Archive for the ‘General’ Category

CN Traveler Top Travel Specialist for Italy 2010

Sunday, August 1st, 2010

The August issue of Condé Nast Traveler is out and Concierge in Umbria is named to Consumer News Editor Wendy Perrin’s list of the Top 135 Travel Specialists for the 5th timeConcierge in Umbria’s Listing on Concierge.com 

We are also listed on CN Traveler’s newest site – www.truth.travel in their listing of World’s 175 Most Trusted Human Beings to Arrange Your Next Blow-out Vacation.  Maria Gabriella Landers and Brian Dore’s listing on truth.travel

The specialists on these lists are chosen by Consumer News Editor, Wendy Perrin and her team and are based upon "the best combination of specialized knowledge, insider connections, user-friendliness, and value for the money."  Being selected for this prestigious list is a career achievement and we are honored and thrilled to be included!

We look forward to helping you plan your next visit to Italy.

Happy Fourth of July!

Sunday, July 4th, 2010
From Blog Photos

Happy Fourth of July from Concierge in Umbria!  Photo from the Palazzo Bontandosi, Montefalco, Umbria

Old Soccer

Thursday, June 10th, 2010
From Italian Dressing

The first match of Il campionato di calcio 2010 in South Africa is tomorrow and Italy will be there to defend its title.  If you are in Italy during the next month, you are bound to be swept up in the fever for the Azzurri.  There will be public viewings in piazzas around the country and all will stop on June 14, 20, and 24 for Italy’s first round games.  Jerseys, scarves, and flags will be readily available but if you are looking for something a bit more interesting, give Old Soccer a visit (www.oldsoccer.it).  Located near the Piazza del Popolo in Roma at VIA DI RIPETTA, 30, Old Soccer offers historic replica jerseys from past World Cups as well as a wide selection of vintage team jerseys. 

FORZA AZZURRI!

Festa dei Ceri – Gubbio 2010

Monday, May 17th, 2010

This year’s Festa dei Ceri in Gubbio was a rain-soaked affair but that didn’t dampenn the spirits of the participants or spectators.  For more photos of the day click here.

From Corsa dei ceri – 2010

Every year, for about the last 900 or so, the residents of Gubbio celebrate this incredible event. The giant “candles” or ceri (pronounced like cherry) are actually three giant wooden octagonal columns over 20 feet high. Each ceri is topped by a small statue representing one of three featured saints: Ubaldo – patron saint of the town and protector of masons, Giorgio – protector of merchants, and Antonio – protector of farmers.

The bearers and their coterie are dressed in the costume and colors of their patron. Before the race, in Gubbio’s spectacular Piazza Grande, a very spirited and exciting ceremony punctuated by medieval fanfare.  The culmination of the ceremony is the raising of the ceri onto the shoulders of the candle bearers and a procession through the town.

From Corsa dei ceri – 2010

 Shortly thereafter, the central action stops as the bearers take time out for a leisurely lunch – it is Italy after all!  While they are loading up on a monstrous fish lunch, the rest of the town is filled with music as local bands parade through the streets inciting a raucous bacchanal.

From Corsa dei ceri – 2010

In the late afternoon, in a ritual that is believed to combine an ancient pagan celebration of the rites of spring with a religious commemoration begun in 1154 to express gratitude to St. Ubaldo, the male citizens of Gubbio race through the town and up to the Basillica of St. Ubaldo at breakneck speed. The ceri are incredibly heavy and the bearers scream and grimace their way through the entire route, trading places with other bearers every few minutes without interrupting the pace. The two hour ordeal through the town and up to the top of the mountain to the tomb of St. Ubaldo is a wild spectacle – you must see it to believe it. One other peculiarity of this tradition is the outcome of the “race” – St. Ubaldo always wins. The race begins with the ceri in Ubaldo-Giorgio-Antonio order, and in the tiny streets of Gubbio – there is no opportunity to change it and the unwritten rules of the race prohibit passing.

From Corsa dei ceri – 2010

Snow in Rome

Friday, February 12th, 2010
From Blog Photos

O Scarpia, avanti a DIO!!!! Brrrrr it’s cold . . . . Floria Tosca

For the first time in 24 years, Roma awoke to a measurable snowfall (3 cm or a little over an inch).  It closed the Colosseo and briefly shut down the airports.  It is being reported that Berlusconi’s government ordered the snowfall as a sign of solidarity with Washington and the rest of the Eastern United States. ;-)

Article in Italian can be found here.

McItaly

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

The McItaly burger has arrived.  The BBC has video from a McDonalds in Rome (here).  It is a 100% Italian beef patty with Asiago cheese and artichoke spread.  While I don’t think that I’ll be rushing to Assisi (the nearest McDonalds to us in Italy) to buy one, I can’t help being slightly amused by all the fuss.  After all — some of the worst fast food I’ve experienced has originated from the “panino” counters of certain rest stops along the highways of Italy.  After having choked down salty, dried-out prosciutto and wilted arugula on stale bread, I’m not sure that McDonalds would have been a worse choice.   The best of Italy is never fast, unless you’re talking about cars!

For great food check out our Great Plates series of posts (here).  There’s even a post about American style burgers on the 4th of July.

It’s Florence — again.

Friday, October 16th, 2009
From Italia!

At the Condé Nast Traveler Reader’s Choice Awards in New York City last night, the great Italian cities once again dominated the Best European City category. The three finalists were Florence, Venice and Rome, with Florence repeating this year as the winner. Danilo Gallinari of the New York Knicks accepted the award for Florence – although he is from Milan!  Over 25,000 Condé Nast Traveler readers participated in this year’s poll and it was a wonderful evening, honoring the best in the airline, hotel and travel destinations. In addition to Gallinari’s supersized contribution, luminaries of the big and small screen (Lorraine Bracco, Stanley Tucci & Mary Louise Parker), runway (former supermodel Rachel Hunter), boardroom (Richard Branson) and kitchen (Daniel Boulud, Danny Meyer) were on hand to present the winners. Maria Gabriella was in attendance as Concierge in Umbria was awarded Top Travel Specialist honors for the 4th consecutive year!

From Italia!

Bon Appetit Travel Board

Monday, August 24th, 2009
From Girasole

Brian has been named to the Bon Appetit Travel Board.  The Travel Board is a selection of Travel Specialists dedicated to finding the best in gastronomic adventures.  A former New York restaurant cook, Brian advises on cooking classes, wine tastings, and other epicurean experiences.  Click here to view his listing on the Bon Appetit Now website. 

Visit Concierge in Umbria online: www.conciergeinumbria.net

Pasta “Maltagliata” with spicy tomato sauce.

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

There is a small enoteca/restaurant on the main square in Montefalco.  We ate there for the first time in 2003, a couple of months after they opened, and it has become without a doubt one of our favorite places to eat — in the world.  The food is always unpretentious, full flavored and most important interesting.  The owners, who have since become friends, take a vacation each year in February.  This year they ended up on the Yucatan penninsula in Mexico.  The trip inspired this plate of maltagliata (literally poorly cut pasta) made with Roveja flour and dressed with a tomato sauce spiked with some dried ancho chiles they brought home.  Roveja flour is ground from a type of pea (”piselli selvatico” or wild pea) that is cultivated in the Valnerina region of Umbria.

From Great Plates

Maltagliata made from Roveja flour and spicy tomato sauce

Cooking at L’Andana

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Michelin 3* chef, Alain Ducasse, has, in recent years, created an empire of restaurants and hotels throughout the world.  His Tuscan “duchy” is located in the plains outside Grosseto near the fishing village turned beach resort of Castiglione della Pescaia.  The hotel is everything you would expect from a 5* country resort with immaculate grounds, spacious rooms, and a well appointed spa.  I, however, wasn’t there for the hotel, although I did find it extremely comfortable – the design and furnishings are for the most part new, styled to look old.  But I was there for the food and to learn something in the process.  

From Blog Photos

The entrance to L’Andana

In addition to our reservation at the hotel’s restaurant, Trattoria Toscana, they offer a two hour cooking demonstration/class for guests of the hotel. Maria signed me up and I went as both interested observer and foodie (I haven’t cooked professionally in 10 years but still know my way around a kitchen). The class was led by Annalisa Martini, a L’Andana veteran and native of one of the great food cities of Italy – Bologna. She told us that she started cooking at a very young age in her grandmother’s now closed restaurant in Bologna. This was perfect, who better to teach the fine points of roll out pasta dough than a Bolognese with a restaurant pedigree? 

The course consisted of making our pasta dish for the dinner and dessert – ravioli stuffed with swiss chard, fresh ricotta, and pecorino in butter and thyme and a simple chocolate soufflé to be served with vanilla ice cream.  We started with the pasta dough, working it with our hands to the right consistency and then letting it rest.  We then moved onto the filling for the ravioli and finally the mix for the soufflé.  All went smoothly and at an amiable pace, aided by the L’Andana’s own white and rosé wines offered as accompaniment to the learning experience.  Annalisa proved to be an excellent teacher as well as good source of information about the philosophy of the restaurant.  Ducasse is trying to create dishes that can be as faithful to the concept of 0 KM cooking as possible.  As a result, the L’Andana property produces most of the vegetables used in the kitchen and everything except the dried pasta from Naples and salted butter from France is sourced from within 20 KM of the resort.  This was especially evident the next morning when the “Nutella” appeared to be a homemade variety of the Italian classic.

At the end of the class we were called by the maître d’ and brought downstairs to our table where Maria and I enjoyed dinner, partially prepared by me, in Trattoria Toscana.  How was the food I didn’t cook?  To be continued . .

N.B. the class is not private and is only open to guests of the hotel.  I was joined by a family of 4, parents with two young boys and although everyone was well behaved and the hotel had informed me beforehand, it is still something to consider when booking.  Also, the best test of any class such as this is does it improve your skills at home?  Well, I got my ingredients together and grabbed the rolling pin and made pasta at home for the first time a few days later.  I still need some work but I’ve got the basic concept down and will soon be getting it right with a bit of practice.