2018-11-01 Italia Magazine PDF
2018-11-01 Italia Magazine PDF
2018-11-01 Italia Magazine PDF
ITALIA!
TIMELESS SALENTO
48 HOURS IN SALENTO • HOMES IN ABRUZZO • DISCOVER CASTELLO IN VENICE • VILLA BALBIANO • THE LINGOTTO IN TURIN
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46 80
IN THISNovember
ISSUE 2018
HOLIDAYS
20 48 HOURS IN SALENTO
FOOD & DRINK
54 JAMIE COOKS ITALY
20
Sara Scarpa travels to Salento in Puglia to Cook up a delicious autumn feast with these
discover the ‘Florence of the South’ set in a authentic Italian recipes by Jamie Oliver.
timeless land ‘beyond the sea’.
59 BEFORE THE PASSEGGIATA
40 THE QUIET SESTIERE Sit down with friends and this southern
Adrian Mourby explores the tranquil Italian supper menu by Diana Henry.
backwaters of Venice in the eastern sestiere
of Castello. 66 VERO ITALIANO
In the latest instalment in his series
27 CULTURE
27 FAST CULTURE
Joe Gartman takes the lift to the top of
uncovering the secrets of Italian food,
Mario Matassa turns to leftovers, and the
wonderful things you can do with them.
62
from Abruzzo.
Artists Andrea Brugi and Samina Langholz
reveal how a surprise romance led to the
creation of a successful woodcraft business.
PROPERTY
80 HOMES IN ABRUZZO
36 MAKING TRACKS: TO LAKE COMO Spacious and unspoilt, Abruzzo also has some
Twenty years ago Rachael Martin explored of Italy’s best-value property, so it’s little
Italy and dreamed of rooms with a view. surprise that the market is hotting up right
46 VILLA BALBIANO now, says Fleur Kinson.
One of the most iconic historic dwellings on 90 PROPERTY SHOWCASE
p40 VENICE
p27 TURIN
p32 TUSCANY
p80 ABRUZZO
SALENTO p20
CONTRIBUTORS
Joe Gartman, Diana Henry, Fleur Kinson, Rachael Martin,
Mario Matassa, Adrian Mourby, Jamie Oliver, Sara Scarpa, Franz Sidney
For everyone who loves Italy content of Italia! is correct we cannot take
any responsibility nor be held accountable
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THIS MONTH
News, events, the latest book releases, top retail picks – we
bring you the best of Italy in our monthly round-up
Readers’ Photos
Our pick of your Italian snaps
p8
News & Views
What’s been happening in Italy
p10
Italia! recommends
New openings and courses
p14
What’s on in November
The best events and festivals
p17
A rare opportunity to
see Leonardo da Vinci’s
Codex Leicester at the
Uffizi Gallery in Florence
this month. Read the full
story on page 12
THIS MONTH
Readers’ Photos
Send us your favourite Italian travel
photos, and each month the best will win
a bottle of Villa Sandi Il Fresco Prosecco
and exclusive bottle stopper!*
*Prosecco and bottle stopper delivered to mainland UK addresses only. To find out more about Villa Sandi and Bellavita, see May 2017 issue.
Reg Murray, Broughty Ferry, Dundee
“The Senate building in Rome with the head of Caesar
being projected onto it. It was not where the Senate met
when he was assassinated but it makes for a good photo.”
THIS MONTH
News & Views
Italy’s Lakes 1
scenery, great swimming and watersports,
Lake Maggiore is one of Italy’s beloved pretty towns and several islands, such as Isola
northern lakes. The Borromeo family has dei Conigli (‘Island of the Rabbits’).
dominated three islands on the lake since
the 16th and 17th centuries: Bella, Madre and
Pescatori. On Bella wander the sumptuous
palace and pyramid of terraced gardens; on
Madre explore the lush, exotic gardens around
the family’s summer villa; and on Pescatori
enjoy a plate of fried lake fish on the shore of
this working fisherman’s island. Back on land,
the cobbled streets and squares of Stresa hold
their charm from the days of the Grand Tour.
3 5
Tucked away to the west behind Lake Trasimeno in Umbria is a popular
Maggiore, pretty Orta is the smallest of place to holiday. The area around the
Jane Keightley
the northern lakes and is often deemed lake and its shores is protected, as it
Image ©
the most exclusive. To get the best from is rich in nature, and the landscape around
your visit to this little gem, base yourself in the lake is dotted with historic castles.
exquisite Orta San Giulio, which is packed with
quaint shops and hotels.
4
More tranquil than Garda, but no less
beautiful, and just as popular as a holiday
destination, the banks of Como are also
home to many of the world’s super-wealthy.
The scenery is rugged and towns like Bellagio,
Menaggio and Como are rightly world famous.
(More about Lake Como’s Villa Balbiano on p46.)
Image © iStock
Morandi Bridge, which tragically collapsed on the 14th of August this year. Piano, who designed mortality in elderly people. Please
London’s Shard and the Pompidou Centre in Paris, grew up in Genoa and has also already been pass us the olive oil!
heavily involved in redesigning the city’s Old Port area. He currently lives in Paris but has an • Italy has been voted the world’s
office in Genoa and retains close bonds with the city of his childhood. It is understood that best country in the CN Travel Awards
he has already presented officials with a design for his new bridge. In an interview with the 2018 (something that Italia! readers
Observer, Piano said he felt it was his duty to respond to the disaster in some way, and that have known all along!). The awards,
the design of the new structure will be hugely important: “It must be a place where people can voted by readers
recognise the tragedy in some way, while also providing a great entrance to the city.” of Condé Nast
Traveller magazine,
saw other accolades
Image © iStock
travelling around her home country rather than farther post by Paris), while Vair Spa at
afield. Come with her as she takes a voyage of discovery Puglia’s Borgo Egnazia was runner-up
around Italy – her traveller’s tales are crammed with for best overseas hotel spa.
practical advice and beautiful imagery. Her enthusiasm
for travel around her homeland is infectious and her
itineraries packed with detail. www.myitaliandiaries.com GOING DOWN
• Fragments of tufa rock fell from
the exterior walls of the Passetto
di Borgo (the covered walkway
The Da Vinci Codex from Rome’s Castel San’Angelo to
From the 29th of October until the 20th of January 2019 you’ll the Vatican) in September, seeing
have the rare chance to see Leonardo da Vinci’s Codex Leicester the area temporarily cordoned
at the Uffizi Gallery in Florence. This remarkable collection of off by fire teams. Firemen also
handwritten notes and sketches dates from between 1504 and removed some more parts that were
thought to be at risk of falling. The
Image courtesy Bill Gates/© bgC3
Call our Italy Experts now on 01293 832243 to find out how we can help
make your Christmas special, or visit www.citalia.com for inspiration.
ABTA
TA No.V4068
N O V E M B E R I TA L I A !
Birthday concert
Image © Iain Reid
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2
hotel is the If you love Italy’s
‘white diamonds’
30-bedroom,
Image © iStock
then November is the
3-star, family perfect time to enjoy a taste
owned and run Le Pleiadi in at the various Italian events
that celebrate the white
Forte dei Marmi in Tuscany. truffle. At the SAN MINIATO
Half the rooms overlook the WHITE TRUFFLE FESTIVAL
wonderful garden and pool, in Tuscany you can buy fresh
truffles and other delicious
whilst rooms at the back regional delicacies. November
is white
on
have a view of the Apuan truffle seas
10-11, 17-18,
mountains. The hotel is only 24-25 November, www.
sanminiatopromozione.it
300 metres from the beach
3
and a 20-minute walk to the In Venice, the FESTA DELLA MADONNA DELLA SALUTE (Festival of
the Madonna of Health) is one of the city’s most beloved festivals,
centre of the town. and it’s a great time to visit. A temporary bridge crosses the Grand
Canal to allow participants in this procession to access the church of the
Madonna della Salute. And, of course, local vendors are on hand with stalls
Family-run favourite selling souvenirs and tasty treats. 21 November
on Tuscany’s coast
4
Music lovers should head for Parma in Emilia-Romagna in November,
as the BAREZZI FESTIVAL takes place this month. Named after
Giuseppe Verdi’s patron (Antonio Barezzi), the event celebrates
all sorts of music, from soul and pop to electronic jazz and trip-hop.
Expect plenty of fantastic performances.
21-24 November, www.barezzifestival.it
5
Get your running shoes ce, run!
Run Floren
on (or simply cheer from
the sidelines) if you’re
in Florence at the end of the
month. The 35th FLORENCE
MARATHON promises to be
as exciting as ever – following
a route that starts and finishes
at the Piazza Duomo and takes
in myriad iconic sights along
the way. 25 November,
The pool at Le Pleiadi
www.firenzemarathon.it
VIEWPOINT
The Amalfi Coast’s breathtaking ‘Path of the Gods’ stretches from
the hilltop town of Bomerano to Nocelle, a frazione of Positano
Clockwise
from top left:
Impromptu
fresh fruit and
vegetable market
at Porto Cesareo;
visitors and locals
enjoying the sea
views at Otranto;
one of the many
antiques and flea
street markets in
lively Lecce; the
typical delicacy
of sea urchins
are found in
Porto Badisco;
travelling by
Appeta in
Otranto; Lecce
back street with
the typical silky
smooth Levantine
stone paving; bike
hire on the beach
at Gallipoli; a
Cinquecento in
Lecce; Sunset over
la Spiaggia della
Purità (Purity
Beach), Gallipoli
Salento
Sara Scarpa travels to Salento in Puglia and
discovers a timeless land ‘beyond the sea’
P
uglia, the iconic and much loved ‘boot heel’ of Italy, is a
large and varied region that has been a crossroads for several
civilisations and cultures over the centuries. Salento, possibly
the best known area of Puglia, covers the bottom part of the
heel: the peninsula dividing the Ionian and Adriatic seas. (Just
draw an imaginary line from west to east on the map from Taranto to
Brindisi, and Salento covers approximately all the area from this line to
the southernmost point at Santa Maria di Leuca.)
Ancient Salento belonged to Magna Graecia, the part of southern Italy
settled by the Greeks in the 8th century BC, and its original inhabitants
were the Messapians. There is a strong imprint of antiquity in Salento,
but the peninsula has been ruled by so many different waves of conquerors
during the centuries since the Greeks that its history is now complex and
mixed. It boasts incredible culture, offering great archaeological heritage,
beautiful art and craftsmanship, fascinating ancient traditions, stunning
landscapes, dreamlike beaches and excellent gastronomy.
OSTERIA DA ANGIULINO 8 •
Via Principi di Savoia, 24 – 73100 Lecce
☎ +39 0832 245146
This unpretentious osteria in the heart of
Lecce offers lovely simple dishes and is full
of locals. It is always incredibly busy so you
must book in advance.
●
€
St Peter’s Church, Otranto The wedding driver in Otranto Pescoluse: the famous ‘Maldives’ of Salento
ACQUAMARINA B&B 13 •
Via Silvio Pellico, 18 – 73010 Porto Cesareo
The beaches and translucent sea port to the eastern shores of the DON’T MISS
that are a short distance from Lecce Adriatic Sea. During our visit an ☎ +39 333 121 0636
LA TARANTELLA www.bedacquamarina.com
really are special. An example of extravagant wedding was taking In the piazze Excellent B&B run by a friendly family
these is the fabulous beach of Torre place in the Castello Aragonese, of Apulia there right in the centre of Porto Cesareo, with
dell’Orso (located in the Marina the impressive 15th-century fortress are often fantastic views over the harbour. Two big
di Melendugno, in the province of that today hosts exhibitions and opportunities terraces, a very nice restaurant and clean,
Lecce) which is only about half an cultural events. The entrance was to enjoy a modern bedrooms will make your stay here
hour’s drive from Lecce. This is a adorned with flowers and outside performance
very enjoyable.
of tarantella,
thin stretch of white sand (around
1km) with crystalline blue water,
the chauffeur was waiting in his
smart car alongside many locals
particularly
in summer.
RELAIS CORTE PALMIERI 14 •
Corte Palmieri, 3 – 73014 Gallipoli
particularly transparent thanks to who were eagerly waiting for the The tarantella ☎ +39 0833 326 5318
currents of the Canale d’Otranto. It newlyweds to appear. is a couples www.relaiscortepalmieri.it
is surrounded by calcareous rocks This old town is small but folk dance
This historic house in the heart of the old
full of interesting caves and has a beautiful, boasting a labyrinth of characterised
town centre dates back to the 18th century.
by quick steps
lush pine forest as its backdrop. narrow streets, a dazzling 11th- and flirtatious
It has elegant interiors and beautiful
This lovely bay is known for century cathedral with magnificent movements, terraces with citrus trees and prickly pears
being home to the famous twin rock mosaic floors and the tiny frescoed usually where you can enjoy a breakfast buffet or
stacks called the Due Sorelle, the Two church of San Pietro, which is one accompanied by a drink.
Sisters. Also nearby in Roca Vecchia,
you will find the picturesque Grotta
of the best examples of Byzantine
buildings in Puglia. Beyond
tambourines.
Its origin is
RELAIS VALLE DELL’IDRO 15 •
Via Giovanni Grasso, 4 – 73028, Otranto
connected with
della Poesia (the Cave of Poetry) – the old town there are bars and ☎ +39 0836 804427
tarantism, a
form of hysteria www.otrantohotel.com
beautiful, with a labyrinth of narrow streets the tarantula Superb views over Otranto, elegant rooms
spider – the with modern comforts, a roof garden with
frenzied dancing solarium and jacuzzi, and a wellness centre.
•
is supposed to
one of the most beautiful natural restaurants overlooking the curved have curative TENUTA CENTOPORTE 16
pools in the world and very popular bay, providing some lovely alfresco effects for bite Via Vecchia Otranto Giurdignano,
for diving. According to an ancient dining options. victims. Località Montibianchi, Otranto
legend this is the location where a Just over an hour’s drive from ☎ +39 0836 801886
beautiful princess used to bathe, and Lecce, towards the southern end of www.tenutacentoporte.it
it has inspired many a poem. the region, you will find the Marina If you can drive and do not mind not
di Pescoluse. It is in this area on being in the centre of town, this is the
ANCIENT OTRANTO the Ionian coast, 10km from Santa ideal setting for a relaxing luxury holiday.
Immersed in the countryside between
Around 30 miles southeast of Lecce Maria di Leuca, between Torre Vado
Otranto and Giurdignano, the Tenuta has
is Otranto, a very ancient town of and Torre Pali, that the famous a beach club with VIP loungers and straw
Greek origin. In Roman times it Maldives of Salento are located. The umbrellas where you can enjoy relaxing
was important for being the nearest coastline is low and sandy and the days in perfect privacy.
Up on the Roof
I
n a little modernist fantasy of a penthouse,
atop a huge commercial building in
southern Turin, you’ll find an art museum
like no other. It’s called the Pinacoteca
Giovanni e Marella Agnelli, and the
penthouse is known as the Scrigno – “jewel box”
or “treasure chest”. The collection is small – just
25 pieces – but the quality is astonishing. Among
the paintings are six superb views of Venice by
Canaletto, masterpieces by Giambattista Tiepolo,
Manet, Renoir and Matisse, and even two pictures
by Picasso. Modigliani’s famous Reclining Nude
Renzo Piano’s Bubble conference centre
is there as well, along with a couple of statues on top of the Lingotto building
by Canova. My first visit there was just before
Christmas last winter.
I rode the escalator from the building’s The Agnelli Pinacoteca, an art
ground-floor entrance to the first floor, walked museum like no other
down a wide corridor lined with shops, found
a rather obscure side passage leading to a small
lift, and pushed the button for the top floor.
When the door opened at the Scrigno, I paid €10
for entry to the Pinacoteca; and then, without
taking even a passing glance at the artworks,
walked out of the penthouse onto the roof.
I meant no disrespect to Tiepolo, Matisse, et
al., of course; but I had come to see first-hand
another extraordinary work of art, or at least one
spectacular part of it. Because the entire building
was, when it was first made, the embodiment
of everything the Futurist artists of the time
worshipped: modern industrial might, assembly-
line production, power, and speed. In fact, having
left the jewel box, I was now standing on a roof-
top automobile race-track, an oval test course over
a kilometre long. There, I ignored the lingering
winter snow on the road surface and imagined
newly-minted automobiles accelerating through
the thrilling, elegantly banked curves at the
corners of the track.
The building is the Lingotto, the legendary
Fiat automobile factory, designed to allow raw Don’t lean over the edge!
materials to enter the structure at the ground
floor and emerge as completed vehicles on the
roof, ready for a spin around the track. Designed
by the engineer Giacomo Mattè Trucco in 1916,
the factory produced 80 different car models from
1923 to 1982, including such automotive icons as
the Fiat 500A, the Topolino. The last car to emerge
onto the roof was a Lancia Delta.
Created a few years before the Fascist takeover
of the Kingdom of Italy, the Lingotto survived
Mussolini, World War II (during which it was
bombed by the RAF and the USAAF several
times), and the abolition of the Italian monarchy.
It lasted through the post-war economic recovery,
the massive migration of workers from the south
to northern industries like Fiat, the creation of
huge new urban neighbourhoods to house them,
labour unrest, riots, government scandals, and
terrorism from groups like the Red Brigades. By
the early 1980s, though, most of Fiat’s automobile
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W H E N Y O U S U B S C R I B E T O I TA L I A ! M A G A Z I N E
LA VITA
È BELLA
by Jill Foulston
The perfect gift for those with
a passion for all things Italian
and the best things of life
– beautiful architecture,
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£25
T
he unspoilt views of the olive and it was a chance meeting while she was
groves surrounding the beautiful on holiday in Italy in 2004 that brought the
Tuscan village of Montemerano couple together. “I was on a short holiday
are a constant source of visiting a friend. I met Andrea after 18 hours
inspiration to wood artists and my short stay turned into a more than
Andrea Brugi and Samina Langholz. To three-week vacation. Andrea didn’t speak a
them, a gnarled piece of wood is a thing word of Danish or English and I didn’t know
of beauty that they will transform into a one single word in Italian,” she laughs.
Samina and Andrea in
unique and desirable hand-made and signed Was it love at first sight? “I think very
the workshop at their
17th-century Tuscan home
object to grace any home. close to… Definitely love at second sight!”
Born in Montemerano, Andrea has lived
all his life in the picturesque mountain THE SIMPLE THINGS OF LIFE
village. Although he trained as a land Growing up in an olive grove, surrounded by
surveyor, he has always worked with nature and the simple things of life in a village
his hands, whether it be rebuilding of artisans, working with wood was second
and restoring the village’s old houses nature to Andrea. “I guess my real passion
or creating items out of wood as a for wood started when I was helping my dad.
hobby. Samina grew up in Denmark, He was an electrician and was always helping
someone who needed a hand in our village.
I fell in love with the old houses, how they
were constructed, and all the little quirks that
were made or repaired over the years. Today
we live in one of those 17th-century houses.
It was built in 1678 and we have renovated
every square metre with our bare hands.”
person needs in their home: a piece you
VINTAGE TREASURES
In the hot summer months they escape with
their six-year-old daughter, Gloria, to a little
wooden house in Denmark, where they spend
every Saturday at a local flea market selling
the vintage treasures they have collected
during the Tuscan winter.
Their love of flea markets and antiques is
reflected in their home – “It is hard to keep
it simple!” – a mix of Danish classics, oil
paintings, many, many lamps, oriental rugs
and, of course, their own designs, including
the first dining table they made together
from two huge planks of solid poplar on a
construction of vintage iron scaffolding.
They love to travel and are inspired by art,
fabrics, ceramics and old tools that they might
come across. (“Everything that is handmade
is interesting, isn’t it?” says Samina.) But
the husband and wife team would never live
anywhere else. “Living in a village with 350
people might seem boring or uninspiring,
but for Andrea it is all about the nature, the
smells, the past, the stories that inspire him.
He is a product of his village. He wouldn’t
work as he does, think as he does, or be who
he is if he had been born anywhere else.”
They now have a worldwide following,
have collaborated with leading furniture
designers and have exhibited at Milan’s
prestigious Salone del Mobile interiors show
of Tuscany
the breakfast table.”
PASSION FOR THE CRAFT Clockwise from top
Recently they spent a year working on an left: Two leather
inspiring book, published this spring, in straps and a driftwood
which they share their passion for the craft branch make a stylish
alternative clothing
and show readers how they too can make
rail; copper or brass
beautiful wood objects for the home from nails are hammered
twenty simple carpentry projects. into place on the
Included are an egg cup made from a clothes rail leather
reclaimed beam and broom handle and a straps; Samina and
chopping board featuring a hand-carved Andrea selecting wood
“butterfly”, an old trick for stabilising a from the surrounding
Montemerano hills
crack. With easy step-by-step instructions,
and photographed on location in Tuscany, the
projects are suitable for all levels of expertise –
even the complete beginner!
What advice would Samina give to a
Woodworking –
Traditional Craft Tour
Tourbegins
begins19th
19thMay
May2019
2019
novice embarking on one of the designs for Modern Living
is written by Tuscan
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answer? I think our first advice would be and Andrea Brugi, and
andthe theBoboli
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a couple of times before you start with the by Ditte Isager,
perfect piece of wood, and then follow your published by Jacqui
heart. There is no such thing as a perfect Small at £20.00,
result. When you are happy with your work available from www.
amazon.co.uk. Their
it is perfect. We are making a big effort with
handmade and
this book to explain how important it is to signed pieces are
us to embrace the non-perfect.” available worldwide
Whether you are inspired to reach for the through Goop,
carpentry tools or not, the book is a reminder Eataly, and their
of the beauty of the natural world – and the online shop https:// Guests
Guestswill
willstay
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www.tuscansecrets.com
www.tuscansecrets.com
D I S C O V E R I TA L I A !
MAKING
TRACKS
Down by the
lakeside at Colico
Lierna, en route
Ice cream in Colico for Varenna
Part Three – To Lake Como Spagna against a backdrop of the mountains of the
Valtellina and stop at Piona, famous for its abbey
that’s home to Cistercian monks.
I start off in Lecco, at the southern tip Lake Como has many moods; moods that change
of Lake Como’s eastern leg, the part with the weather, moods that convey certain sadness;
of the lake that is known as both Lake and colours that change accordingly. Virgil called it
Lecco and Lake Lario. The setting is “our greatest lake”. Byron, Shelley, Rossini, Stendhal
spectacular, a whole town framed by the and others all visited and loved it. Today it’s windy,
dolomitic Grigne mountain range with slightly cloudy, but when the sun’s out it’s hot. A
Colico station its two peaks – Grignone, or Grigna settentrionale, and brown, utterly uninspiring apartment block is a
Grignetta, or Grigna meridionale – and most distinctively reminder that Lake Como is more than the sum of its
by Mount Resegone, with its saw-like profile that celebrities, desirable holidays and picture-postcard
towers over the town. blue skies. Varenna station may wear its very best, yet
Lecco is a town that offers many opportunities for forgotten stations such as Dervio are covered in graffiti.
climbing and its Lecco Spiders mountaineering group The lakeside square in Colico is wide, open and
is internationally renowned. It’s also the setting for windy, with a small marina. “There aren’t many tourists
Alessandro Manzoni’s The Betrothed, the famous 19th- this year,” I’m told at the gelateria. “Fewer than last
century novel describing the love story of Renzo and year. But then I suppose there isn’t much here. It’s not
Lucia, and compulsory high-school reading for many as if there’s a golf course.” No, it’s just as it is, and it’s
an Italian teenager. beautiful – although that doesn’t help the local people.
I take the regional train to Sondrio, although I’ll A table of men are whiling away their afternoon behind
be getting off at Colico. The train is old and rather me over coffee and possibly Braulio, the local digestif.
noisy and I have to pull the window down to take I order a coppa di gelato with a lakeside view and syrupy
photos. We’re travelling above the lake, past Abbadia Amarena cherries on top.
Lariana (literally, the Abbey of Lake Lario), named The train going home is one of the fast ones, with
after its Benedictine abbey. The abbey has gone now just a few stops and then straight on to Milan. A young
Across the carriage are two girls and a boy; they are working
out what they’ve spent and who owes what to whom. They are
in their early twenties, the age I was when I first came to Italy.
but there’s a long, white, stony beach that attracts woman sits opposite me. “Sorry if I’ve put my feet up.
plenty of holidaymakers and locals out for the day. My legs are killing me. I’ve got veins already, and I’m
On we go along the mountainside, into tunnels and only twenty eight. I’m a waitress.” She tells me she’s
out of tunnels, rejoining the views of the lake below; a from a small village above Morbegno, in the Valtellina,
view of cypresses, red-roofed houses, church bell towers, that she has moved to Switzerland and is hoping for a
clusters of yellow and ochre-coloured buildings and better future, “although I’m already twenty eight.”
villas with fine gardens. We pass stations with their Across the carriage from us are two girls with long
station houses, their doorways and windows emphasised dark hair and a boy with a head of peroxide blonde; they
in a darker shade of ochre brick, and the familiar blue are working out what they’ve spent and who owes what
station signs with their white writing. to whom. I would say they are in their early twenties,
There’s Mandello del Lario, home to Moto Guzzi the age I was when I first came to Italy. In those days I’d
since 1921. Then Olcio, Lierna, Fiumelatte, Varenna and get the train up the lake and sit and eat ice creams
its tourists – or rather Varenna-Esino Perledo as the train in cafés. I could barely speak any Italian – none when
station is actually slightly above Varenna in the village I first arrived. I hadn’t yet learned this language that
of Perledo; and Esino comes from Esino Lario, which lies attracted me with its sounds and gestures, or developed
A railway journey above in the Northern Grigna Regional Park. my own identity within it.
along the shores of A woman in colourful African dress and carrying We travel back towards Lecco, past people on
Lake Como brings
back memories of early
two huge bags gets off the train at Bellano and goes beaches under umbrellas. We stop once more at Varenna,
days in Italy enjoying to wait at a bus stop. A girl on the train continues to where Japanese ladies with sun-protective headwear
ice creams and views read the book on her knee. A few people get on with join us, along with tourists with suitcases, while other
and the sound of a
language not yet rucksacks and walking sticks, along with a mother tourists get off and make their way towards hotels, guest
understood. and her children. We move onto the plain of Pian di houses, stereotypes and their own dreams.
I
t’s the sestiere that Venetians call truly Venetian. But Castello is also full of beautiful churches,
The neighbourhood of Castello consists of the palazzi and scuole. Venice’s mighty Arsenale rises like
same narrow lanes, broad campi and monumental a gigantic Gothic fortress at its eastern end, where
churches as the other five sestieri, but it lacks it’s guarded by the island of San Pietro di Castello
the crowds and the tourist-trap trattorias. In (from which the sestiere takes its name). Two of the most
Castello it’s rare to find a waiter standing in the street imposing churches in the whole of Venice, San Francesco Clockwise from far
left: The sestiere of
urging you inside. You’re more likely to find that your della Vigna and the Basilica dei Santi Giovanni e Paolo,
Castello is full of
chosen restaurant – modest, despite its excellent reviews are just half a kilometre apart in the northern corner quiet nooks where
– is located next to the local chemist or a shop selling of the sestiere. you will rarely see
washing-machine parts. another tourist;
Castello exerts a slow charm but it’s probably the A FAVOURITE WALK Zanipolo, Venice’s
easiest sestiere in which to feel at home. Teenagers come I have a favourite walk every time I visit. It’s good to most beautiful
charging out of the Liceo Scientifico on Fondamenta di check that not too much has changed in this, the largest church;
the incomplete
Santa Giustina, the cloisters of Chiesa San Lorenzo have of Venice’s sestieri. I start on Riva degli Schiavoni, Chiesa di San
been turned into the supermarket and the Alta Acqua outside Santa Maria della Pietà. This tall, mid-18th- Lorenzo; San
bookshop has steps made out of old magazines and a seat century church was built on the site of the Santa Maria Zaccaria, gateway
where you can read as the canal water laps into the shop. della Pietà for which Vivaldi composed so much music. to Castello
Images by Kate Tadman-Mourby
Luigi Frizzo
Clockwise from
left: Street art
near San Francesco
della Vigna; Londra
Palace and the
Paradiso restaurant;
inside the Ospedale
Civile, the Chapel
of San Lazzaro
dei Mendicanti;
the monument to
the doges inside
Zanipolo
SCULPTURES OF GIANTS
Nearing the end of my morning walk, I pass the
Church of Santa Maria dei Derelitti which has been
deconsecrated and is now used for concerts. Its façade
was decorated by Baldassarre Longhena and contains
extraordinary sculptures of giants by Giusto Le Court.
Once again I find myself wishing I could get further
back to appreciate their monumental muscularity.
I end up at Venice’s most beautiful church (forget
San Marco). Known locally as Zanipolo but officially PARADISO
as Chiesa di SS Giovanni e Paolo, this is a lofty Gothic GETTING THERE Riva degli Schiavoni
masterpiece and contains funerary monuments to ☎ +39 041 520 6644
25 doges, each more spectacular than the previous. ➤ BY PLANE
British Airways offers return flights Friendly waiters serve a good-value lunch
The Chapel of the Rosary contains a dramatically carved from Heathrow, Gatwick and London City here on the ground floor of the Hotel
ceiling featuring three paintings by Veronese. Another airports from £62. Savoia & Jolanda. People come for the view
hour can be happily expended here and nearby there British Airways Holidays (www.
of San Giorgio Maggiore and, for once, are
are coffee shops next to the statue of Bartolomeo britishairways.com) offers three nights not overcharged for it.
Colleoni, Captain-general of the Republic of Venice, at the Danieli in Castello from £499pp. OSTERIA OLIVA NERA
when you need a break. Price includes return flights.
Calle Seconda de la Fava
Finally I’ll walk into the hospital – yes, Venice’s The cheapest way to transfer from Marco ☎ +39 041 522 2170
modern hospital is entered through the beautiful Scuola Polo airport to Castello is by taking the www.olivanera.com
Grande di San Marco. No hospital reception in the Venice Airport Express (www.atvo.it/ Isabella serves excellent seafood in this
it-venice-airport.html) followed by a
world can compare. Once inside, signs to Oncologia and cosy, informal restaurant in Castello’s old
vaporetto from Piazzale Roma to San
Radiografia rub shoulders with ancient cloisters and Zaccaria. The fastest way to transfer is
Greek neighbourhood.
the most wonderful chapel, which was part of an old by water taxi (www.motoscafivenezia LOCAL
leper hospital that once stood on this spot. How many .it) which costs €110 for a maximum four Salizada dei Greci
hospitals can boast Tintoretto’s Saint Ursula and the people if booked in advance.
☎ +39 041 241 1128
Eleven Thousand Virgins on its wall? ➤ BY TRAIN www.ristorantelocal.com
We are now at the northern border of Castello. Railbookers (☎ 0203 780 2222) offers One of the best trendy new restaurants in
Across the next bridge I’ll be into bustling Cannaregio. three nights at the Londra Palace in Castello, housed in an old shop opposite
But what an extraordinary neighbourhood Castello is. Castello, including all trains, one night Chiesa di Sant’Antonin. The innovative chef
in Geneva en route and a return flight from Murano places great emphasis
Nowhere else does Venice so effortlessly combine the from £1,189pp.
mundane and sublime. on sourcing local produce.
Villa Balbiano
Italian Opulence
on Lake Como
One of the most iconic historic dwellings on the shores of Lake Como,
Villa Balbiano is a glorious masterpiece of Renaissance-style architecture
V
illa Balbiano has been reborn. Its rooms eminent artists and writers. The warm and intimate
have regained their stately magnificence atmosphere of these encounters is still palpable today.
and its decorations harmonize beautifully The library leads to the Sala dell’Arco di Tito, with
with its timeless setting – luxuriant splendid mural paintings by Torricelli on all four walls
vegetation and the limpid expanse of and the ceiling. This richly coloured room provides
water encircled by mountains. access to one of the newly invented spaces created in
Text © Rubens Modigliani. Images © Bruno Ehrs from Villa Balbiano: Italian Opulence on Lake Como, Flammarion 2018.
An ideal itinerary for discovering the villa begins the project: an indoor swimming pool looking out onto
on the ground floor – the original and oldest part of the garden through plate-glass windows installed in
the villa – in the rooms and halls painted with mural archways. The vaulted ceiling was inspired by the aviary
paintings by renowned 18th-century Italian artists such at Villa Borghese in Rome. The two blank walls at
as Giovan Antonio Torricelli and his school. The Sala either end are adorned with enchanting landscape scenes:
delle Colonne, the heart of the villa, features splendid an imaginary veduta of Lake Como on the opposite wall
late 17th-century frescoes by Giovan Paolo and Raffaele as you enter, while behind you is a panorama of Sorrento
Recchi, and four late 18th-century frescoed busts by including Villa Astor, which also belongs to the owners
Francesco and Gaetano Cartosio. of Villa Balbiano, based on a 19th-century painting of
Entering the villa, the eye is immediately drawn the villa. The other ground-floor wing contains a very
to the Sala Durini, special and intimate
so-named because View from the gardens of Villa space: Durini’s
of the coat of arms Balbiano across Lake Como chapel. Damaged
of Cardinal Durini and stripped bare
emblazoned on the over the centuries,
ceiling. Originally it has now been
the study, it has brought back to its
now become the original form and
library. Three meditative peace.
beautiful bookcases The paintings
are filled with on the walls and
historical volumes ceiling are the only
that transport us surviving elements
back in time; indeed, from the original
this was where the chapel, while all
erudite cardinal the furnishings –
liked to receive paintings, icons,
Louis XIV table and Marie Enter the villa into Sala del Durini,
Antoinette armchairs in the once an office and now a library
peaceful Sala del Tempietto
of the lake are the most breathtaking of any in the villa Louis XVI polished steel and gilded
and its bathroom is the only one with white fixtures. bronze andirons around the fireplace
The interior motif in the bathroom is based on its
historical white Carrara marble bathtub and was used as
the model for all the others. These immense bathrooms
are faced in marble of different colours from various
sources. The master bathroom is distinguished by its
amazonite interior scheme with sinks, custom made by
a French artisan, set upon massive vintage sculpted and
gilded wooden consoles, and 19th-century mirrors.
Inspired by the eclectic nature of the Italian
Renaissance – a taste for the old and a yen for the new
– the owners and designers succeeded in striking a
perfect balance between the history and heritage of Villa
Balbiano and the most advanced technology, creating
a comfortable dwelling of the rarest elegance that is a
paean to the art of living.
Villa Balbiano:
Opulence on Lake
Como With text by
Ruben Modigliani,
photography Bruno
Ehrs. Published by
Flammarion, £55.
ITALIA!
CookITALIA!
Jamie Cooks Italy
Cook up a delicious autumn feast
with Jamie Oliver
p54
Before the Passeggiata
A southern supper to make for
family and friends
p 59
Vero Italiano
Making the most of leftovers,
Italian-style
p 66
DrinkITALIA!
We taste top Montepulciano
d'Abruzzo wines
p75
21 pages
of fabulouds
Italian foo
and drink
Stracotto
Beautiful slow-cooked beef ragù This is about getting right to
➤ SERVES 8
the heart of the Italian kitchen
➤ TOTAL TIME 4 hours and frankly, celebrating the
A Tuscan family favourite: think the emotion of Bolognese utter joy of great Italian food.
on the familiarity scale, but with a whole new level of
comfort. It’s inspired by Nonna Miriam from Panzano, and
this simple cooking process gives you what she calls a ‘rich
plate’ – she likened it to the moment you know you’ve got
a winning hand in poker. To serve, it’s traditional to enjoy
the rich sauce with freshly cooked tagliatelle as a primo,
serving the rest of the sauce with the meat as a secondo,
teamed with steamed greens, oozy polenta, mash or
whatever you fancy!
➤ SERVES 10-12
➤ TOTAL TIME 2 hours, plus chilling
PASTRY
• 250g plain flour, plus extra for dusting
Panissa is risotto’s frumpy but very, very tasty cousin. The way the difference was
1 To make the pastry, put the flour and icing sugar into a explained to me by Rosa, who taught me, is that there’s simply more in panissa so
large bowl with a good pinch of sea salt. Make a well in it’s considered more of a whole meal than risotto is. You know it’s ready when it’s
the middle, then add the oil, wine and vanilla paste. thick enough for your spoon to stand up in the middle – how cool is that?
Use a fork to whip up the wet mixture, gradually bringing
the flour in from the outside until it comes together as a • 50g piece of higher-welfare smoked pancetta
ball of dough. • 50g quality salami
2 Tip on to a lightly floured surface and knead for just a • 2 onions
couple of minutes, then wrap in clingfilm and place in • 2 sticks of celery
the fridge for 30 minutes. • 1 litre organic meat stock
3 On a flour-dusted surface, roll out the pastry to about • 1 bunch of fresh rosemary (30g)
3mm thick. Loosely roll it up around the rolling pin and • 300g Arborio risotto rice
unroll it over a 25cm loose-bottomed tart tin, easing and • 250ml Barbera d’Asti red wine
pushing it carefully into the sides. Trim off any excess, • 1 x 400g tin of quality plum tomatoes
patch up any holes, then prick the base with a fork, • 1 x 400g tin of borlotti beans
cover with clingfilm, and chill in the freezer for 1 hour • 4 sprigs of fresh flat-leaf parsley
30 minutes.
4 Preheat the oven to 180ºC/Gas Mark 4 . When the time’s 1 Chop the pancetta and salami into 1cm chunks, place in a cold casserole pan and put it on
up, bake the pastry case blind for 25 minutes, or until a medium-high heat to let the fat render out. Stir occasionally while you peel the onions
lightly golden. Meanwhile, finely grate the zest of 1 lemon and celery, then chop both into 1cm chunks. Stir the veg into the pan and cook for 10
and put aside. Squeeze all the lemons to give you 150ml of minutes, or until soft, stirring regularly. In a separate pan, simmer the stock and rosemary.
juice, then whisk with the rest of the filling ingredients 2 Stir the rice into the veg to toast for 2 minutes, then pour in the wine and let it cook
until smooth, by hand or in a food processor. Pour into the away. Scrunch in the tomatoes through your clean hands, then start adding the stock, a
tart case and bake for 30 minutes, dusting with icing sugar ladleful at a time, letting each one cook away before adding more. Keep a close eye on it
and sprinkling over the lemon zest for the last 5 minutes. and stir constantly for 20 minutes, or until the rice is cooked but still retains its shape.
Transfer to a wire rack to cool – it will have a slight Drain the beans and stir into the pan with the last ladleful of stock. When your spoon
wobble, but will set as it cools. Dust with extra icing stands up, it’s done. Taste, and season to perfection with black pepper. Finely chop and
sugar, then slice and serve. stir in the parsley leaves, then tuck on in.
CALORIES FAT SAT FAT PROTEIN CARBS SUGAR SALT FIBRE CALORIES FAT SAT FAT PROTEIN CARBS SUGAR SALT FIBRE
323kcal 14.4g 4.9g 8.5g 41.5g 22.8g 0.2g 08g 545kcal 11.3g 3.9g 22.4g 82.6g 9.4g 1.4g 8.5g
by Jamie Oliver
is published by
Michael Joseph,
£26. Photography
by David Loftus.
If you’re feeling
the Italian vibe,
a little slice for
breakfast with
a black coffee is
a real treat.
Burrata oozes lactic sweetness. It’s also the perfect focal point
for a dish that requires few other ingredients: start with good
burrata and there isn’t much that can go wrong. Here, the
saltiness of anchovies and capers and the sweetness of peppers
are excellent counterpoints. The fennel isn’t just for its aniseed
flavour, but also for crunch.
This might seem a hassle, but the paper 1 Preheat the oven to 180°C/Gas Mark 4. each with a little extra-virgin olive oil.
parcels aren’t just for show. The pasta, Clean the mussels: remove any beards and Lightly oil 2 roasting tins, too.
which cooks with the seafood, becomes barnacles (scrape the latter off with a 5 Parboil the pasta in lots of boiling, lightly
wonderfully flavoured with the fish. The table knife) and wash the shells. Tap each salted water for 7 minutes. Drain and
aroma as you open the packets is great, against the sink as you go and discard moisten it with extra-virgin olive oil. Heat
too: pure Mediterranean seaside. It’s any that are open and don’t close. the remaining ½ tbsp of extra-virgin olive
really worth doing (though hard to pull 2 Heat 2 tbsp of the extra-virgin olive oil in oil in a frying pan and quickly sauté the
off for more than four diners). a pan large enough to hold the mussels. prawns, just long enough to get a very
Add the onion and cook until soft but not pale pink colour – they will continue to
• 1kg mussels coloured. Add the garlic, chilli and cook in the parcels. Season.
These recipes
• 2½ tbsp extra-virgin olive oil, plus tomatoes, increase the heat a little and 6 Divide the pasta between the parcels,
have been taken
more for the parcels and pasta cook for another 3 minutes. Add the putting it in the middle. Add the prawns
from How to
Eat a Peach by
• 1 small onion, peeled and very finely alcohol and bring to the boil. and mussels with their sauce. (Don’t add
Diana Henry, chopped 3 Reduce the heat to medium, add the so much sauce that it starts to run across
published by • 3 garlic cloves, peeled and finely sliced mussels and cook for 2 minutes, or until the paper; it should cling to the pasta
Mitchell Beazley, • ¼ tsp chilli flakes they open, shaking the pan a couple of and seafood.) Season, then douse each
RRP £25. Imagery • 6 large tomatoes, peeled, deseeded times and throwing in the parsley for the portion with a little extra-virgin olive oil.
by Laura Edwards. and chopped last 30 seconds or so. When the mussels 7 Carefully pull the 2 longer edges of each
• 200ml dry white vermouth are cooked, remove and discard any which parcel together, turning them over to seal
• 2 tbsp finely chopped flat-leaf haven’t opened. Take half the mussels (don’t roll it up so the parcel is tight, you
parsley leaves out, remove the meat from the shells, want to make a kind of tent). Now seal
• 425g spaghetti return the meat to the pan and cover to each parcel by turning over the ends as
• 600g raw shelled king prawns, keep warm. well. Carefully move them to the roasting
deveined 4 Put together 4 double rectangles of tins and bake for 7 minutes. Transfer the
• sea salt flakes and freshly ground greaseproof paper (for extra strength), parcels to plates – again, be very careful
black pepper each about 44x26cm. Brush the centre of – and serve.
1 Mash the ricotta in a bowl and gradually add the milk and cream,
whisking with a fork or a balloon whisk so that everything mixes
together well. Add the sugar and zest, stirring to help the sugar
dissolve. Cover and put in the fridge to chill.
2 Add the lemon juice and churn in an ice cream machine, or
transfer to a shallow container and put in the freezer. If you’re
using the latter, manual method, take the ice cream out and
churn it – either using electric beaters or by putting the mixture
in a food processor – 3 times during the freezing process. Do this
first after about 1 hour, when the mixture is setting around the
edges, then at two-hour intervals. Cover with a lid, or with cling
film or greaseproof paper, between each churning; and also when
you store it.
3 While the ice cream is still a little soft, mix in the candied peel
and pistachio nuts. Freeze until needed, then serve sprinkled with
more candied peel and pistachio nuts, if you like.
ITALIAN JAMS
There’s nothing like a fruity conserve for brightening breakfast time –
and beyond! The Italians certainly make them well, which is why we are
indulging in a taste of the sweet life with seven fine jams this month
I
talian fruit jams never fail to satisfy a sweet tooth. Generally made quite
simply from fruit and sugar – and without the water content that bulks out
many mass-produced jams – artisan jams from Italy are known for their rich
and intense fruit flavours and natural sugar content. This mouth-wateringly
sweet spread is worth keeping in your larder at all times, and not just for your toast
at breakfast time – Italian jams and conserves have many more tasty uses, from
livening up panini and making sweet tarts to using as a glaze on tender cuts of meat
for a unique sweet and savoury combination, or eating with a strong hard cheese.
Figs, berries, cherries and plum are all firm favourites with the Italians, but there
are a host of other exciting jam flavour combinations out there, a few of which we
have sampled in the course of this feature, notably carrot and orange, liquorice and
prickly pear, along with more familiar (but no less flavoursome) ingredients.
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Vero Italiano
LEFTOVERS
In the next part of his series uncovering the secrets of Italian food, Mario Matassa
turns to the subject of leftovers. Economical, quick to cook, and packed with flavour,
Italian leftover recipes are the perfect way to make the most of what you have.
F
or Italians, using up leftover food is a virtue, It’s the same principle when it comes to risotto
and one that has been transformed into an or polenta. While both can be time-consuming dishes
artform. The Tuscans in particular are a to prepare in their own right, by making more than
shining example of this tradition. They have you need you are effectively getting two or more meals
invented more ways of using leftover bread for the effort of one.
than they have of using it fresh! One of Italy’s most More than any other store cupboard ingredient,
iconic dishes, the humble ribollita, is in fact nothing however, bread epitomises the Italian knack for culinary
more than a clever guise for leftover soup that has been invention. We all shop for our bread here on a daily
re-boiled and garnished with bread that has seen fresher basis and it would be unthinkable to sit down to a meal
days. Tuscans know only too well that twice-cooked without having fresh bread to accompany it. This means
vegetables concentrate the flavours and, in fact, this that at the end of the day there always seems to be a
dish tastes so good that restaurants today often charge surplus in the bread bin. Yet, in all the years I’ve been
exorbitant prices for their not-so-humble ribollita. living here, I’ve never seen anyone throw away bread.
Today’s use of leftovers in the Italian kitchen stems There are endless variations on the uses for old bread.
from a time when food was scarce and the idea of It can be ground into fine breadcrumbs and combined
•
a few cooked roast potatoes, chopped
30g Parmesan, grated Meatballs
•
•
1 tbsp olive oil
salt and freshly ground black pepper Polpette
➤ SERVES 4 ➤ PREPARATION 15 minutes ➤ COOKING 15 minutes
1 Place the olive oil in a frying pan, add the
roast potatoes and cook over a low heat, • 350g leftover boiled or roast meat 2 In a separate bowl, add the stale bread
until warmed through. Add the asparagus and (chicken, turkey or beef) and a few tablespoons of milk. Leave for
cook for 1-2 minutes. • 2 slices of day-old bread a few moments, until the bread has
2 Into a large bowl, crack the eggs; season • a few tablespoons of milk softened. Add the cheese, egg, bread,
them and beat well. Pour the eggs into the • 80g Parmesan, grated herbs, seasoning and lemon zest to the
frying pan and cook over a medium heat until • 1 free-range egg meat and mix together well. The mix
they set. Place onto serving plates and • a sprig of rosemary and sage, chopped should be a consistency that allows you
sprinkle generously with Parmesan. This can • salt and freshly ground black pepper to mould small meatballs with your
be eaten hot or cold. • grated zest of ½ an unwaxed lemon hands. If it is too wet, add a few dry
• olive oil, for frying breadcrumbs; if it is too dry, add a little
TIP When it comes to frittata, measurements milk. Form meatballs from the mixture,
are almost superfluous. It depends on what 1 Put the meat in a food processor and until the mixture is all used up.
and how much of each leftover item you have whizz it up for a minute, until it has 3 Heat a little olive oil in a frying pan,
in the fridge. Here I have used asparagus and been finely chopped. Or you could chop then fry the meatballs over a medium
roast potatoes, but you could add a handful of it by hand if you like. Place the chopped heat on all sides, until browned and
peas or broad beans as well, or instead. meat in a large bowl. cooked through.
Rice balls
Arancini
➤ SERVES 4
➤ PREPARATION 15 minutes
➤ COOKING 15 minutes
• 2 large floury potatoes with your hands. Finally, add the cheeses
• 200g leftover polenta to the bowl.
• 75g Taleggio cheese, chopped 3 Heat the olive oil in a frying pan. Form
• 30g Parmesan, grated small, flat patties from the polenta
• a few tablespoons of olive oil mixture and add to the pan. Fry them on
• leftover tomato ragù, for serving each side over a medium to high heat for
around 3-4 minutes, until golden and
1 Peel the potatoes, chop into chunks and crispy. Serve topped with a few spoonfuls
boil in a pan of salted water, until soft. of leftover tomato ragù.
2 Place the leftover polenta in a large bowl
and break it up roughly with your hands. TIP I’ve used Taleggio and Parmesan in this
Add the cooked potatoes while they are recipe, but you can use any cheese you
still warm and mix them together roughly have lying around.
ARANCINI BALLS
I’ve always wondered why arancini balls are especially popular in the
south of Italy, despite the fact that risotto is a northern speciality. Arancini
balls are the south’s answer to a great bar snack – in Naples they could be
classified as street food.
Their origins remain uncertain, although it is most likely that they
were first made either in Campania or Sicily, where they always have been
and still are most popular. Small balls of leftover rice are filled with either
a spoonful of meat ragù or chopped chicken and a cube of mozzarella, then
coated in egg and breadcrumbs and deep-fried until crispy on the outside
and meltingly tender on the inside.
My family comes from Lazio, and arancini balls were a regular treat.
As a child I would look forward to the weekly risotto because I knew what
would follow the next day. To this day, whenever I make risotto I make
more than I need because, like me, my sons are firm fans of arancini.
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MONTEPULCIANO
D’ABRUZZO
RED WINES
Abruzzo is perhaps an overlooked region, and the same
could be said (unfairly) about its wines. We examine the
Montepulciano d’Abruzzo grape to see what it has to offer
O
HE MO
EatITALIA!
MONTEPULCIANO MONTEPULCIANO MONTEPULCIANO
D’ABRUZZO D’ABRUZZO DOC 2017 D’ABRUZZO ‘JORIO’
DOC 2015 From Majestic Wines DOC 2015
From Berry Bros & Rudd www.majestic.co.uk From Great Western Wine
www.bbr.com Price £6.99 (or £5.99 each www.greatwesternwine.co.uk
Price £18.75 for a case of six) Price £13.50
The Faraone family have
produced their Montepulciano
d’Abruzzo since the 1970s and
This bright and breezy
Montepulciano d’Abruzzo
is from the ‘Majestic Loves’
Umani Ronchi is based in Le
Marche, although they do
also have vineyards across
CookITALIA!
you can taste their expertise entry-level range of wines the border in Abruzzo, where
in this well-balanced wine,
almost purple in the glass,
from the company. With
flavours of ripe plum, red
this wine is produced. Made
with grapes from a single
Just Desserts
with heady aromas of cherry, and a subtle herby vineyard, this is a full-bodied Italian dolci with a difference
blackberry and black cherry. note on the palate, this wine of distinction. A plum, for your Christmas celebrations
More fruits of the forest with straightforward wine is full of herb and red cherry bouquet
notes of tobacco and liquorice fruit and easy to drink. With a gives way to deeper flavour
follow on the palate, while lower ABV than some bottles on the palate with damson Taste the Rainbow
silky-smooth tannins and a here, you have a light-bodied and earthy liquorice. With Carmela Sereno’s coloured
refreshing acidity ensure a wine with subtle character firm, smooth tannins from
long, pleasing finish. Even and gentle tannins on the ageing in oak, you’ll savour pasta masterclass
better in a few years’ time. satisfying finish. Drink young. the wine’s ample finish.
Vero Italiano
Game on! We sample the
delights of the wild
Image © Lauren Bamford and Jesper Hede 2017. Taken from Lisa Valmorbida’s Pidapipó, published by Hardie Grant Books. Contents may be subject to change.
DrinkITALIA!
Fine Italian wines for the
festive season
QUICK
CONVERTER
We know that many of you may prefer to use imperial
or US weights and measures to cook our recipes – use
Images © iStock
our handy conversion tables to translate from metric
Homes ITALIA!
Homes in Abruzzo
This unspoilt region has
excellent homebuying prospects
p80
Property Showcase
Our round-up of top properties
for sale in Italy this month
p90
Ask ITALIA!
Our experts answer your
burning questions
13 pages p93
of expert
advice and
guidance
Homes in
Abruzzo
Spacious and unspoilt, with mighty highlands and gleaming beaches, Abruzzo is
a nature-lover’s paradise. It also has some of Italy’s best-value property, and so
it’s little surprise that the market is hotting up right now, says Fleur Kinson.
H
alfway down the eastern side of the inaccessible sort of place; the region has good, well-
Italian leg, Abruzzo confidently unfurls maintained roads and transport connections, and is easily
between the high Apennines and the reached via direct flights between the UK and regional
blue Adriatic. This is a region of wild, capital Pescara. And for all Abruzzo’s sense of space, you
majestic landscapes where modest- won’t feel cut off here. Socially, as you might imagine,
sized settlements sit surrounded by vast expanses of communities are warm and supportive; people help their
the natural world. Indeed, this is known as Italy’s neighbours, and outsiders are warmly embraced into
‘greenest region’ and a full third of Abruzzo’s land area the fold. The pace of life is slow and gentle, and there’s
is protected national parkland. always time to stop and chat. Abruzzo’s crime rate also
The region’s far west provides an arresting, celestial is rock-bottom, which only adds to the overall sense of
backdrop of mountain peaks, while the east meets the ease and peace that suffuses this place.
warm sea with more than eighty
miles of clean, golden beaches. The snowy peaks of the Gran Sasso UNCULTIVATED BEAUTY
And the distance between these are just a short drive from the sea Abruzzo might not have quite the
two extremes is not so great. historical significance, exquisite
As Christine Purdie of Abruzzo architecture or cultured air of
Property Italy points out, Italian regions such as Tuscany
“Abruzzo is the only place in or Umbria, and it might lack
Europe where you can look at the slick modernity or romantic
the sea while you are skiing. It fantasticality of some of Italy’s
is just one hour from the beach northern regions, but it definitely
to the slopes, which means that has a raw, uncultivated beauty
on a warm day in April you can all its own. If you love wild and
be skiing in the morning, have wholly unspoilt natural spaces, if
a tasty lunch in town and be you love kind and friendly people
sunbathing in the afternoon.” with a strong sense of community
Between the peaks and the and an instinct for hospitality,
beaches, lush green hills and then this is a part of Italy that’s
valleys cradle charming villages likely to appeal to you very
and small towns. Abruzzo is strongly. A lesser-known region
thinly-populated, which helps in a well-visited country, Abruzzo
keep it wonderfully quiet and offers a real sense of exploration
unspoilt, but it’s not a remote or and discovery.
Among its other charms, taking from €50,000. And from this Monia Di Guilmi of Abruzzo
Abruzzo offers lots of extremely price up to €100,000 there is a very Rural Property concurs. She says,
good-value property. This is perhaps wide choice of country properties. “In 2018 we received more foreign
the single most affordable of all Buyers with a budget of between visitors – and sold more properties –
the central Italian regions, thanks €150,000 and €200,000 would be than ever before. In February,
in part to its very late arrival on able to buy themselves a large villa I was informed by the property
the foreign-buyer scene, just before ready for immediate use. Prestigious web portal Rightmove that interest
the international financial crisis of seaside locations are always going in Abruzzo properties had increased
2008 rather paralysed the whole to be at the higher end of the price by 192% compared to the previous
buying-abroad shebang for several scale, but the value for money on the year. Prices are still very low, but
years. Today in Abruzzo, you might coast is still very good. I think they will slowly increase
get a two-bedroom townhouse in a It seems that overseas buyers because there is so much demand.
charming locale half an hour from have recently woken up to all that In the past it was easier to find old
the sea for just €35,000. Plenty of Abruzzo has to offer them, and the country houses with land; nowadays
habitable homes are yours for the last two years have seen a much it is getting harder because many
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L I V I N G I TA L I A !
Loreto Aprutino, where olive oil and wine The fertile hills of Atri produce some of
production are the major industries the best food in the region
L
hilly scenery, and plenty of golden
beaches within easy reach. isa Tomlin and Mickey Ward from Surrey own a two-bedroom
property half an hour from the sea in the hilly countryside of
PRECISE LOCATIONS southern Abruzzo. They intend to enjoy several weeks there every
Now that you know in general summer and make shorter visits at other times of the year.
how the land lies, do estate agents What drew them to Abruzzo? “I’ll confess we didn’t really know much
specialising in Abruzzo have about Italy until recently,” Lisa admits. “My older sister Margret was the
any specific tips and suggestions traveller in our family, and it was her who put us onto Abruzzo. We came
for precise locations you might out a few years ago and loved it – the outdoor life, the sense of space. We
consider? Christine Purdie of went hiking in the mountains and stayed in tiny village B&Bs in houses that
Abruzzo Property Italy says, “Most were hundreds of years old. They had vaulted stone ceilings and were deeply
of our clients are searching for atmospheric and beautiful. It felt like we were in another world. Then we
a property within easy access of spent a few days exploring the coast, where we found some perfect, pristine
the coast and close to an historic beaches that had hardly anyone on them, even in the middle of the summer!
village or town with shops, bars Sure, we also found buzzing resort-towns with lots of people and bars, but
and restaurants. The towns that we never felt that anywhere was actually jam-packed or overcrowded, which
made everything so much more relaxing and enjoyable for us.
“When my sister decided that she was going to buy a holiday home
in Abruzzo, she found a house in the country that could easily be divided
into two small properties and she asked if Mickey and I might like to share
in the project. We did some research, found out that Abruzzo seemed to
be a pretty good place to invest because its prices were low but its tourist
popularity was growing, and we decided to take the plunge. So now Margret
owns one side of the building and we own the other. The two properties are
completely self-contained with their own entrances. We bought at the end
of 2017, had the minor building work done in the early spring, and took
our first holiday there in Easter this year. Next year we are going to start
offering holiday rentals.
“Staying in our own place when we’re on holiday is a fantastic feeling.
It’s like we’re visitors but also locals. The people here are almost ridiculously
friendly, and they already greet us like old friends when we go shopping in
the village, even though we still struggle to communicate in Italian. We’re
both taking evening classes in England now, and I really look forward to
eventually being able to build up a network of Italian friends out here and
talk to them with ease. The lifestyle here is wonderful. Beautiful weather
and amazing food, really nice people and so many gorgeous places to visit.
I’ll always be grateful to my travel-savvy sister for pointing us towards
Abruzzo. We might never have heard of this place without her!”
3
1
TERAMO
Colledimezzo, in the
Province of Chieti, looks
over the Val di Sangro
A FULL RANGE OF
QUALITY LE MARCHE PROPERTIES
Right Sized Budget Friendly Homes
Character Properties
Quake Proof Ruin Restorations
Fully Restored Villas
Ecco La Cucina
Culinary tours in the heart of Italy
Property Showcase
¤250,000-¤500,000 ¤250,000-¤500,000
CASA VOSTRA CASA TESORO
A big (240sqm) comfortable, beautifully located and lovingly restored An opportunity to treasure… Casa Tesoro. Restored 1870s farmhouse
stone farmhouse with all amenities. Its owners live there full-time and it with big views, minutes from the elegant town of Servigliano. Just
shows. You feel instantly welcome in its spacious open plan layout. The 35 minutes to the beach, 35 minutes to the mountains. 3 bedrooms,
house delivers 4 or 5 bedrooms depending on your needs. Lovely views 3 bathrooms, swimming pool and terraces. Excellent rental history.
and close to the town of Loro Piceno. The 10x5m pool has a deep end and Immaculately maintained by the current owner. Now outstanding value
postcard-like panoramic views. Have it all with full day sun coverage and a for money at €329,000.
classic loggia to provide welcome shade. The plot boasts 30-plus olive trees Price €329,000
and a variety of fruit trees. Casa Vostra is yours for just €480,000! Contact Kevin Gibney
Price €480,000 Contact Kevin Gibney ☎ +39 347 538 6668 ☎ +39 347 538 6668
info@propertyforsalemarche.com info@propertyforsalemarche.com
www.propertyforsalemarche.com www.propertyforsalemarche.com
¤250,000-¤500,000 ¤100,000-¤250,000
CASA BELLAVALLE LA STORICA
Casa Bellavalle is a classic… Classic in terms of how it looks, how it Your chance to own a real piece of history. La Storica is a one-of-a-kind
was restored, the town that’s a short walk away and, of course, the property that dates all the way back to the 1400s. It’s that rare type of
amazing valley it overlooks. Casa Bellavalle is a right-sized house of property where you will feel connected to a house where you’re the latest
around 200sqm (of currently habitable space) that was restored keeping in a very long line of people who’ve called this place “casa”, or home. It’s
true to the character of the original farmhouse. The house currently has a simple 2-bedroom, 1-bathroom house with a very unusual form, replete
three bedrooms and there’s upside in the form of cantina space and an with garden and stone terrace, within comfortable walking distance to
outbuilding to restore. Privacy, peace and personality give Casa Bellavalle lively Sarnano, yet surrounded by peace, quiet and beautiful views. This
high marks for those seeking a classic, restored Marche farmhouse. is your very own piece of living history, and it becomes available at a very
Price €359,000 modest price.
Contact Kevin Gibney ☎ +39 347 538 6668 Price €139,000 Contact Kevin Gibney ☎ +39 347 538 6668
info@propertyforsalemarche.com www.propertyforsalemarche.com info@propertyforsalemarche.com www.propertyforsalemarche.com
£500,000-£750,000 £500,000-£750,000
VILLA VETERE VILLA AZZURRA
Ostra Vetere, Le Marche. Spacious, detached house restored to a high San Felici, Umbria. Villa Azzurra. Almost every room in this light and airy
standard in 2003. Near an authentic and cosy Italian town yet offering villa has spectacular views of the lake where Umbria meets Tuscany. Just
peace and privacy. Ground floor: entrance with stairs to upper floor, living a 5-minute walk to the lake and its beaches, bars and restaurants. This
room, bathroom, kitchen with covered terrace, utility room, detached stunning villa (200sqm over two floors) has 3 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms,
double carport with storage. First floor: hall, master bedroom with terrace, a lovely kitchen with breakfast bar, open plan sitting/dining room with
2 guest bedrooms, bathroom. 6.5 x 13.5m swimming pool. Landscaped balcony, which leads out into the generous panoramic loggia. There is
and fully fenced garden of 5,800sqm. 3 hectares of agricultural land. All also a second living room, store room and boiler room downstairs. The
technical facilities, including underfloor heating. Ancona airport is 30 landscaped garden (800sqm) is surrounded by beautiful olive groves
minutes away. A turn-key object for perfectionists! tumbling down to the lake. The garden also features an infinity pool.
Price €640,000 Contact ItaliaCasa % +39 339 101 9042 Price €570,000 Contact ItaliaCasa % +39 339 101 9042
info@italiacasa.net www.italiacasa.net info@italiacasa.net www.italiacasa.net
QUESTIONS
This pasta and bean stew
is an Italian classic
& ANSWERS
Our experts are here to help with all your questions about Italy.
This month we find a favourite Neapolitan recipe, go cycling in
Italy and ask about Americans buying property there…
•
75g fatty pancetta or prosciutto (optional)
3 tbsp olive oil
1 onion, peeled and chopped
1 If using canned beans, drain and set aside. If
using dried beans, soak overnight in cold water,
Italy and which has a thousand different • 1 large carrot, chopped then drain and rinse. Boil quickly in water for
interpretations! There are so many recipes • 1 large celery stick, chopped 10 minutes to remove the natural toxins, then
for this soup as each and every region of Italy • 1 litre good meat or vegetable stock drain and rinse again. Cover with fresh water and
seems to have its own take on it. Basically, • 150g small soup pasta simmer gently until tender, which will take about
however, the recipe is always more or less • sea salt and freshly milled black pepper 40 minutes.
the same, with a few variations such as the • extra-virgin olive oil for drizzling 2 Having prepared the beans, fry the pancetta and
addition of tomato purée, other vegetables, • Parmesan cheese for sprinkling olive oil with the onion, carrot and celery until
the vegetables are all soft. Add the beans and stir
thoroughly. Add the stock and simmer slowly until
Image © Alex Moling
CYCLING HOLIDAYS
Q We are a couple of keen (but not ‘sporty’)
cyclists who would like to cycle in Italy on
holiday, both around and outside cities, but so far
we have been put off by the prospect of having to
cope with the high mountains in the country and
also by fears our friends have sown about how
dangerous Italian roads can be. Would you advise
You simply wouldn’t be
able to get here by car
cycling there? And if so, how do you think we
should go about it?
ITALIA! ITALIA!
Amanda Robinson, our editor, Jon Palmer, our sub-editor,
has a wealth of experience in worked on cycling magazines
preparing for and dealing with for several years in the 2000s
travelling in Italy, and enjoying the local food! Though and has made two cycling trips to Italy this year. He gave
she is kept busy with the magazine she still makes regular up his car in 2010 and is currently looking to purchase an
trips to the Peninsula. Email Amanda with your queries at e-bike, to make life easier for himself. Email Jon with your
amanda.robinson@anthem-publishing.com queries at jon.palmer@anthem-publishing.com
ITALIA!
FESTIVE ITALY
Travel, recipe and gift inspiration for a truly Italian Christmas
Want to guarantee your next issue of Italia! and save money? Then turn to page 30 to subscribe
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• Real Estate acquisitions in Italy • UK and Italian inheritance
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you get to the platform or they’re only to Pisa but also to Florence.
●
10
more expensive). Terminal B is for There’s a shuttle train into Pisa, from
international flights; Terminal C for where you can get a train to Florence ●
9
transatlantic. The Terravision shuttle after you’ve seen the Leaning Tower.
bus is cheaper but takes twice as long. But, if you’re dead intent on heading
Ciampino, which in the days of straight for the Renaissance City, why ●
12
Gregory Peck and Audrey Hepburn was not just jump on a bus? Buy tickets
the city’s main airport, also has regular at the Information Desk (leave the
flights to the UK and is closer to town, arrivals hall and turn right).
though there is no rail link. There is Alternatively, you can (for a price)
talk of a third airport. fly straight into Florence from London ●
8
DRIVE #01
ITALIA! FIAT 500
CINQUECENTO
Tiny, iconic, cheap to run and
chic, this is the cheeky small
city car everyone loves…
Sixty years ago,
T
few would have
expected this hink of those classic
diminutive city car
to have survived 1950s Italian street scenes
so long. Practical, and inevitably the image
cheap and instantly that springs to mind will
recognisable, include the quintessential Fiat city
small is definitely
beautiful!
car: the iconic 500.
Designed by Dante Giacosa
and launched as the Nuova 500 in
mid 1957, as the successor to the
cute 500 Topolino (little mouse),
this little city car measuring only
2.97 metres from nose to tail could
accommodate Pappa, Mamma, two
bambini and their luggage. The
design included a simple fabric
sunshine roof – not as a luxury but
to save on metal!
Originally powered by a 479cc
two-stroke, air-cooled engine and
with ‘suicide doors’, the 500 is
considered one of the first purpose-
built city cars. Spares could even be
bought at the local corner shop!
Produced between 1957 and
1975, the tiny car changed little
from initial concept to final run-
out, although the suicide doors
were dropped for safety reasons
and there was a modest increase
in horsepower. The only downside
at the time was with the car’s
popularity, which came at the
expense of a good slice of the Italian
motorbike industry.
Firmly cemented as part of
today’s classic car scene, a clean,
original 500 of any vintage will
command a decent price, with
avid interest. Find a well cared for,
rust-free example and enjoy the
simple, modest thrills of motoring,
seemingly long forgotten with
today’s modern equivalents. It won’t
even take much garage space!
Jan van Eyck to Hieronymus The Dutch Golden Age in The Pre-Raphaelites and
Bosch: Early Netherlandish Amsterdam, Haarlem the Arts & Crafts Movement
Magnificence, 12-15 March and The Hague, in the Cotswolds and
2019 from £1,185pp. Single 26-30 March 2019 from Beyond, 3-7 April 2019
supplement £190 with £1,775pp. £200 single from £1,250pp. £150 single
Georgina Trevelyan-Clark supplement. supplement.
This tour takes in the most magnificent of early The Dutch Golden Age was one of the most This tour will visit some of the finest examples of
Netherlandish artworks; the Ghent altarpiece. exciting and intensely creative periods in the artworks produced by the Pre-Raphaelites, the
The van der Paele altarpiece, Memling’s St history of art. It was a time of unprecedented Arts and Crafts and the Aesthetic movement,
John triptych and the diptych of Maarten change; socially, economically and culturally. including paintings, houses, textiles and stained
Nieuwenhove. Artworks by other early Flemish This tour starts with lunch cruise on a private glass. Some of the places visited include
masters, Jan van Eyck, Petrus Christus, Rogier boat along Amsterdam’s canals. We visit the Owlpen Manor, Rodmarton, , Wightwick Manor,
van der Weyden, Dieric Bouts and Hieronymus Rijksmuseum to see work by artists including The Oxford Union, The Wilson Cheltenham, The
Bosch will be seen in the museums and churches Rembrandt, Frans Hals and Vermeer; the Ashmoleum, and the Birmingham Museum and
of Bruges, Ghent and Brussels. Stay at the 4 star Rembrandt House and the Frans Hals museum. Art Gallery.
Hotel Acacia in Bruges.
Lucca, Pistoia and Prato lie liked jewelled links in This tour will include trips to see the This four-day tour to Paris and Giverny provides
a chain between Pisa and Florence. All three have architectural gems of Charles Rennie Mackintosh significant insight into French Impressionism
fine churches, palaces and houses that provide us and eclectic artworks and designs produced by and the painters themselves, including Monet,
with a cohesive survey of styles and developments the Glasgow School. It will also feature iconic Pissarro, Manet, Degas and Renoir. We view their
from the Romanesque to the late Renaissance. Scottish artworks, for example, Raeburn’s art in Paris’ outstanding museums and galleries;
Accommodation is in a 4-star hotel within the ‘Skating Minister’ in Edinburgh, and key hidden gems such as the Musée de l’Orangerie. A
medieval walls of Lucca. European paintings such as Salvador Dali’s visit to Monet’s house and gardens at Giverny is
‘Christ of St. John of the Cross’. a special highlight.
Madrid: The Art and Brescia & Bergamo, 4-8 Verona Opera & Art,
Architecture of the Spanish June 2019 from £1,595. 26-30 June 2019
Capital, 20-25 May 2019 £175 single supplement. with Clare Ford-Wille
with Thomas Abbott from from £2,625. Single
£1,995. Single supplement supplement is £250
£200.
Madrid is renowned for its rich repositories of The northern Lombard cities of Bergamo and The atmospheric setting of the Arena di Verona
European art, including the Prado Museum’s Brescia were fought over by the two mighty plays host to an annual opera festival harking
works by Goya, Velázquez and other Spanish powers of northern Italy; Milan and Venice, back to 1913 when an opera was held to celebrate
masters. The heart of old Hapsburg Madrid is with Venice emerging triumphant. Bergamo’s the centenary of Verdi’s birth. We will attend
the portico-lined Plaza Mayor, and nearby is the Accademia Carrara houses 1,800 paintings three operas during our 5-day visit to Verona;
baroque Royal Palace and Armoury displaying from the 15th to the 19th centuries by artists Aida, La Traviata and Il Trovatore. During the
historic weaponry, including that of Charles such Raphael, Bellini, Botticelli, Canaletto, and day, we will explore the impact the early rulers
V. A day is spent in Toledo, the “Imperial City” Pisanello. Brescia’s historic centre is full of of Verona had on the city, from Roman times
for having been the main venue of the court of impressive monuments: one of the oldest Roman through to Venetian.
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor. sites in Italy, the Capitolium.