Italy
Province of Palermo

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    • Day 21

      21. Tag Camping

      May 6, 2023 in Italy ⋅ 🌙 16 °C

      Heute ist mal wieder entspanntes Campen angesagt. Wir genießen einen ruhigen Vormittag, snacken am Womo, waschen Wäsche und leben in den Tag hinein. Am Nachmittag geht es mit Strandmuschel an unseren quasi Privatstrand: Bis auf wenige andere Camper ist hier weit und breit keiner zu sehen. Ben testet das Wasser und befindet es für eindeutig zu kalt. Abends gibt's Pizza für die Großen.Read more

    • So geht Frühstück

      October 20, 2023 in Italy ⋅ 🌬 28 °C

      Heute zeige ich mal wie unser italienisches Frühstück aussah.
      Auf dem Weg haben wir ein kuriosen Garten besichtigt. Der mit ca. 3000 Steinköpfen zu bestaunen war. Die Geschicht des Mannes/Künstler ist traurig, war nie glücklich in seinem Leben. So hat er halt Steinköpfe hergestellt.
      Weiter ging es dann noch bis zu einem Campingplatz direkt am Meer, hier ist es sehr windig.
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    • Day 43

      Von der Küste in die Berge

      December 20, 2022 in Italy ⋅ ☀️ 11 °C

      Sciacca an der Küste bietet eine einzigartige Ansicht vom Fischerhafen aus. Wir machen Kaffeepause und kaufen frischen Fisch und Garnelen.
      Anschließend fahren wir ins Landesinnere nach Caltabellota. Das Bergdorf liegt wie ein Nest zwischen schroffen Felsen auf fast 1000 m.ü.M. Was für ein Gegensatz zum farbenfrohen Sciacca. Die Aussicht ist phantastisch, ebenso der Sonnenuntergang. Die Garnelen, mit viel Knoblauch gebraten schmecken köstlich. Wir verbringen hier eine ruhige Nacht auf dem Parkplatz bei der Schule.Read more

    • Day 41

      Experiencing Sicilian Food Culture

      November 2, 2023 in Italy ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

      After 3 nights in the chaos and heat of Palermo, we arrived at the epicentre of Sicilian food culture, the Anna Tasca Lanza Culinary School. Sicily is shaped like a triangle and our travels have taken us to the eastern point near Mount Etna, near the southern tip to Ortigia and to the western tip at Trapani. We are now in the geographical centre of the island, near Vallelunga, on an old 19th century farm called Case Vecchie. The 3 of us are here with 6 other guests for 4 nights immersing ourselves in Sicilian food culture.

      The Lanza family that owns the estates (vineyards) and the farm is an historically wealthy, landowning family - therefore Sicilian nobility. Sicily was ruled by monarches in the past but the official monarchy across all of Italy was not recognized after 1946 when Italy became a Republic. However, the title of Marchessa and Marquise are still used by this family. They even have a family crest that is embossed on all of the dishes …..as you do when you are royalty. I wonder what our family crest would be - probably something with a beer mug . Today the current owner Fabrizia Lanza (daughter of the famous Anna Tasca Lanza) came to say hello and join us for lunch. She was very regal and presided over lunch from the end of the long table explaining her food philosophy and dismissing the modern tendency to photograph everything we eat rather than using all of our senses to enjoy it. I quickly hid my phone. She stated that, “ We have never spoken so much about food and yet been more distant from our food.” Her second cookbook has just been released and it does have beautiful pictures. So someone’s taking photos!
      On our first morning, a young gardener, Lucia, took us on a garden tour. She has a masters in fruit science with a focus on citrus plants. The garden is full of fruit trees including persimmons, quince, pomegranate, lemon and loads of vegetables and herbs. There are olive trees all around and an almond grove, that Tara and I came across on a walk. The area is surrounded by vineyards. We have enjoyed many types of wine from the family estates or land holdings located in terroir across Sicily.
      Getting back to the food ——-We participated in 2 full morning cooking classes where we made our 4 course lunches using many local ingredients. We then ate our 4 course meals family style around a large table. Day 1, we made panelle ( a Sicilian fritter made from chickpea flour), pasta in the shape of cavatelli (shells), caponata (a popular dish making use of the abundant eggplants), and a dessert called cassata which incorporates almond paste, ricotta and cake. Our chef - Kyle - is from the US and married to an Italian. He and the other staff explain all the background about the food ingredients and what makes it typical to this area. The staff are warm and engaging and love to answer our many questions. The kitchen is fabulous and its been loads of fun to jump in to stir, chop and make the pasta. This is really farm to table cooking. I went into the garden with chef Kyle to grab some Sicilian celery and some parsley for the caponata. There are 3 ladies in the back kitchen scooping up all the dirty dishes and pots, serving the meals and setting tables etc. Yesterday’s menu was a pasta bake called tomboli ( meaning drum because that is it’s shape) that was stuffed not with meat ragu, as we would expect, but with a wild fennel/ mint sauce. We also made beer-battered stuffed zucchini blossoms, tuna meatballs in tomato sauce and a bianco mange or blanche mange as people might know it - a clear, milk pudding.
      Some common ingredients include lots of onions (but little garlic). The Sicilians don’t favour garlic as it is seen as “low” or peasant food. Lots of cheese from sheep - ricotta, pecorina. Loads of mint and other herbs( interesting arab influences in the cooking here). Loads and loads of olive oil, anchovies, capers and salt. Also lots of nuts - pine nuts from the trees in the garden, almonds and pistachios, Enza, the baker at the school, has been keeping us fed with a steady flow of cookies, cakes and freshly baked bread. We get a lesson from her this afternoon. I wish I could somehow attach some of the wonderful smells from the kitchen because the pictures don’t do the food justice.
      At night Chef Kyle makes our dinner and all of the meals are surprisingly vegetable focused with lots of fresh salads and various local greens. We’ve had only two meat dishes since arriving - a grilled lamb and some rabbit braised in wine last night. Beef and dairy from cows are less common here. The tomato paste and sauces are all homemade and bottled during the tomato harvest. The jams are made from the fruit of the surrounding trees.
      On Tuesday afternoon we were taken to a nearby communal olive oil processing business run by a sharp Sicilian lady. The locals were coming in with their large bins of olives , dumping them in the main collector hopper and about 1/2 hour later the most beautiful, rich green olive oil poured out into their large plastic containers and off they drove, and the next farmer backed in to unload. Seems everyone has an olive orchard and the fruit is being harvested now so the place was really buzzing. We spent this morning with a local shepherd / cheesemaker, Filipo, and saw yesterday’s sheep milk go from liquid to curds and whey and finally new cheese. The curds were squeezed out and formed into rounds. Once more liquid has drained away, it will be sold locally as pecorino. The remaining whey was heated to make ricotta (meaning re-heated). It was fascinating to ask Filipo questions about the production (translation by the cooking school staff who speak English). Seems that the current production must be done using stainless steel, although it was recently all done using wooden screens / baskets and implements. The good bacteria gave the cheese additional flavours although - as you can imagine - it was not as safe.
      The school/farm whee we are staying is in a beautiful, rural setting. Besides the hum of the farm machinery the place is quite peaceful until about 2 in the morning when the 3 roosters start crowing loudly. We’re not sure what sets them off but evidently the long-time vegetable gardener ,Giovanni , has a soft heart and won’t kill the roosters even though they do nothing productive. Tara and I were ready to strangle them after the first night!! We have access to a lovely swimming pool in the yard and the rooms are very comfortable. It’s not been all hard work in the kitchen and we’ve taken time for some walks and reading.
      This has been a wonderful end to our Sicilian adventure. Sicily doesn’t have the ambiance of other parts of Italy that we’ve seen. In particular, when compared to areas in northern Italy, this is like night and day. Even the language - Sicilian - is different. I think we have seen more of the true Sicily here than over the past few weeks of travel - as enjoyable as that was. Sicilians are a very warm, proud and passionate people and according to one of our Palermo guides - just a little bit crazy! The economics of the island take many of them away but the people all seem to retain a strong bond to the island and the unique culture here. I can only think of Newfoundland as our Canadian analogy
      Tomorrow the return trip begins. We are in Palermo overnight and may do some souvenir shopping. Saturday morning we say arrivederci to Tara who flies home to Ottawa via Munich. We head to Frankfurt to pick up our bike gear that we left there 3 weeks ago and fly home to Victoria on Sunday. It’s certainly time to get home but it has been another great adventure. Hope to see some of you very soon. Thanks for traveling with us!!
      As they say in Sicily when leaving - “ciao, ciao, ciao”
      Love Heather/ Mom xxx
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    • Day 7

      Non Offroad in Sicilia 😫🚳

      April 13 in Italy ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

      Heute wollten wir über diverse Offroadwege durch die Berge von Palermo zu unserem nächsten Übernachtungsort Prizzi fahren. Aber erneut sind wir auf absolute Fahrverbote für jeglichen motorisierten Verkehr gestoßen..😪 Ok, teilweise haben wir es dann ignoriert, sind durch und 🍀gehabt da nicht erwischt worden..😏 Wir hatten heute dann doch noch einen hohen Offroadanteil und sind in Prizzi, dem Ort am Berg, angekommen 👍Read more

    • Day 7

      Beschränkte Fahrt nach Prizzi

      April 13 in Italy ⋅ ☀️ 23 °C

      Bei unserer heutigen Tour hatten wir schöne Pisten, allerdings auch immer wieder unüberwindbare Hindernisse vor uns.
      Dank EU-Sponsoring wurden hier offenbar zahlreiche Schutzgebiete ausgewiesen, eingezäunt und mit Eisentoren und Schlössern dem unbefugten Betreten und Befahren entzogen 😳🤷‍♀️
      Trotzdem hatten wir Spaß, gutes Wetter und konnten schöne Landschaften genießen.
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    • Day 8

      Round the House

      April 14 in Italy ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

      Heute gab es 180km Round the House, mit schöner Mischung Off-Onroadanteilen. Zu Beginn mal gleich in den groben Mist gefahren, hätten es besser gelassen und haben zum Schluss als der Weg völlig im Bachbett endete ne' halbe Stunde an den sackschweren T7 bei 🌞🌡 rumgezerrt um wieder zurück zu kommen. Ich war so fix und fertig das Waltraud mein Mopped noch den Rest nach oben gefahren hat..🙈💪👍💑 Danach war es dann entspannter und wir hatten wieder mal Schilder mit Streckensperrungen, Fragen von uns entgegekommenden Forestals ob wir denn aus den Bergen kommen..No, no..😉 Dramatisch leer sind hier die Wasserspeicher, lt. den Einwohnern hat es im Winter kaum geregnet..😟 Als wir wieder in unserem Hotel ankamen ging hier der Punk ab..😎 Eine 🇮🇹 Eisenbahner Pensionärstruppe hat hier ordentlich einen auf's Parkett gelegt..👍Read more

    • Day 45

      Grande Cretto

      November 23, 2019 in Italy ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

      Alberto Burri - ein italienischer Künstler - wurde mit einer Arbeit im Rahmen des Wiederaufbaus des 1968 von einem Erdbeben zerstörten Valle della Belice beauftragt. Er beschloss, sein Projekt über den Trümmern der Stadt Gibellina zu errichten und damit das größte Land Art Kunstwerk der Welt zu schaffen. Der Künstler bedeckte den Ort mit einem “weißen Leichentuch”; einem riesigen Betonguss, der die Überreste der Stadt enthält und gleichzeitig in Teilen ihren alten Grundriss nachzeichnet.
      Auch am Satellitenbild von Google-Earth lässt sich das außergewöhnliche Kunstwerk gut erkennen!
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    • Day 45

      Lost Place Ruderi di Poggioreale

      November 23, 2019 in Italy ⋅ ☀️ 15 °C

      Wie wir gelesen hatten, wurde das Dorf beim Erdbeben am 15. Januar 1968 komplett zerstört. Dabei kamen damals hinderte Menschen ums Leben.
      Das alte Poggioreale wurde nie wieder aufgebaut und schlummert seitdem im Dornröschenschlaf. Ein Spaziergang durch die Ruinen ist wie eine Zeitreise und das Dorf strahlt immer noch etwas Besonderes aus.
      Die Ruinen zeigen immer noch wie schön die Häuser und die Räume darin einmal gewesen sein müssen, denn man erkennt überall noch die Runddecken mit vielen Deckenmalereien.
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    • Day 45

      Lost Place Ruderi di Poggioreale

      November 23, 2019 in Italy ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

      Hier könnten wir Tage verbringen um in der Vergangenheit zu stöbern. Bei soviel Details die Tom natürlich in einer Vielzahl von Foto's festhalten musste, reichte einfach ein Beitrag dafür nicht aus😀.

    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Palermo, Provinz Palermo, Province of Palermo, Provincia de Palermo, مقاطعة باليرمو, Палермо, ཕ་ལེར་མོ།, Proviñs Palermo, Província de Palerm, Provincie Palermo, Παλέρμο, Provinco de Palermo, Palermo provints, Palermoko probintzia, استان پالرمو, Palermon maakunta, Palerme, פלרמו, Palermo megye, Provinsi Palermo, パレルモ県, პალერმოს პროვინცია, 팔레르모 현, Provincia Panormitana, Provinsia de Palermo, Pruvincia de Palermo, Palermo provincija, Palermo province, Палермо аймаг, Wilayah Palermo, Palermo Séng, Provinsen Palermo, Província de Palèrme, Prowincja Palermo, Provincia ëd Palerm, ضلع پالرمو, Provincia Palermo, Provìntzia de Palermu, Pruvincia di Palermu, Province o Palermo, Provinca e Palermos, Palermo ili, صوبہ پالیرمو, Provincia de Pałermo, 巴勒莫省

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