A konoba, in Dalmatian vernacular, is the stone-walled room in which a family kept its wine, cured its meats, and gathered around a single long table. The word survives as the name for a particular kind of Croatian restaurant — small, family-run, unfussy, built around the food that people actually cook at home. Konoba Fetivi, tucked behind the Church of St Francis on Ulica Tomica stine in the Varos district, is the archetype. It was the first traditional Dalmatian restaurant in Split to receive a Michelin Bib Gourmand, and it has held that distinction consistently since 2018.
The menu is not printed. A handwritten board announces what arrived from the market that morning, and the kitchen cooks exactly that. Expect the classics done with unshowy precision: grilled daily catch (sea bream, sea bass, John Dory, whatever came in), octopus salad dressed in local olive oil, and the black risotto — cuttlefish ink, rice, a little wine, a little garlic, nothing more — that has become Fetivi's unofficial signature. The prsut, Dalmatian air-dried ham, arrives with a few olives and cheese and requires no further accompaniment.
The Varos setting is part of the experience. This is the traditional fishermen's quarter of Split, a grid of narrow stone lanes climbing uphill from the harbour, and Fetivi's dining room feels like an extension of the neighbourhood. Tables spill into the alley in summer. The Michelin inspectors' citation, when it came, praised the restaurant for "quality food at a reasonable price" — a description that seems almost understated given what the kitchen consistently produces for under €35 per person.
Reservations are essential in high season. The restaurant is closed Mondays, and operating hours run from 3pm to 11:30pm Tuesday through Sunday. Walk-ins are occasionally possible at the earliest or latest slots, but the dining room seats comfortably under forty people and fills quickly.