Showing posts with label Prosecco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prosecco. Show all posts

Friday, October 11, 2024

Italy Day 18, Firenze: Arrivederci Mosquitoes, Buongiorno Americans

Friday, October 11

Firenze, Firenze, Toscana

Highlight: Fantastic afternoon and dinner out
Lowlight: So many f*cking Americans

I awoke in Ferrara having once again got very little sleep. Besides the torment of the mosquitos in our apartment, I was probably agonizing about turning in the rental car. Today would be the day that we would drive from Ferrara to our final vacation stop in Firenze. We'd drive the A13 to Bologna and then take the now familiar A1 autostrada from Bologna through the mountains to just northwest of Firenze. We'd then drop the rental car back where we got it at the airport, take a shuttle bus from the rental car center to the terminal, and then take the tram into downtown Firenze and find our apartment.

Firenze: Cattedrale della Santa Maria del Fiore
Our trip is coming to an end, and quickly. We talked about it last night. This vacation has been a few flashes of brilliance coupled with a lot of torment and boredom, not at all what I expected from my first trip to Italy. Lots of it has been trying. And we have survived it. Survived it as a couple, I mean. This kind of vacation will rip your relationship apart if it is not solid. By this yardstick, ours is undeniably solid. And we are ready for home. Three weeks is a long trip. 

We wanted to leave Ferrara as late as possible in the hopes that we could get into our apartment in Firenze immediately so that we did not have to worry about luggage as we navigated the streets of the capital of Toscana. So, we stuck it out in Ferrara until 11, the deadline for checking out. When we tried to leave, we could not get enough signal to get a GPS route on our phones. So, I started walking downtown to get the free WiFi to plot a route. Ann texted me once I was almost there that she managed to get a route so I walked the 10 minutes back to the apartment and we got underway. This Internet problem is a pain in the butt.

At one point in leaving Ferrara, the GPS wanted us to turn right but which of the three possibilities we should take was unclear. I assumed that following the bulk of the traffic was likely correct. But while stopped at a red light, I realized we were going wrong. I could get on the correct course if I moved right a lane and took a quick, sharp right. And as I was so doing, I saw two carabinieri standing there, one of whom gave me the WTF are you doing sign. In my best Italian driver style, I shrugged him off and kept accelerating through the gear box.

The trip to Bologna and then through the mountains was routine. At some point, we stopped at an AutoGrill alongside the autostrada to use the facilities. I have to say that the AutoGrills are pretty amazing. You can get fast food, coffee, gelato, a sit down meal, tourist schlock, groceries, and all manner of other things there and people swear by the quality of the food. This mirrors my experience in France that the truckstops have really decent food. Among the food stuffs for sale at this particular AutoGrill were whole salame, fresh pasta, and boxed pasta. I saw a bunch of boxes of oversized bucatini in long blue DeCecco boxes; the pasta must have run 50cm long, a full half a meter! 

I was wondering where in the vicinity of the airport to get diesel to refill the car before we turned it back in. It turned out to be a non-issue: there’s a service area just before the airport and the friendly attendant told me to pump first and pay inside. Easy peasy. I had already been to the rental car center to get the car, so navigating to it was easy. But finding an attendant was not, at least not in the location where Neal told me to drop the car. An attendant from another agency directed us to the correct location. Still, it took a few minutes to find an attendant. It's not like at American airports where you drop the car in a return lane, leave the keys inside, and walk away.

After that, we waited for the shuttle to the airport for just a few minutes. Once we got on the shuttle bus, we realized it was wall-to-wall with American college kids, a sign of things to come. The shuttle took a very convoluted 8-9 minutes to drop us 400 meters away at the terminal, located across the autostrada from the rental car center.

Catching the tram for the 20-minute ride into Firenze was simple enough; I had already noted the location of the airport tram stop just to the right of the terminal building when we arrived three weeks ago. The ticket machine was simple after dealing with those from TrenItalia. You merely buy a ticket for €1,70 which is good for 90 minutes after validating it on the tram and it is good for any destination and also I believe for transfers to buses.

Ann was a little concerned about our stop which our host had said was the main train station named Santa Maria Novella. However, Santa Maria Novella was not one of the names of the stops that our tram was making. We wanted the Alamanni stop; looking at the route map for the tram made it look like Alamanni was correct and we were able to verify that with another passenger. Likewise, the name of the airport stop on the way back was not Amerigo Vespucci but Peretola Aeroporto.

Our apartment was not supposed to be ready until 16:00, but it was ready when we arrived at 14:15 after dragging our luggage the two or so blocks from the station on rough cobblestones. We were highly fortunate to get inside just before a brief rain shower hit. It passed quickly but it was enough that we would have been soaked.

Our room was a great apartment on the third floor of a building downtown above a little trattoria. The steps were steep, ancient, and off kilter which made schlepping the suitcases up to our room a bit of a challenge, but the apartment was beautiful. Our host really thought of everything and was fantastic in texting us directions, advice, places to eat, and so forth. There was even a map of Florence on the wall in our room with his favorite walks marked, each with a theme, and cool places to visit highlighted. He even left exquisite pastries in our room; I would eat them for breakfast before heading back to the airport.

Our Host Left Pastries for Us; They Were Killer
After the rain shower, the sun came out and shone brightly, encouraging us to take a walk about town. Firenze was one of the highlights of Ann's 1996 trip to Italy and she has been hyping it for months; I was naturally eager to see what she found so attractive about this medium-sized walkable city. I was looking forward to it being one of the highlights of our trip, our last hurrah before getting back on a plane for the seemingly interminable trip across the ocean.

From our apartment near the main Santa Maria Novella train station, we wandered in the direction of the Piazza del Duomo lured on by the stunning warm brown terracotta tiles of the duomo designed by Filippo Brunelleschi, the massive dome that we could glimpse here and there between and above buildings. We had not progressed more than a block or so in the direction of the duomo, when we encountered hordes of tourists, tourists so thick that we had at times to shoulder our way through.

My first impression was that I hate this town full of filthy rich Asians dripping in designer outfits and even more American kids with SoCal accents. I came to Italy to get away from America for a while, to get some perspective on my own country through the lens of another country, and yet, here we were surrounded by Americans. We heard almost exclusively English on the streets and almost no Italian at all. I felt that we were in some medieval-themed Disneyland full of Instagram wannabe-influencers with their noses firmly planted in their phones, not watching where they were going or even taking in the gorgeous architecture around them, when they were not busy filming themselves.

Carousel at the Piazza della Repubblica
As we made our way toward what is known nearly universally as The Duomo, the full church, the Cattedrale della Santa Maria del Fiore, with its glorious campanile came into view. I've seen St. Patrick's in NYC, St. Paul's in London, Nôtre-Dame in Paris, and many other grand cathedrals, but none of this prepared me for the simplicity and the splendor of this cathedral in Florence. It is one of the most amazing buildings I have ever seen. The stonework in all colors of marble is unfathomable in this day and age.

Il Campanile di Giotto

As I mentioned earlier, Ann came to Firenze in 1996 and took a bunch of photos including many of the Duomo. Below is a shot that I took on this trip; Ann took a similar one on her phone. After we returned to Oregon and she was going through her camera roll, she realized that she had taken an almost identical photo from nearly the exact same spot in 1996. I find that to be an amazing coincidence.

My 2024 Photo
Side by Side of Ann's 1996 and 2024 Photos
After enduring the obnoxious crowds of Americans at the Piazza del Duomo, we tried to escape by heading away from the cathedral. We were not really successful as we walked by one high-end designer boutique after another. Clearly, people come to Firenze to spend obscene amounts of money on extravagant habillage and jewelery. Our escape path led us by the Bargello and on towards the Arno River, where we found scads and scads of, you guessed it, more Americans.

Museo Nazionale del Bargello
Pediment on the Palazzo di Giustizia
Skyline of the Palazzo di Giustizia
Badia Fiorentina - Monastero
Interplay of Light and Shutters
Torre Arnolfo at the Palazzo Vecchio
Right at the river, we walked by the entrance to the Museo Galileo and its sundial, a wonderful public art installation. From here, we walked into the middle of the Uffizi Gallery, or rather, I elbowed my way into a sea of people. It was so crowded and the sun angle was so wrong, that I didn't even stop to take a photo. As much as I might like to have seen some of the collection at this museum, I would never put up with this kind of crowd to do so. We kept moving downstream along the Arno with the famed Ponte Vecchio in clear sight.

Annie Camps Out on Scorpio at the Galileo Sundial
Upstream Side of the Ponte Vecchio
Downstream Side of the Ponte Vecchio
Across the Arno: Campanile at the Basilica di Santo Spirito
We did not go out on the Ponte Vecchio; it was wall-to-wall people. I am satisfied with having seen it at a distance, this, the only bridge across the Arno in Firenze not destroyed in the Second World War. Please do not hate me when I say that I did not find this famous bridge at all pleasing to my eye. I dare say I might even call it an eye sore, unlike the graceful Ponte alla Carraia just downriver.

During our walk, finding ourselves exasperated with the unruly crowds, we decided to seek out the wine bar that our host had recommended to us as being excellent and hidden away from tourists. Firenze provides some minimal free WiFi, so I was able to plug the wine bar location into my phone and navigate there. Our track would have us continue along the north side of the river beyond the Uffizi, past the Ponte alla Carraia, and to the Piazza Ognisanti and Chiesa di San Salvatore.

Ann in Front of the Ponte alla Carraia
The Light Does Not Get Better Than This
Chiesa di San Frediano
Chiesa di San Salvatore
Detail Above Door to San Salvatore
Horse Drawn Carriage Near the Palazzo Lenzi
Interesting Shop Selling Paintings
The enoteca we were aiming for, Nuova Vigna, is tucked away just at the foot of the Ponte alla Carraia such that it took us a moment of poking about to find it even when we were within 25 meters of the door. A young guy welcomed us into the store which looked confusingly like a cross between a wine shop, restaurant, and pasticceria. The spaces serves as a pasticceria in the day, a wine bar from the afternoon on, and a restaurant at night. We spent a wonderful couple of hours with the two guys there, one of whom is a sommelier. As we walked in and were considering the wine list, the younger guy asked, "Why not a glass of Prosecco?" Naturally, why not?

Hide and Seek: Where is the Hidden Enoteca?
Left Fork, Left Corner, Behind the Optician
Enoteca Vigna Nuova/Pasticceria Batoni
Soon enough, two glasses of Prosecco appeared on the table and I took a quick sip of the €7 glass. You really cannot expect much from a glass pour of inexpensive Prosecco, can you? I was totally unprepared to have the best Prosecco of my life. I looked at Ann; she looked at me with that "Am I really tasting what I'm tasting?" look. Suddenly, tucked away in a little off-the-beaten-path enoteca with a glass of phenomenal wine in my hand, I was feeling much better disposed to the city of Firenze.

Suddenly, We Love Firenze!
This is Excellent Prosecco
Nebbiolo Anyone?
We spent a fair amount of time chatting with the two guys and naturally we got to talking wine with the one who is a sommelier. We decided after the Prosecco that we wanted a red, preferably a Nebbiolo and he led us directly to this bottle of Langhe from Barale Fratelli in Barolo. It was a damn fine bottle of wine and went really well with the savory pastries that they brought us gratis. It was a shame to see, at the end of the day, that what leftover pastries the staff did not want had to go in the trash.

While at the enoteca, we started thinking about dinner and made a reservation at another host-recommended restaurant just down the street from our apartment, Il Bacaro Fiorentino. After resting at the apartment for a while, we made the 200-meter walk to Il Bacaro and were seated outside on the sidewalk just as the sun was setting. During the course of our 3-4 hour meal, it seemed to us that this is more of a locals restaurant than a tourist place. Also, it is clear that they take their food and wine seriously.

Frontman Endrit Devolli Behind his Cicchetti Counter
Enjoying a Beautiful, Tourist-Free, Dinner
Before it got busy, we chatted with frontman Endrit Devolli about all things restaurant as we sipped on an excellent bottle of Pira Barolo Serralunga d'Alba. Of all the comune to produce Barolo, Serralunga is my favorite for power, structure (tannins and acidity), cherry fruit, and herbaceousness. Back to the restaurant, it seems to meld the concept of Venetian bacaro (a tapas-style bar where the small dishes are called cicchetti) with Florentine osteria. The dishes coming out of the kitchen, manned by veteran Venetian chef Luca Marin, were refined and probably the best meal we had in Italy.

Dynamite Pira Barolo Serralunga d'Alba
Once the wine was on the table and we had had a chance to go through the menu, though we wanted everything on the menu, we ordered two antipasti, a terrine and some burrata. The terrine of chicken livers was the single best thing I had in Italy, perfectly cooked and delightful. When we finished these two dishes, we asked our server to bring us a third antipasto, one that we really wanted to try, baccalà. Twenty or so minutes later, out from the kitchen came a delightfully presented tower of whipped salt cod with sticks of fried polenta. This exquisite dish was a close runner up to the terrine for best dish during our vacation, running neck and neck with the anchovy toast at Ponte Pietra in Verona.

"La Terrina dello Chef" con Fegatini di Pollo e Ristretto di Vin Santo
Best Dish of our Trip: Brilliantly Cooked, More Pudding than Terrine
Burrata Fritta Ripiena di Pesto, Melanzana Affumicata, e Pomodorini
Baccalà Mantecato all'Olio d'Oliva con Polenta Fritta
Awesome Flavor, Great Presentation
When we tasted how amazing the baccalà was, I asked Ann, because she was on the restaurant side of the table while I was on the street side, if she would go in and ask Endrit to order the rest of our meal for us. He did and the rest of the meal was a surprise. The primi, ravioli and gnocchi, were both works of art. The sfoglia for the ravioli was outstanding and the gnocchi were the lightest and most ethereal that I have ever had, sauced with a tomato and scampi (langostino) sauce reminiscent of my shrimp étouffée sauce.

Gnocchi di Patate alla Busara di Scampi
Best Gnocchi I've Ever Eaten: Ethereal, a Work of Art
Busara is a Venetian Scampi and Tomato Sauce; Think 
Étouffée Sauce
Ravioli di Ricotta e Olive Taggiasche al Ragù di Coniglio Arrosto
The Star of This Dish was the Beautifully Thin Sfoglia
By the time the secondi, pork and duck, hit the table we really didn't need any more food, but we ate it anyway! The duck with cherries was well-cooked but my least favorite effort of the evening. I'm not a big fan of secondi in the first place because I always find the smaller plates more interesting. I cannot fault the cooking here, but this duck was not the Moulard that I love. Once you've had the best duck there is, all other duck pales in comparison.

As for the huge pork chop, I do not know what the spices were that it was marinated in, but I do know that it was delicious and that the sprig of nepitella added to the pan lent a great flavor. If you recall from the Verona posts, nepitella is a mint that grows wild all over Italy. The crust was great on this chop, but the highlight was the really tasty fat. This chop came from a high-quality hog. I would have preferred the meat to be a little less well done, but that's a hard thing to do when trying to get a hard sear on a chop.

Petto d'Anatra alle Ciliegie
Braciola di Maiale Marinata alle Spezie con Nepitella
After being hugely stuffed at Il Bacaro, we rolled the 200 meters down the sidewalk back to our apartment, noticing that Firenze seems to be a different town after dark, somehow less touristy and more romantic. Our wonderful enoteca and ristorante experiences capped a day that all in all was largely drama-free and enjoyable, save for the early GPS route issue and the swarms of tourists. We went to bed quickly, aiming to get up and get moving early in the morning to avoid as many tourists as possible.

Thursday, October 10, 2024

Italy Day 17, Ferrara: Exploring the Centro Storico

Thursday, October 10

Ferrara, Ferrara, Emilia-Romagna

Highlight: Cappellaci di zucca for dinner
Lowlight: Cancelling restaurant plans because of injury

I have a self-imposed rule that I will not include more than about 50 photos in any single blog post. Not only does this keep the posts shorter (and in the bad old days, easier to download), but it keeps me focused on photos that support the narrative of the blog. This particular post was extremely hard to pare back; Ferrara is a photogenic town and I am glad that we made a detour to see it.

Let's just say that sleep in Ferrara was hard to come by. The AC was blasting against the oppressive humidity and blowing directly on me, making me alternately hot and freezing as I would adjust the covers. Moreover, Ann and I both were snacked on by irritating mosquitoes during the night, though I killed several. Many was the time that a whining buzz of a mosquito near my ear awakened me in the night. How they were getting into the apartment was and still is a mystery.

By 03:30 it seemed as if we had decent WiFi in the apartment, just in time for me to read about Hurricane Milton striking south of Tampa-St. Pete. For what it’s worth, Milton was my great grandfather’s first name. Fortunately, the hurricane spared our friends in Tampa-St. Pete. I finally fell asleep towards 05:30 and woke up at 08:30. On waking, WiFi was all over the map, sometimes OK, sometimes iffy, and sometimes nonexistent. One thing was clear: we could get nothing over the cellular network.

After a crappy night's sleep, espresso was much in order, so we set out for the historic district, free WiFi, and a place to get a coffee. We meandered into the historic district via the Piazza Ariostea with its statue of Ludovico Ariosto, then past part of the University of Ferrara, and down to the Castello Estense where we were the evening before. There we got back on the WiFi network, which only got stronger as we walked the block or two south to what is called alternately the Piazza del Duomo or the Piazza della Cattedrale, seemingly the big public piazza downtown.

Piazza Ariostea
Castello Estense in the Morning Light
Walking to the Piazza Della Cattedrale
Torre dell'Orologio (l), Palazzo Municipale (r)
For coffee, Ann chose a little chocolate shop, a touristy nook that sells coffee, gelato, chocolates, and pastries. I think she probably chose it for three reasons: it was cute, it had seats on the piazza for people watching, and, truth be told, she needed coffee ASAP and was not going to look further. We got our coffees and then decided we needed seconds. Ann went in to get them and I could hear her yacking away in Italian and English with the young lady behind the counter. It seems they were fast friends in moments (which Ann can do with anyone; it's her superpower).

Espresso on the Piazza at Cioccolato Rizzati

In people watching, as I sat in short sleeves enjoying the 70-degree weather, it felt like we were in Florida. Most people were dressed for winter, wearing down coats and scarves. Seriously? As we enjoyed our second cup of coffee, we noted that the once sunny skies were changing over to gray. I took advantage of our front row seats on the piazza to shoot some of the lovely downtown buildings including the cathedral and the Palazzo Municipale opposite the cathedral. At this point, the light kept changing as clouds rolled in and out, a true pain for photography.

Cattedrale di Ferrara
Flags and Statue of Niccolo III at Palazzo Municipale
Flags and Plaques on the Palazzo Municipale
Tower of the Palazzo Municipale
Detail of the Cattedrale
Roof Line of the Cattedrale
Colonnade on Side of the Cattedrale
Highly Decorative Light Fixture in Front of the Cattedrale
After coffee, we wandered in the Centro Storico with a plan to get lunch at a restaurant, of which we had selected a couple specializing in Ferrarese cuisine. Despite the rapidly deteriorating skies, we started wandering fairly aimlessly in downtown, making our way ever near the Canale di Burana, the canal that runs through Ferrara.

The Cloister of the Church of San Romano
Now a Museum
More Cloister Detail
I Love the Reflections in This Photo
Contrasts: A Photo Apropos of Nothing
Trattoria Noemi, Tucked Away
We Thought to Have a Traditional Ferrarese Dinner Here
Random Cobblestone Street Looking East
Still Life with Bicycle
Same Street, Same Spot, Looking West
The gray skies started to unleash random raindrops on our heads. The forecasted sunny skies with 10% chance of rain quickly made it evident that the weather forecasters in Italy are equally as skilled as in America. We decided to forego lunch and walked back to the apartment at noon in a drizzle under leaden skies.

Palazzo Municipale Now in the Rain
Piazza del Municipio, Scalone d'Onore
Contrast in Colors and Textures
Pink Marble Bollard, Pinker Marble Wall, and Brick Cobbles
Typical Cobblestone Pattern in Ferrara
Pigeons on the Wall of the Castello Estense
They Appeared to be Feeding Young
Courtyard of the Palazzo Naselli Crispi
I Love the Ceramic Number Plates
The return to our room proved an excellent decision on our part: it started outright raining after we got back inside. For lunch, we a beautiful pork salame and Fontina that we bought at the Aldi in Meran. With clearing skies by 13:30, we set out on another walk at 14:00 to go see Palazzo Bonacossi. We wandered around a bit back down toward the canal and then headed through a kind of slummy neighborhood toward the palazzo. Said palazzo is not in a scenic neighborhood, is not in good shape, and was not really worth the walk.

Chiesa di Sant'Agnese
Flower Boxes on Unusually Shaped Building
I Love the Cobblestones and Earth Tones
After making this disappointing trek, Ann’s knee was killing her so we went immediately back to the apartment under overcast skies. My plan to take golden hour photos of the historic center was most definitely in question. Moreover, walking to a restaurant for dinner seemed totally out of the question. We had planned to go to Noemi, well known for Ferrarese cuisine, but because of injury we would have to execute another plan B, the seeming story of this trip. 

The skies cleared toward sunset and we had to make a decision about dinner. Either we needed to walk to a restaurant or we needed groceries so that I could make dinner. Given the pain that I saw Ann in, I talked her out of walking on her bum leg with promise that I’d hit a store and make a nice dinner.

I left the apartment at 18:00 to take advantage of the sunset light that we discovered last night happened from 18:15 to 18:45. I shot enough photographs to satisfy myself, went to a grocery store by the Castello Estense, and walked home, arriving at 18:50. I hurried because I did not want to leave Ann all alone in the apartment with an aching knee and no internet access.

Piazza Ariostea at Sunset
Ludovico Ariosto
Italian Flag on Main Police Station at Dusk
Awesome Rooflines on Back Side of Cattedrale at Dusk
Striking Dusk Skyline of Palazzo Municipale
Torre dell'Orologio
La Cattedrale di Ferrara
Castello Estense
I Love the Red Brick Building Peeking Through the Arch
While I was in the cobblestoned Piazza del Municipio taking the broad photo of the entire Castello Estense, a guy on a bike wheeled up to me and stopped. "Hey, do you love Ferrara?" he asked. "Do you shoot the building or the details?" he enquired. "Le due," I replied and showed him my camera roll, a mixture of wide shots and close-up shots of details. He whipped out his phone and showed me his versions, telling me he had photographed the castle hundreds of times. "Where you from?" he inquired and when I told him Oregon, he went on, "Portland? Portland Trailblazers? I love the Trailblazers!"

At this point, we took our leave of each other and I went on shooting a few more frames. Then I noticed that he circled back on his bike. He got off and held his phone out to me to show me another photo, this of a stylized hammer and sickle. "You know what this is?" he asked me and I played dumb. "Fascisti? Socialisti?" I fake guessed. He was mock offended, "No! Communisti! My country needs this; your country needs this!" I wished him a good evening and he rode off, apparently happy to have pitched his political ideology at me. Or perhaps he thought he found a fellow traveler.

I left the piazza immediately for the grocery store just by the castle with the idea to make Ann at least a typical Ferrarese dish: cappellaci di zucca, pasta stuffed with pumpkin. Cappellaci is known as tortelloni elsewhere. I managed to get 500g of cappellaci along with some prosciutto and sage for the sauce. I would wilt all the leftover salad greens from our dinner the night before, rucola and valeriana, into the sauce. 

I also bought a bottle of Cartizze (Prosecco Valdobbiadene Superiore di Cartizze) that we could sip while I was making dinner. Cartizze is the grand cru of Prosecco and a bottle runs $40-60 at retail in the US. I think I paid €13 in Ferrara. I also got a Montepulciano because I wanted a great red and Emilia-Romagna and specifically Ferrara is not known for great reds or even great wines. So I went to the best of Tuscany, next door, where we’ll be tomorrow. Actually, I think Brunello is the best of Tuscany, but they had none. 

A Ferrarese Classic, Cappellaci di Zucca
After dinner, we were again frustrated that internet access was totally absent. This made me recall that while I was downtown with WiFi signal, I got a reality check that our trip was coming quickly to a close, an email reminder from Delta about our upcoming flight home. It really had not sunk in until this point that we were closing out day 17 of 20. I was equally parts ecstatic to be heading home and sad that we would not longer be exploring beautiful places in Italy.

With these thoughts in mind, we headed off to bed to do battle with more mosquitos in the night and to look forward to heading to Firenze tomorrow.

Wine Wednesday in McMinnville

Each summer we try to make one or more trips to our former home of McMinnville over in the Willamette Valley, about 3.5 hours from Bend, giv...