Testa Dura: the sourdough pizza that's making Bordeaux crunch

🍕 Ambiance & decor: between wood-fired oven and Bordeaux dolce vita

Located at 2 cours d'Albret, just a stone's throw from the Palais de Justice, Testa Dura Pizza Club is the new address that everyone in Bordeaux is talking about.
At the helm: Carolina Paradiso, Hugo Lipsky and Maxime Gourgues, three former Ferrandi school students, who chose to revisit Italian pizza in their own way — with rigor and generosity.

The place is bright and warm: a large wooden counter, a wood-fired oven in plain view, and a terrace upstairs lined with aromatic plants and citrus trees. A friendly and somewhat artisanal atmosphere, where the dough is kneaded by hand and smiles are shared without fuss.


🍽️ At the table: the pasta, the real star of the menu

Here, no extensive menu. The house focuses entirely on a naturally leavened dough, made with ancient wheat flour "Rouge de Bordeaux" stone-ground.
Result: a light, digestible crust, crispy on the edges, soft in the center.

A few must-tries:

  • The Margherita revisited, simple and perfect.
  • Mortadella & Pistachio, a creamy and melt-in-your-mouth hit.
  • The Pizza of the Moment, often inspired by seasonal products.

As a complement: homemade antipasti (Bellota ham, grilled vegetables, crispy breadsticks), artisanal ice creams, and carefully selected natural wines.
Budget-wise, expect €11 to €18 per pizza, and €6 per slice "al taglio" at lunchtime.


👥 For whom? Food lovers with no compromises

Testa Dura will seduce:

  • Lovers of Neapolitan pizza who want authentic taste.
  • The curious in search of culinary novelty in Bordeaux.
  • Groups of friends or colleagues who want to eat well without breaking the bank.
  • The sourdough aesthetes, who know that fermentation is life.

📝 Verdict: the pasta in the spotlight, no fuss

Testa Dura checks all the boxes of a successful restaurant:
sourced products, mastered craftsmanship, relaxed atmosphere.
A sincere, thoughtful, balanced pizza — and a team that puts heart into every plate.

Small tip: arrive early in the evening, because the room fills up as fast as a wood-fired oven running at full capacity.