Italy 2022

junio 2022
AKA Matt and Katie’s Second Honeymoon Leer más
  • 22huellas
  • 2países
  • 10días
  • 272fotos
  • 11videos
  • 5,2kmillas
  • 4,5kmillas
  • Día 4

    Day 4, Part 1/2

    20 de junio de 2022, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 79 °F

    This is Matt checking in to let the people know I’m alive. And by people I mean the 13 kind souls that follow this trip journal. Here is a recap of today:

    We woke up and packed. The bags are getting fuller and the wallet is lighter, but hey, I signed up for this. We had one last breakfast at the Portrait Hotel in Florence and made our way to the train station for our ride to Naples. I was planning on giving the cab driver 20 bucks anyway since the ride was 15/16, but then he sneakily shut off the meter upon arrival and asked me for $20! Bold move calling your own tip bro. I begrudgingly paid him $20 but made a mental note to fart in his cab if I ever see him again. We boarded the train for Naples and both Katie and I took glorious naps for about 3.5 hours. Now that’s living! Katie shared foot space with a pretty good looking Italian stallion because our travel agent booked the wrong seats, and I got scolded by an elderly Italian lady for not wearing a mask which I guess are still required on the train.

    We then got our ride from Naples to Amalfi which is a fairly treacherous road over and around the mountains to get to the coast. Shout out to our driver who was the smoothest stick-shift operator I’ve ever encountered - No joke. It was very interesting to see how the locals utilize every patch of farmable land, starting from just outside Naples where there are Urban Farms literally in between what appears to be working class housing midrises for several miles. The same concept continues throughout The mountains and the driver was very helpful as he pointed out different towns and what they specialize in (Granano- famous for handmade pasta; Argerola- famous for mozzarella cheese; All over the valley, they grow the best tomatoes in the volcanic soil; Furore— famous for white wine).
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  • Día 4

    Day 4, Part 2/2

    20 de junio de 2022, Italia ⋅ 🌙 73 °F

    Once we’d checked into the hotel, it was LUNCH TIME. Amalfi seems more traditional than Florence in that real restaurants definitely close between lunch and dinner. We wandered about seven minutes down the road from our hotel into the town of Amalfi and had lunch at a total hole in the wall, which was absolutely great. Pizza, fritto misto and spaghetti limone. We came back to the hotel and got dressed for dinner (after ordering a couple of espresso martinis, of course). We took a cab into Positano, about 25 minutes and had plenty of time to shop around before we had to get to dinner. While we were walking, I spotted one of my favorite Bravolebrities, Paige Desorbo. Idk what came over me, but I was just like, “Paige? Is that you?”, as if we were old friends 😹. She was so tiny and cute and nice and we snapped a pic. She’s on vacation with her parents, but she and Craig are still together, in case you were wondering. Following this, we wound our way around the town before arriving at La Sponda at the hotel Le Sirenuse. This was probably the fanciest meal we’ve had/will have. Highlights included the tomato salad with tomatoes five ways and the veal entrecôte. Pardon the flash photography, it was sooo dark. The service was impeccable and the view was beyond. We split a cab home with another couple who are also staying at our hotel and hit the hay!Leer más

  • Día 5

    Day 5, Part 1/2— Breakfast & Boarding

    21 de junio de 2022, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 75 °F

    Matt here again. Hey y’all. Today was a FANTASTIC adventure in the Amalfi/Capri region and the caps are warranted.

    We started with breakfast at Santa Caterina - I was kind of tired of the Florence brekky so this was a pleasant surprise. Cappuccino was the best I’ve had thus far and the breakfast buffet had versatility that the previous hotel was missing. Highlights for me were soft scramble eggs, prosciutto, buffalo mozz, amazingly soft bread (definitely an example of how bread changes from region to region) and next to the bread was my bestie aka a giant block of butter. They gave you a scraper that was reminiscent of a play dough toy and rest assured I had plenty of childish enthusiasm when scraping my own portion of butter when no one could tell me to stop. Meanwhile Katie was sipping her fresh squeezed OJ while over looking the Med. amazing place.

    Moving on to the day’s activity. Captain Alfonso picked us up in a 38’ ft beauty directly from the hotel dock. Credit me for organizing. El Capitan took us on a boat tour, heading west from our location past Praiano (a smaller town) and then Positano en route to Capri. Along the way we stopped in a beautiful cove, one of three La Galli islands, mythically known as Le Sirenuse (Same name as the hotel from last night’s dinner).
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  • Día 5

    Day 5, Part 2/2– Capri and Dinner

    21 de junio de 2022, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 79 °F

    We were supposed to have lunch at a fancy beach club called Il Riccio, but decided at the last minute to take our captain’s suggestion and stop at Torre Saracena (http://www.torresaracenacapri.com/en/index) at the Marina Piccolo. This was the best decision we could have made. Both the scenery and the food were unreal. We enjoyed zucchini Parmesan, fresh raw mixed seafood, spaghetti vongole, and pasta with zucchini and fresh shrimp. After lunch, we took a nice hike up (everything is straight up and down here) to catch a lovely open-air taxi into the town of Capri. The town was crowded but lovely. A great mix of independent and luxury stores, with plenty of lemon sorbet everywhere you turn. Matt got a great pair of shoes at Ferragamo, so the physical pain we felt on the stairs was worth it. We also ran into Adam Leuger, which was fun! When we arrived back at the hotel, we spent about an hour chilling at the pool, because you really just cannot get enough of the water here. Headed back up to the room using the very cool external elevator (see video; lots of steps and elevators because the hotel is built into a cliff) and got ready for dinner. Tonight we ate at Al Mare, the more casual, but still very nice restaurant that the hotel. When we sat down they gave us each a menu— standard— but only Matt’s had prices on it 😹!! The food was wonderful— we had a calzone with ricotta, mozzarella and salami, a beautiful tuna tartare with preserved lemon, bottarga and fennel, spaghetti with lemon cream, fusilli nerano (zucchini and provolone), and grilled vegetables. We also ordered fried anchovies, though I’m not sure why Matt wanted this, seeing as he hates anchovies. It did not get eaten. Unfortunately, our lovely night was ruined by Donald Trump, as the conspiracy theorists next to us spent the whole night describing every scene in “2000 Mules” to their Australian dining companions and going on and on about how lock down and isolation caused more deaths from suicide than COVID caused. We cut the night short and headed back to the room. We’ll be in bed by 11, which is fine because we’ve been up until about 2am the last three nights!Leer más

  • Día 6

    Day 6, Part 1/2– Cooking class AKA Darty

    22 de junio de 2022, Italia ⋅ ☀️ 75 °F

    This morning we woke up, and you guessed it— had breakfast at the hotel! I can’t stress how beautiful the hotel grounds are. Terraces of perfectly manicured flora and fauna everywhere you turn. I’ll post pictures, but they won’t do it justice. At 9am, we left the hotel for a cooking class at La Tagliata in Positano. https://www.latagliata.com/cooking-class Little did we know, it was going to be a wine-fueled festa! The class is held at a family owned restaurant and working farm. They have multiple gardens full of eggplant, tomatoes, herbs, onions, peppers… everything you’d need for an Italian restaurant menu! But it doesn’t end with the vegetables. They also have chickens for fresh eggs, rabbits (some are pets, some… aren’t), Guinea pigs (all pets!), hunting dogs, pheasants and other birds, cows, goats and sheep for cheese, a donkey, emu… the list goes on. All well-kept and healthy. Not one unpleasant aroma detected. After picking our own veggies including digging up potatoes which I’ve never done and saying hi to all the animal friends,, we headed back to the class area where we were greeted by the sounds of “Gasolina”, and a ceremonial dance (lol). A lot of gasolina, aka Falanghina, made on site, was served throughout the morning. It was so crisp and delicious— we’re bringing a bottle home. Wish we could bring more! We were then served an assortment of snacks made from the garden, including a delicious olive and hot pepper goats milk cheese. The class started out with dessert— two types of tiramisu. Traditional coffee and a limoncello/orange flavor. Next we moved onto two types of bruschetta, potatoes and zucchini flowers, eggplant Parmesan, gnocchi pomodoro and potato croquettes. In between each project, we’d sit down to eat what we made, or another snack they’d give us, including a house made ricotta ravioli with sauce genovese, which is a pork ragu. Matt and I actually couldn’t even eat the gnocchi and eggplant, so they packed it up for us (I’m not writing this entry in real time— we tried it this morning and it was FANTASTIC. Will be making at home!!). The party— I mean class— lasted until about 3:00… or maybe later! We had to leave because our driver was waiting. Everything here takes a long time, which is just a fact, not a complaint. Anyway, I would HIGHLY recommend this class. It was super fun and super delicious. Go hungry!!! And thirsty 😜.Leer más

  • Día 6

    Day 6, Part 2/2– Ravello

    22 de junio de 2022, Italia ⋅ ☁️ 86 °F

    After the class, we took a little breather by the hotel pool, which is on a cliff just about three feet above the sea. You can jump right off your chair and into the Med. Not sure why, but we got cocktails— mine was so delicious; a local, fresh orange juice vodka spritz. Around 4:30, we went back to the room for a costume change and headed about 20 min north east to the town of Ravello. It’s known as the city of music and is famous for festivals, the architecture and beautiful piazzas, which did not disappoint. As is common throughout this region, there were several pottery shops. I finally found a beautiful neutral print and was able to ship several pieces home (https://www.ceramichecosmolena.com/store/?lang=en ). The stuff is basically indestructible, plus it’s microwave and dishwasher safe! Matt and i made a deal- he was allowed to smoke one cigarette if I was allowed to buy the pottery. A good deal for me, I feel. I will admit, the Italians do make smoking look glamorous and fun…

    After a short stroll around the town, we sat down for dinner at La Vecchia Cantina (https://lavecchiacantinaravello.com). Matt had his best pizza so far— tuna and onion. We will definitely recreate at home!! We also had thinly sliced cuttlefish with a sauce of peas and truffle, spaghetti with clams and cherry tomatoes, paccheri with wild boar ragu, and steak, bc why not. Then it was back to the hotel for a little tiramisu, which we made in our class. It was sooo good! Finally, bed time : )
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  • Día 7

    Day 7, part 1/2– Arrival in Rome!

    23 de junio de 2022, Italia ⋅ ⛅ 82 °F

    Today we woke up in Amalfi, skipped breakfast… JK!! Well, actually Matt did… besides a few bites of our leftovers from yesterday. I had a salad. Pro tip for Italy: the breakfast buffet is the best place to get veggies/salad. We hopped in our car and headed back over and down the mountain into Naples to catch the train to Rome. It really is the most beautiful drive. This time, we weren’t in basic economy and I actually had somewhere to put my feet. What luxury! We arrived in Rome, where prior to arrival, we elected to forgo a car service to the hotel. Little did we know that there would be a taxi strike 🙄. We waited about 40 min for a cab and finally made it to the gorgeous Hotel de Russie. https://www.roccofortehotels.com/hotels-and-res… We dropped out bags and headed right out for lunch at Hosteria da Pietro (http://www.hostariadapietro.it). We started with vitello tonnato and went with spaghetti with razor clams and amatriciana, and a side of spinach, for our mains. After another stressful time finding a cab, we met our guide Nunzia at the Colosseum. We went on a three hour walking tour of the Colosseum, Palantine Hill and the Roman Forum. So much to see, so much to learn! And in 95 degree heat. Matt wanted her to go on longer, but alas, the tour had to come to an end. We rented bird scooters and immediately drove them into the busiest roundabout in Rome. We saw our life flash before our eyes and ditched the birds immediately. We hoofed it back towards the hotel, stopping to sample some pizza al taglio and gelato in the way.Leer más

  • Día 7

    Day 7, Part 2/2– First Dinner in Rome

    23 de junio de 2022, Italia ⋅ 🌙 75 °F

    After the fountain, we needed to rest out tooties. Headed back to the hotel for a quick refresh and all of the suddden, it was 9:00! Time for dinner! We went to Il Chianti Osteria Toscana.https://www.chiantiosteriatoscana.it/en/ It was back by the Trevi Fountain area, about a 20 min walk. It goes fast when there’s so much to look at! We ordered panzanella and zucchini carpaccio as well as spaghetti carbonara and a white pork ragu, and a regular salad. We really kept it together and had just a few bites of each pasta, though they were both delicious. On the way home, we stopped for gelato at Il Gelato di San Crispino (famous, but no website!) for a yogurt gelato and grapefruit sorbet. So refreshing, the perfect end to our night <3Leer más

  • Día 8

    Day 8, Part 1/2

    24 de junio de 2022, Italia ⋅ ⛅ 84 °F

    Today we woke up at Hotel De Russie and had a quick breakfast on a beautiful terrace over looking the hotel courtyard. Pretty solid Italian breakfast with all the normal fixings. We also did some laundry this morning. Next up was 25 minute walk to Piazza Farnese, where we met our tour group for the morning’s food tour (https://www.viator.com/tours/Rome/Small-Group-R…). First stop was the local farmer’s market at Campo de Fiori - if we lived in Rome, this would be a regular stop. The produce looked phenomenal and the stands will actually cut up the fruit and veg for you to take home. The group visited a famous market performer who created his own vegetable cutting tools which are pretty cool! He put on his little show and we then completed the quick visit which is ok because we are going back there tomorrow.

    Next up was a nearby seventh generation, family-owned salumeria (/deli) called Ruggeri’s. We sampled some buffalo mozz, which was the best we’ve ever had. Super flavorful. https://ruggericampodefiori.com We then filled up out water bottles at one of the many Nasoni, which are free water fountains throughout rome, named for the shape of the spout which resembles a nose. If you hold your finger under the water? It will shoot out of a little hole on top of the spout and become a drinking fountain!

    Stop two was a surprise visit to Roscioli which is actually where we planned to eat dinner that evening. Roscioli is a bakery/deli/everything gourmet shop (think high level Italian Zingerman’s). It is also a “Forno” meaning that have a big wood burning oven and in addition to multiple other ovens on site. The bread and pastries look amazing but we were there for the granddaddy of them all - Pizza al taglio. The Roscioli pizza is cut into squares and there are many different kinds to choose from. We had the Margarita and Pomodoro slices, both of which were incredible (this entry is all Matt). So good that we will be going back for breakfast to try other things.

    Following the pizza stop we walked through a “secret” tunnel which originally was the entrance to an ancient Roman theatre. In the tunnel there was a shrine to the Holy Mary, and learned that there are secret shrined apparently hidden all over the city. Romans will often say they are “looking for the holy Mary” when they can find something/someone/etc. we said goodbye to Mary and continued on to the Jewish Ghetto, which is something Katie and I had been looking forward to.

    (Matt falls asleep and Katie takes over:) We entrees the Jewish quarter, a pedestrian-only area with the most expensive and desirable real estate in Rome. We saw gold bricks in front of certain apartment buildings acknowledging any Jewish person who sent to the concentration camps, including information on the date of their return, liberation or death. In one apartment building, there was a brick for a 92 year old gentleman who returned to his home and still lives there today. It was very powerful. I am not sure if this is completely accurate, but the tour guide said that until after WWII, all Jews still had to live in the Jewish Ghetto and needed to be within the walls by sunset. Anyone who married into the Jewish faith was included in this, and there was a significant amount of intermarriage. Of course the housing practices were horribly discriminative, but I imagine that they contributed to there being a thriving culture of business in this section of the city.

    We headed to La Taverna de Ghetto to try some traditional fried treats, which have been perfected by the Jews. Suppli (rice balls with a little “surprise” of melted mozzarella inside) and fried zucchini blossoms stuffed with mozzarella and anchovy were on the menu.

    We crossed the bridge and went through the Isola Tiberina, a small island in the middle of the Tiber River. This is the island where they used to quarantine people afflicted with the Black Plague. A large hospital still exists there today.

    Ristorante Sette Oche in Altalena was the next stop. We sampled amatriciana and cacio e pepe. For me, I do not tire of the classic Roman pastas. I could eat them 10x a day. Which is problematic. Last stop was gelato. I don’t think I’ve discussed this in the journal yet, but there are two main types of gelaterias. The first is the kind with the beautiful mounds of gelato, decorated and enticing. Unfortunately these places are all show and no go. They use chemical stabilizers in the gelato to keep it from melting in the case. What you want to look for is a place where the gelato is stored in covered metal cylinders under the counter. This is the good stuff. Bonus if the place includes “Artigianale”, which means it was made on site.
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  • Día 8

    Day 8, Part 2/2– Lunch, Walking, Dinner

    24 de junio de 2022, Italia ⋅ ⛅ 77 °F

    This may sound shocking, but after the food tour, we headed to lunch. One of us really limited our tasting on the food tour, one of us did not. Anywhoo, lunch was scheduled at Santo Palato, a small trattoria in a working class neighborhood in rome that has become well known for classic Roman dishes made with impeccable technique. https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/16/travel/a-new… We started with a “meatball” of wild boar with a peanut sauce and crostino with pickled scapes. Next was pork neck with the most amazing demi and grilled flat beans and cucumbers; we moved on to quintessential versions of carbonara and amatriciana. We finished with a popover filled with yogurt cream and lightly macerated wild strawberries. It was all divine.

    Lunch necessitated an hour long postprandial traipse through the neighborhoods of Rome to the Villa Borghese. We walked through the “gardens”, but tbh everything is very brown, it was nice though. Our hotel backs up to the gardens, so it was very convenient to end there for a little cool down. It was 91f, after all!

    After we both took ice cold showers, it was of course appertivo time. We enjoyed the beautiful courtyard scenery with a mint julep for Matt and a Paloma for me. I’d say these were the best concorsils we’ve had, but following this we went to a craft cocktail bar in Trestevre called Freni e Frizioni (https://www.freniefrizioni.com/en/), and I had some sort of watermelon soda concoction that blew my socks off (in terms of flavor, not %etoh). There was a full appertivo buffet, but we (mostly) held strong to build up an appetite for dinner.

    [Matt:] After drinks we headed back to Roscioli for dinner, with a quick little detour to walk through a riverside pop-up restaurant/carnival game scene. Cool set up but nothing special. The restaurant space at Roscioli is in their Deli, separate from the Forno/bakery. The Deli counter itself is extensive, filled with meat, fish, cheese and some prepared foods. The walls are lined with wine and liquor bottles, including some harder to find in Italy scotches, vodkas (bottles that we can easily get at home) priced at a significant mark up. Ex: A 5th of Johnny Black was $200.

    [Katie: In general, almost every time you look up a review of a restaurant in Italy, they reviewer will say “this is a no frills place”. I have started to laugh at that comment because almost every restaurant is exactly the same. Table cloth (paper vs cloth), placement, regular plates and silverware (a brand new set of EVERYTHING every time you finish a course), glasses… what more frills should there be?? And all the warrants are casual. They just are. You can come dressed up for your night or you can come in your gym shoes from the day and either are fine. We also found the service to be incredibly kind and accommodating in terms of arriving early or late for reservations, menu translation, order we wanted dishes in, etc. Never a bad experience. Ok— back to Matt’s account]

    We were seated at the back of the restaurant, behind us was a small family of 4 and both Katie and I recognized the dad [Randy] as one of the 90s pop culture “Sklar brothers”. They had short stints and ESPN and we’re part of the commentary talent on some VH1 shows. He was right in Katie’s view and she was concerned he thought she was staring at him. [I was!! I just wanted to look out but I had to look right at/past him! It was torture.]

    Dinner started with a plate of house made meats including the house made salumi (more like a ham), lardo and salami. We also got a massive ball of burrata with house made roasted/dried tomatoes, accompanied by a bread basket (all made at the Forno) with various types of bread. The star bread is their pizza “Bianca” which is basically just pizza dough cooked with some olive oil until crispy on both sides but some how still soft and chewy enough in the middle to easily eat. The little pizza Bianca + burrata/tomato sandwiches you can make were heavenly. For drink we had a bottle of orange wine, which the waiter rolled his eyes at but finally admitted the orange wine he brought us was perfect (if you drink that type of hippie shit). Italians love their tradition and to some that means that wine should be red or white only. We ordered 3 pastas - Cacio Pepe (the star), pomodoro (second star) and butter/anchovy which I (Matt) thought was disgusting but Katie assured me was actually very good. We skipped desert and hoofed it back to the hotel, fighting through throngs of Italian teenagers heading in the exact opposite direction as night two of the concert festival had just let out. Success! [Katie: They had given us a bowl of cherries (Italy has THE BEST cherries) on arrival, so that was my sweet treat before bed 🍒.]
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