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Food in Rome

April 30, 2009 by Tony Page  
Filed under Featured, Food

Food in Rome and around: a brief gastronomical tour!

Rome and Lazio

Rome; Tuscania; Viterbo; Tarquinia; Cerveteri; Ostia Antica; Frascati; Monte Cassino
The best insalata caprese is made with mozzarella di bufala

The best insalata caprese is made with mozzarella di bufala

Perhaps the most savoury of all Italian regional cuisines, and perhaps due to its central location, the food in Rome and the surrounding district of Lazio offers an incredible variety of dishes and ingredients. Classic southern Italian flavors such as garlic, black pepper, rosemary, and parsley are all present with an added predilection to mint.

Lazio is justly famed for making products from pork such as salted ham, centred around Lake Bracciano and in the province of Frosinone. And for more than 2,000 years, Lazio cheeses made from the milk of sheep and goats have claimed to be Italy’s best, notably "pecorino romano" and "ricotta" made from sheep’s milk, which is prepared inside wicker baskets. However, the main attraction, especially for those of us who like "insalata caprese", is around Terracina, Formia, and Gaeta where "mozzarella di bufala" is produced – all those other ones are just pale imitations! And the region also produces excellent vegetables, such as the "Romaine" or cos lettuce, peas, fava beans and "carciofi romaneschi", round artichokes, cultivated in Cerveteri . Excellent olive oil comes from the Sabine hills and a good selection of fish from the Tyrrhenian Sea as well as from the region’s many lakes.

Roman cuisine has very old traditions and is based on simple cooking with inexpensive ingredients. Famous dishes include "Abbacchio" (a suckling lamb seasoned with fresh rosemary), "Spaghetti alla Carbonara" ( a bacon, egg and cheese sauced pasta), "Saltimbocca alla Romana" (marsala braised thin slices of veal topped with ham), and "Suppli al Telefono" (addictive deep fried rice balls filled with mozzarella guaranteed to boost your cholesterol count). Beans, as in all parts of the country, are important, they love their "fagioli" (they have a Bean festival in Sutri in September).

Here’s a warning for vegetarians: the Romans have a particular liking for offal. You name it, they’ll eat it, especially around Testaccio. In keeping with this, Romans are a dab hand at "fritto misto" – mixed fried meats. "Porchetta di Ariccia" suckling pig, boned and roasted with a seasoning of rosemary, garlic, salt and pepper is sold sliced in every market place. "Abbacchio", the youngest suckling lambs which have never eaten grass, is traditionally roasted (arrosto); but is also often prepared "alla cacciatora" (simmered in olive oil, vinegar, rosemary, and garlic), or stewed with a sauce of lemon and egg ("abbacchio brodettato"). Fish and snails are also popular. "Filleti di baccala" are deep-fried cod fillets, originally a Jewish speciality, that are now a Roman favourite.

But vegetarians, don’t despair! The Jewish ghetto in Rome has developed its own variation on Roman cooking and today produces the best deep-fried baby artichokes around ("carciofi alla giudea"). Interesting trivia coming up: it was the cooking in the Jewish ghetto that discovered the eggplant, a member of the nightshade family, was not poisonous. Think of that when you’re enjoying your "parmigiana di melanzana" in Naples (or everywhere now). And of course, Rome is where "Romaine" lettuce comes from…

Food in Italy:More than pizza and spaghetti bolognese!

Food in Northeast Italy: Trentino-Alto Adige; the Veneto and Friuli.

Food in Northwest Italy: Lombardy; Valle D’Aosta and Piedmont; Liguria.

Food in Central Italy: Emilia Romagna; Tuscany; Umbria; Le Marche.

Food in Southern Italy: Naples and Campania; Abruzzo, Molise and Puglia; Basilicata and Calabria; Sicily and Sardinia.

Other Italy pages:

Italy travel is more than a Roman Holiday!

Tour Routes in Italy

When to travel to Italy: weather and seasons

Useful facts, dates and links to help you plan your tour of Italy

Book your sightseeing tours or day-trips in Italy online

Book your hotel in Italy online

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ITALY TRAVEL WITH US: PHOTO HIGHLIGHTS

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Tour Routes in Italy

April 29, 2009 by Tony Page  
Filed under Destinations

Suggested Tour Routes to make the best of your holiday in Italy

Map of Italy with major cities

Map of Italy with major cities

A Suggested Route around Italy

A comprehensive tour of Italy would take a long time, and if limited to the usually visited sights would omit many interesting experiences. However, here is my offering, and I’d say this was a 24 day minimum (excluding Rome):

Note: links to the towns go to photo albums on the TravelSignposts website

Rome – Cerveteri/Tarquinia – Viterbo – Orvieto – Siena – San Gimignano – FlorencePisa – Carrara – Portofino (Cinque Terre) – Genoa – MilanStresa (Lake Maggiore) – Como – Verona – Bolzano – Cortina d’Ampezzo – Brenta Canal – Venice (NOT Mestre) – Pomposa – Ravenna (St Apollinare in Classe) – Perugia – Assisi – Castel Gondolfo – Frascati – PompeiiSorrento – Capri – Positano (Amalfi Coast) – Bari – Matera – Castellana – Alberobello – Lecce – Taranto – Calabrian Mountains – Taormina – Syracuse – Ortygia Island – Piazza Armerina – Enna – Selinunte – Agrigento – Mondello – Palermo – Naples – Monte Cassino – Rome

Most of the standard Europe tours cover roughly the same major highlights, but miss out Sicily, the Genoa section, one or both of the Italian Lakes and Dolomite sectors, and the southeast sector round Alberobello. Distances are not huge and roads are good, so in many cases it would easily be possible to change the order I’ve given above without major difficulty.

Don’t know where a place is? Try this map from Google:

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Other Italy pages:

Travel to Italy for more than a Roman holiday!

When to travel to Italy for your tour: weather and seasons

Useful facts, dates and links to help you plan your tour of Italy

Food in Italy: a brief gastronomic tour

Book your sightseeing tours or day-trips in Italy online

Book your hotel in Italy online

TOUR ROUTES IN ITALY: PHOTO HIGHLIGHTS

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