Saturday 18 January 2014

Secondi


Here it is. Your second course of the Romalogue. I'm just going to wing it this time, since there's no gentling into Roman food; you can only hope to dive in and do. Do as the Romans do.

I've also made a list of places for kids in Rome, as recommended by Chotto-ma, our keen little traveller. It's a city where you might be prone to dragging children from one historical ruin to another, from one Bernini painting to another, but really, but after a while, it can become white noise. Spread it out, breathe and make sure to be a bad tourist every now and then. That's when Rome gets good.

What else do I have? Ah, yes - the lovely apartment we stayed in. The ins and outs of it. And the caged, old lift that took us up to it.

Enjoy your Roman tryst. Tell me what you think of it. I'll meet you on the other side.


What we ate:
We went to Rome with a long, and sure, list of places we wanted to eat in. Food that we wanted to try. And we did. We also wanted to cook a couple of meals at home so that we got a chance to pick fresh ingredients from the market, which we wouldn't find in England.


Here are some of the best of what we tried.

First: the pizzas, the pizzas. Rome doesn't know how to make a bad pizza, so you're safe almost anywhere, but here are some of the places we loved:


- Pizza al Taglio, or pizza-by-the-slice, from Ai Marmi on Viale de Trastevere (open evenings only), and from Il Forno Roscioli (for their Pizza Bianca).
- A sit-down pizza lunch at Bir & Fud (For thin crusts and craft beers. And their bruschettas. Beautiful.)
- A pizza dinner at Ivo A Trastevere (Busy, bustling, filled with locals. Open kitchen churning out pizza after pizza)





Suppli from:
- I Suppli (one of the best in Rome)
- Pizzarium (Although they're known for their pizza, the thick, puffy crusts were not for me. But the suppli was fantastic.)




Typical Roman trattoria food, like mamma makes it:
- La Boticella (Try the Fiori di Zucca, the chicory with garlic and chilli, the oxtail, the tiramisu.)
- Da Enzo (the carbonara, the carbonara)
- Cesare al casaletto - recommended to me by the lovely Rachel of Rachel Eats, who's a Testaccio local. More food links on her blog.




Italian cooking with a Kosher influence in Rome's gorgeous Jewish Ghetto:
- Sora Margherita (The Carciofi alla giudìa, the Fettucine Cacio e Pepe and the meatballs) 






Coffee at:
- Caffe Sant'Eustachio (A Roman institution. Caffeine-ing the city since 1938.)
- Bar Gianicolo (one of our favourite finds, after a leafy uphill walk from Trastevere)
- Baylon (modern mismatched cool, old books and chrome lamps, great coffee and fresh juice in recycled jars)






Gelato from:
Fiori di Luna (The gelateria that every guidebook will lead you to)
Albeto Pica (Another on-the-map gelateria. Of old fame.)
Old Bridge (The one no guidebook tells you about. It has an unfortunately English name, but one of the best gelatos we had in Rome.)



And finally, an absolute must-do:
Sunday brunch at Open Colonna (Modern Roman cooking in superchef Antonello Colonna’s glass-roofed restaurant. Don't leave the city without doing this, don't.)



Food shopping (the only kind of shopping I did in Rome):
- Head to the local butcher and stock up on hand-minced local sausages. Especially the Luganica, which are so, so very good.We even flew them back to the UK.
- Pick up freshly made (not dried) pasta, especially the ravioli, from any local pasta maker.
- Biscuits from Artigiano Innocenti (Hard to find, but worth the hunt)
- Get a bottle of extra-virgin olive oil and some Mozzarella di Bufala from Roscioli or Volpetti (legends, both)
- From the market - fish, courgette flowers, artichokes and chicory leaves.





And here's what you do with the cicoria. Pluck the chicory leaves from the stem, boil them in salt water for 5 minutes, drain. Heat olive oil, crush a few whole garlics still in their peel. Throw them into the oil with some chilli flakes. Toss in the leaves. (We first had this in La Botticella, then cooked it at the apartment the next day. Probably the best thing I've had in Rome.)


For more on Rome and its food, check out Katie Parla's inexhaustible blog.


Where we stayed - the apartment:
After months of hunting, we found this charming apartment located in the heart of Trastevere, walking distance to most things (we walked to Centro Storico, as well as Testaccio), but away from everything touristy. It has a fish and vegetable market around the corner, along with a gelateria and speciality cheese shop. There's a bakery below, opposite a little shop that makes fresh pasta in small batches. And right opposite the apartment sits a cool rock-and-roll bar called Big Star with great coffee, beer on tap and darn good music. In Rome, bars are about coffee first, alcohol later.


The apartment has everything you could think of. And Silvana, who owns it, was the loveliest host who handed us the keys, with a big smile and box of good advice, and then left us to it.








You can contact Silvana, or find out more about the apartment here.


Rome for little legs:
Chotto-ma could move to Rome. Where else would you find all her favourites in one place? Pizzas, pastas, gelatos, fountains and dogs. At every turn. That such a place even existed...!
Here's her list of must-dos. A fool-proof list, I thought, if you're doing Rome with kids.


- Explora il Museo dei Bambini di Roma (because you owe them one museum that's all about them)
- I Burattini del Gianicolo (a old-world puppet theatre on a lovely hill)
- Mouth of Truth or La Boca della Verita in the Church of Santa Monica. Of Roman Holiday fame. And one for which Chotto-ma was ready to walk miles. She'd read all about it in her book, and couldn't wait to put her hand into the big gaping mouth. Her next favourite bit was lighting a candle in the church.
- The Planeterium (because she's into all things space)
- Largo di Torre Argentina - a cat sanctuary
- Piramide di Caio Cestio (Because she's also into all things Egyptian. And because there's the beautiful, quiet Protestant Cemetery behind it where Keats and Shelley lie. A piece of peace in the midst of the city, which Chotto-ma loved.)
- A visit to the seaside (It's a beautiful break from the busy-ness, and all a fun train ride away. We took a train from Pyramide and got off at C. Colombo, to visit friends who lived in a house filled with lemon and pomegranate trees. There's a beautiful beach right opposite the station, stretching for miles. Not to mentioned, a glass-walled ristorante looking out to sea.)
- Cinema dei Piccoli - the smallest movie theatre in the world, and it's for kids! English films are dubbed in Italian, without English subtitles. But what fun!)
- A meeting with La Befana, Rome's favourite witch. She's flies down on her broomstick every January 6, bringing treats for children. You can meet her at Piazza Navona on the day of the Epiphany. Chotto-ma met La Befana, who ran up to her with a big bar of chocolate, in Orvieto, a village in Umbria.
- Trevi Fountain or Fontana di Trevi - Oh, the thrill of throwing that coin in! You have to face away from the fountain and throw the coin over your shoulder. It's apparently the way to wish your way back to Rome some day. And Chotto-ma did. She also wished to see a rainbow.


 

A day away from Rome - Orvieto
I think I'd better say ciao! now, and leave you with photographs of this little Umbrian village. If you want to visit Orvieto for a day-trip, you can read more about it on this lovely blog.







21 comments:

  1. Oh my word.... An incredible post! I will be printing this off to take with me when we go too! :D xx

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  2. How very splendid. I have absolutely no doubt that we would hang out in the same places across Europe. And were you to come to Barcelona, oh there'd be food, and lots of it! I would take you to a local Botifarreria for sausages, wine and cheese, and the market for artichokes, and courgette flowers and fresh seafood. Finally, wine from a tumbler - excellent work, just excellent all round really!

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    1. Kindred spirits, then. And what a tempting picture you paint! Yes, to all of those things - from the local Botifarreria to the wine from a tumbler.
      Thank you - so glad you enjoyed the post :)

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  3. A terrible post to read on a Monday morning, I want to drop everything and go about planning a trip to Rome. It's been on my list for so very long.

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    1. Just like pictures of your food on my Instagram make me scamper around for things to eat! Returning the favour, Nags :D

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  4. If only more people wrote like this! I've loved both posts and the pictures make me want to visit Rome. I am sharing this link.

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    1. Thank you, lovely Roxana. I hope you do walk the streets of Rome some day. I'm sure you'd love every bit of it. xx

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  5. It looks like you had such a wonderful adventure. Do speak Italian, or did you manage in English?

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    1. Denise, I'd been warned by my Italian students about Rome having very little English to lean on. So, imagine our surprise when most of the locals we stopped for directions, or pizza recommendations, spoke perfectly intelligible English. We did just fine.
      And funnily enough, we spoke an inordinate amount of Bengali because every shop or market stall we went to had a Bangladeshi shopkeeper - and they speak Bengali just like we do in much of Eastern India, only in a different, but understandable, dialect.
      Chotto-ma now thinks one can speak Bengali in two cities - Calcutta and Rome.

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    2. Wow! Really? I am Tamil but I have a crazy Bengali connection that is a little hard to explain. This little Bong connection just made Rome even more appealing, if that was possible :). Also, what an utterly delightful observation by your lovely little Chotto- ma.

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    3. You'd be perfectly at home then, Roxana! :)
      And here's to bong connections - even better when they're hard to explain.

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  6. Ooo, everything looks SO delicious! I wouldn't have expected thick puffy pizza crusts though. And a cat sanctuary? How cool!

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    1. Ah, you're a cat person then, Joyti? :) Rome certainly takes care of its cats. And there's no dearth of ruins to keep them entertained either.

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  7. I wanted to make enough time for your Rome posts but then is there anything like 'enough time'? Finally, I thought let me just start reading between whatever I am doing right now. Well you know what I never got around doing the other things. I kept reading and going through your pictures and imagining the taste of the pizza and the meat balls in the photographs. Italy is definitely on my wish list for the next year. I hope I get to do Spain, in this one! Beautiful Post, Pia. Chotto ma's pictures are adorable

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    1. Ah, Spain! Perfect thing to look forward to for the year. And the food will keep you busy there too. Can't wait to see it through your eyes.
      Thanks for leaving everything aside to read this, Anita, because I know just how impossible that 'enough time' is - I'm lucky to have you share that time with moi :)

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  8. I love travelling! Thank you for this little trip to Rome through your (and Chotto-ma's) eyes!

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  9. Hi Pia, loved reading about your trip...the food, the stay, the people, everything...but most of all, I absolutely adored the "Rome for little legs" part of your post...such a lovely detailed compilation. I am bookmarking it for future travels with my baby bear. :)
    P.S. I have put up a link to this post on my Facebook page.

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    1. Esha - wouldn't it be lovely if you followed our trail - Chotto-ma loved it, and I'm sure your baby bear will too :)
      And thanks for the share; I hope your Facebook-ers enjoyed the post.

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  10. I, for one who fantasizes to visit Europe (Rome tops my list) someday, this post is like a chocolate bite that I wish never ended. Lovely lovely photographs Pia and each of them has a story to it. Bookmarked this post for future reference. I know I will be there soon, not sure when..but soon! :-)

    Siri

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