Bar Bellini runs on aperitivo, not one big main course
Bar Bellini feels like a place where "just having a drink" almost automatically becomes "we eat something too." That's not in a talk about atmosphere, but in how the menu is structured: small dishes that you put next to each other, rather than a classic three-course itinerary. So you can start light and keep adding a plate, depending on how the evening goes.
The Bellini is not a gimmick, but the go-ahead
The Bellini really takes center stage here: prosecco with peach, as a classic opener. It matches the rest of the bar line: Italian in tone, with cocktails meant to be sipped through while food is on the table. That makes it more restobar than restaurant, and more cocktail bar than wine bar-but without trying to be either entirely.

Food: sharing, grill and pasta that doesn't stay broke
The kitchen leans on a compact selection of dishes that you can order in rounds. There are dishes on the menu that pull clearly toward grill and sea (think quail from barbecue or pasta with langoustine and clams), as well as enough "table builders" to carry the evening. No need to puzzle: two or three choices together already make a table.
You notice in everything that this is made for sharing: faster ordering, more frequent tastings, less set order.
Private dining without a hall feel
A striking feature is the private dining room. Not a loose space that happens to be there, but really set up as a separate setting: suitable for private dinners and small events, with a set layout that delineates your evening without becoming formal.
Why this is right in The Pipe
De Pijp has plenty of places where you either drink alone or dine alone. Bar Bellini sits in between and makes that exactly the concept. You come for cocktails, you stay for dinner, and your table determines the itinerary.