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Archive for the ‘Food + Culture’ Category

Santa Lucia Ristorante…Rome stop for VIPs

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

Ristorante Santa Lucia.  Location:Near the Pantheon.

SantaHas a wonderful courtyard.  The restaurant had its 15 minutes of fame (again) when Julia Roberts of ‘Mystic Pizza’ fame frequented during the 2009 filming of best seller “Eat, Pray, Love”.  ( Not that these Hollywood types are evidence of good food but Santa Lucia has been a hit with such VIPs as Rupert Everett, Ridley Scott, Sofia Loren, Dante Ferretti, Bernardo Bertolucci and Harvey Keitel. Bill Clinton has been back many a time with his daughter Chelsea, while Kirstie Alley gave the paparazzi the international finger sign having been spotted leaving the restaurant.  During the never-ending filming of Gangs of New York at Cinecittà, Martin Scorsese and Leo di Caprio were a permanent fixture at the restaurant.

Roberts is quoted as saying her favorite location scenes were “when people were speaking Italian aRobertsthousand miles a minute and there was plenty of pasta and wine”.  We agree.  Menu favorites include scialatielli and spaghetti.

2 Via di Tor Sanguigna ; info@santaluciaristorante.it ; Tel#:  +39 06.68802427

Homemade in the Hamptons…

Monday, July 26th, 2010

Where does Marisa Tomei or Leonardo DiCaprio go when their in the Hamptons and looking for some local Italian fare to take home?  Best guess is ‘The Villa’.  An East Hampton institution for over 20 years Villa Italian Specialities is located across from the rail station in the village. Famous for homemade mozzarella, sausages and Italian heros. “The Villa” also features an assortment of prepared foods to go, house made sauces, soups, salads and breads. Try the foccaccia.  Villa

Villa Italian Specialties
7 Railroad Avenue
East Hampton,
New York 11937
Tel#  631-324-5110
Info@villaitalianspecialties.com
Hours: Monday – Saturday 7:30am -7:00pm; Sunday 8:00am – 5:00pm.

Frank Bruni’s NYC Favorite Italian Ristoranti…

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

Frank Bruni is no longer reviewing restaurants fro the New York Times but his sense of A-1 Italian has been proven time again.  In recent interview in La Cucina Italiana, he was asked about his favorite NYC Italian restaurants.  Below are five he felt were worth mentioning…(Note: the descriptions of these restauarants and their signature dishes are drawn from other sources like New York Magazine and Fodor’s.)

> Marea

www.marea-nyc.com; 240 Central Park S; New York, NY 10019-1457; (212) 582-5100. ”One of Chef White’s great pasta specialties is fusilli smothered in a delicately braised pork-shoulder ragù. Deprived of pork, he substitutes octopus then loads this already heavy dish with lumps of heart-stopping bone marrow. The sense of overkill is magnified by the grand entrée-size pasta portions, among them a dank pile of spinosini obscured in a swarm of pricey but tasteless langoustines, and tubes of house-made gramigne overwhelmed with smoked cod and too much speck. A heaping portion of crab-and-sea-urchin spaghetti had a lustrous, exotic quality to it, but nothing on the pasta list was quite as satisfying (or, at $23, as comparatively cheap) as the little ricotta-filled “pansotti” ravioli (served with a pesto artfully flavored with nettles), which contains no seafood at all. The seafood entrées, come in all sorts of baroque shapes and sizes. If it’s freshness you’re after, try the ivory-colored black bass (with artichokes, pine nuts, and pools of salsa verde) or the skate, piled over morels and a bed of green, butter-soaked summer peas. A seafood risotto is also available, along with an elaborate $45 “bordetto di pesce” soup from Italy’s Adriatic coast, which could have used a little more broth. Scallops were sweet and fresh, though weirdly slippery (they’re touched with more lardo), and if you’re not dieting, you’ll probably enjoy the Columbia River salmon, which the calorie-happy chef poaches in duck fat.—New York Magazine

> Lupa Osteria Romana

www.luparestaurant.com; 170 Thompson Street; NYC; (212) 982-5089. Lupa opened its doors on October 1, 1999 under the partnership of Mario Batali and Joseph Bastianich, and Chef Mark Ladner. A salumeria serves Italian artisan meats and cheeses, house-made products such as canned tuna and guanciale, and a kitchen that is dedicated to creating dishes as traditionally Roman as possible, while skillfully substituting and supplementing ingredients that are out of season or unavailable in New York. The result is a Roman menu with a New York balance.

DeNiro> Locanda Verde

www.locandaverdenyc.com; 377 Greenwich Street; New York, NY 10013-2338; (212) 925-3797  “The latest Italian restaurant in Robert De Niro’s star-crossed space is called Locanda Verde (“green inn”), and in style, conception, and tone it’s as different from its predecessor Ago as a raucous, deceptively sophisticated pop band is from the provincial touring company of a tattered old Broadway show.  The most radical overhaul, however, is in the kitchen, which is now overseen by the celebrated chef Andrew Carmellini. Carmellini is a protégé of Daniel Boulud (he was head chef at Café Boulud for years), and he later ran the critically acclaimed Italian restaurant A Voce before leaving in a dispute with the owner. Carmellini is a master of classical French (and Italian) technique, but at Locanda Verde (where he is a partner), he chucks it all to cook “family style” food for the masses. His menu is filled with lots of fashionable, small-plate “cicchetti,” including mounds of fresh sheep’s-milk ricotta (sprinkled liberally with sea salt) and melty slices of “testa della casa” (headcheese) antipasti decked with tangy pickled vegetables. The best of these early finger foods, though, are the crostini, which the chef piles alternately with faintly spicy summer corn (over toasted prosciutto bread), smooth dabs of puréed chicken liver, and mounds of blue crab leavened with jalapeño and a light touch of cream. There are only seven “secondi” entrées on the menu at Locanda Verde, and, in line with Carmellini’s populist mission, none costs over $25.”—New York Magazine

> Peasant

www.peasantnyc.com; 194 Elizabeth Street; New York, NY 10012-4255; (212) 965-9511. “The crowd at this rustic restaurant is stylishly urban. Inspired by the proverbial “peasant” cuisine where meals were prepared in the kitchen hearth, chef-owner Frank DeCarlo cooks all of his wonderful food in a bank of wood- or charcoal-burning ovens, from which the heady aroma of garlic perfumes the room. Don’t fill up on the crusty bread and fresh ricotta, though, or you’ll miss out on other flavorful Italian fare like sizzling sardines that arrive in terra-cotta pots, or rotisserie lamb that’s redolent of fresh herbs.”—Fodor’s

Convivio > Convivio

convivionyc.com; 45 Tudor City Place; New York, NY 10017; (212) 599-5045  “Convivio is chef Michael White’s ambitious reimagining of an upscale Italian restaurant in Tudor City that was called L’Impero. To provide a sense of sunny, Italian lightness (Convivio is also the name of a famous restaurant in Rome), the interior designer, Vicente Wolf, has covered the walls with white reflective glass and fitted them with installations of shimmering nylon string. The old lamp shades have been replaced with modish ones hung with orange glass spheres. The waiters have been outfitted with rust-colored shirts and the banquettes covered in Italianate crimson, like the inside of a grand Sicilian railway car. The four-course, $59 prix fixe dinner is $5 cheaper than the old one, but now you can choose from a mind-boggling 53 items, many of which change on a daily, or seasonal, basis. There are nine authentic varieties of the pre-antipasti finger food called sfizi (artichokes tossed with slivers of mint, fat risotto croquettes colored with saffron, soft bits of baby eggplant touched with chile), and enough antipasto to feed a small army of Sicilian peasants. Try the skewer of grilled quail with sweet onions, the faintly boozy chicken-liver crostini made with onions sautéed in Marsala wine, and the breaded sardines, which are dunked in creamy salmoriglio sauce (like Sicilian tartar sauce) and filled with smoky provolone. It’s in the realm of pastas that White demonstrates why he’s become known, in certain Rabelaisian circles, as midtown’s answer to Mario Batali. Like Batali, the rotund, gregarious chef is a voracious scholar of regional Italian cuisine. And like Batali, he has the ability to take classic recipes and imbue them with his own combination of lightness and soul. I’m thinking of the handcrafted maccheroni, folded Roman style with egg yolk, pepper, salty bits of pancetta, and summer peas, which was followed to our table by a bowl of baby-size orecchiette dunked in a rich Sicilian ragù made with tripe and lightened with fennel. There are densely textured ragùs made with braised pork shoulder (served over a nest of fusilli and finished with a lush fonduta made with caciocavallo cheese), fat tortelli ingeniously stuffed with tomato, onion, and cured pork jowl, and a weirdly ethereal recipe from Sardinia called malloreddus made with saffron, blue crab, and a hint of fresh sea urchin.” —New York Magazine

In Rome, Opera in Ruins

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

The headline of the article read: “In Rome, Opera in Ruins“.  Truth is this uniquely Italian form of music and theatre continues to flourish.

Visitors to Rome often marvel at the astonishing integration of ancient structures into the city’s modern fabric. Shops, an embassy and a gelateria all sit atop the ruins of a first-century stadium; apartments lean on the Theater of Marcellus; even the mayor’s office claims a Republican-era records hall as its foundation. This summer, the eye-opening ruins of the Baths of Caracalla join the fun, hosting ballet and opera performances.

BathsSummer operas in the ruins of the third-century public baths are nothing new. The tradition dates back to the 1930s and, save for a couple of interruptions (1940 to 1944 and 1994 to 2000), outdoor summer performances at the complex have been held annually, making them synonymous with sultry Roman summer evenings.

A ballet, “Romeo and Juliet,” has just finished its run, and will be followed by two operas: “Aida” (July 15 to Aug. 5) and “Rigoletto” (July 28 to Aug. 8). Both of these Verdi works were first performed at the baths in the 1930s, when the stage and seating were set up inside the ruins themselves.

Today, visitors sit on bleachers outside the baths and the stage is set up a short distance from the ruins. The impressive walls of the ancient caldarium (hot room) become stage scenery. Though despoiled of their stone veneer, mosaics and columns, the Baths of Caracalla provide an evocative setting and intensify the magic of this decades-old tradition.

Tickets are available online at the Opera Web site (39-06-481-60-255; en.operaroma.it), starting at 26.50 euros, about $32. They are also sold at the box office on the night of each performance, though due to the high demand for tickets, advance reservations are recommended.–From NY Times’ Travel.

Mario Batali in Michigan Forum

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

Batali“An Evening with Mario Batali”

The Traverse City National Writer’s Series will host Mario on the the Historic Front Lawn of the Village at Grand Traverse Commons on August 14th for a spectacular outdoor celebration of food, chefs, restaurants, beer, wine, music and the local culinary culture.

The event, scheduled from 5pm to 10pm will feature dishes inspired by recipes from Mario’s cookbooks and prepared by chefs representing The Cook’s House and Epicure Catering, as well as world-famous mixologist Bridget Albert, renown magician and MC Billy Harris, and an interactive audience Q&A with Batali. The evening will close with music and dancing.

To buy tickets, visit to www.porterhouseproductions.com.

Elba’s Ristoranti…

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Best known as the site of Napoleon’s exile, Elba’s long history stretches back to pre-Roman times, when it was settled by Ligures and then Etruscans. It’s Tuscany’s biggest island and Italy’s third-largest, offering a great mix of options both cultural (like hilltop towns and castles) and recreational (like hiking, biking, swimming, diving and beaching). There’s an airport at Marina di Campo, but most arrive by ferry from Piombino to Portoferraio (the biggest town), Rio Marina or Porto Azzurro. Elba is also part of the National Park of the Tuscan Archipelago and  is connected to the mainland via the two ferry companies, Toremar and Moby Lines, both offering routes between Piombino and Portoferraio, the capital located in the north, Cavo, Rio Marina and Porto Azzurro, on the east coast of the island. There is an airport on the island, Marina di Campo Airport. It is served by Intersky, with flights to Munich and Zürich and ElbaFly by internal flights.

If you go, here are a few places to put down a knife and fork…

> Ai Fiori

A local restaurant that serves up classic regional food with an elegant twist, including a tasting menu. Piazza Hortis 7, Trieste, 34124, Tel # 0403.00633,  aifiori.com.

> Caffè Tommaseo

Near the Piazza Unità, this is billed as Trieste’s oldest coffeehouse, and was decorated by the painter Giuseppe-Lorenzo Gatteri. It houses a cafeteria, restaurant and bar, and features live music each night. Pz. Tommaseo 4/c, Trieste, 34121,Tel # 0403.62666, caffetommaseo.com

italy_elba_island1> Osteria da Marino

This traditional osteria has its original 1920s architecture, boasts a convivial atmosphere, and serves classic Italian dishes and local wines. Via del Ponte 5, Trieste, 34100, Tel # 0403.66596, osteriadamarino.com.

> Taverna Cigui

This casual restaurant, in the nearby town of Muggia, showcases local cuisine influenced by the area’s proximity to Slovenia. Via Colarich 22, 34015Tel # 0402.73363, tavernacigui.it.

Source: La Cucina Italiana (http://lacucinaitalianamagazine.com/travel-article/trieste#where-to-eat)

Frank Bruni’s Rome Favorites

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

La Cucina magazine interviewed Frank Bruni (former NY Times food critic) on his favorites Rome ristoranti…see three of his favorites below…Thought you might want to try if you have not already done so…welcome your suggestions too.

> Trattoria Monti
Address: Via San Vito, 13A; Tel # 06-4466573.
“Walk inside and see two charismatic brothers, Enrico and Daniele Camerucci, handle a dozen or so tables with grace and ease. Their mother, Franca, is the cook, and she can be depended on for terrific pasta dishes (her tortellone with an egg-yolk center is a delicate marvel) and an amazing Parmesan custard of sorts, which the restaurant vaguely labels a tortino. No matter where on the menu you stray, it’s hard to go wrong.” (NY Times Review.)

>Taverna dei Fori Imperiali
Address: Via Madonna dei Monti, 16; Tel # 06-6798643. Open: Wed-Mon 12:30pm-3pm, 7:15pm-10:30pm. www.latavernadeiforiimperiali.com
“Alessio and his wife Maria have created a homey ambiance in their small, family-run restaurant. Here, just a stone-throw away from the Coliseum, enjoy the beauty of Italian cuisine and hospitality. The recipes are a selection of Sicilian, Roman and Umbrian (the ancestral stomping grounds), plus the chef’s innovations. Recommendations count for a lot here: let the waiter or waitress advise your selection.” Reservation required. (review by 10 Best). Favorite pick of Frank Bruni, former NY Times restaurant critic as referenced in La Cucina Magazine, July/August 2010.

> Santopadre
Via Collina, 18; Tel # 06 4745405. Casual. Neighborhood place. (10 minutes walk from St. Regis Grand). Favorite pick of Frank Bruni, former NY Times restaurant critic as referenced in La Cucina Magazine, July/August 2010.

Piedmont Ristoranti by IWM

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

The Italian Wine Merchant (IWM) of New York is one of the best shops to check out when considering vino d’italia.  The store also has a wonderful e.newsletter to enlightens and inspire both regular consumers and connoisseurs alike.  A look at their website also offers a serious listing of Italian ristoranti.  We have taken a look at their suggestions for Piedmont and find them quite satisfactory…Here is a sampling:

Il Cascinalenuovo
 (Asti
)

Highway A21
Exit Asti Est– Main Road

Tel: 011.39.0141.958166
Fax: 011.39.0141.958828

Email: info@ilcascinalenuovo.it Website: www.ilcascinalenuovo.it Il

Cascinalenuovo offers some classic Piemonte dishes, such as: raw meat, handmade ravioli, braised beef etc., as well as some more modern creations. This restaurant and hotel match innovation and tradition to create bold flavors and memorable dishes.

Antica Corona Reale (Cuneo)

Via Fossano, 13
12040 Cervere (CN)

Tel: 011.39.0172.474132
Fax: 011.39.0172.474132

Mentioned in Sergio’s book, Passion on the Vine, this Michelin Star restaurant enlightens you with home cooking-Piedmontese-style, including perhaps the finest rendition of tripe anywhere in the world. Wine options are extensive.

Belevedere 
(La Morra)

Piazza Castello, 5
(CN)

Tel: 011.39.0173.50190
Fax: 011.39.0173.509580
; Email: info@belvederelamorra.it Website: www.belvederelamorra.it

No longer owned by the Bovio family, it is under new management.
Closed Sunday evenings and all day Monday. 
Belvedere is one of the oldest restaurants in Piedmont. It offers typical Piedmontese cuisine; the base ingredients of these dishes are carefully selected and are of the highest quality. When in season the restaurant also offers traditional dishes made with local mushrooms and the white truffles of Alba.

De Guido 
(Stefano Belbo)

Localitia San Maurizio, 39
St

Tel: 011.39.0141.841900
Fax: 011.39.0141.843833
Email: info@relaissanmaurizio.it Website: www.relaissanmaurizio.it

(Part of the Relais San Maurizio hotel, so always open.)

Ristorante Bovio
 (La Morra )

Via Alba, 17 bis
(CN)

Tel: 011.39.0173.590303
Fax: 011.39.0173.590350
Email: info@ristorantebovio.it Website: www.ristorantebovio.it

The Bovio family, one of the oldest families of restaurateurs in Piedmont, has now moved to a new location, in a panoramic position among the vineyards of Barolo. It is an informal but elegant environment, with delightful views of the vineyards and castles of the Langhe, seen through big windows in the dining area.

Trattoria della Posta “da Camulin”
(Monforte d’Alba)

Località Sant’Anna
12065

Tel: 011.39.0173.78120
Fax: 011.39.0173.78120
Email: info@trattoriadellaposta.it Website: www.trattoriadellaposta.it Closed Thursdays and Friday for lunch and for the month of February.

The philosophy underlying Gianfranco Massolino’s cuisine consists of reproducing the great classical recipes of the Langhe and Monferrato territories. Recipes, handed down for generations, keep their own authentic tastes and simplicity. The care for ingredients, such as mushrooms and truffles, is outstanding. Along with Piedmont’s traditional recipes Gianfranco Massolino likes to incorporate international cuisine, especially fish and foie gras.

La Gallina 
(Gavi)

Monterotondo Resort
Frazione Monterotondo, 56
15066 Gavi (AL)

Tel: 011.39.0143.685.132
Fax: 011.39.0143.607.811
Email: info@la-gallina.it Website: www.monterotondoresort.com/gallina/index.htm

La Gallina provides guests with the opportunity to taste the traditional flavors of typical Piemontese cuisine. The chef uses only the freshest of ingredients, obtaining his meat from the surrounding lands and his fish from the neighboring region of Liguria The main dining room provides a rustic, yet refined ambience while the outdoor terrace boasts beautiful panoramic views.

Ristorante Pisterna 
(Acqui Terme)

Via Scatilazzi 15
15011

Tel: 011.39.0144.325114
Email: info@pisterna.it Website: www.pisterna.it Acqui Terme, away from the Barolo area.

(more…)

Vino d’Italia… under $20 USD per bottle

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

Here is a list of wines all under $20 that I would drink instead of a number of more expensive wines.

grapes Nino Franco Prosecco Valdobbiadene “Rustico”  NV  D.O.C. 100% Prosecco  (After April 2010 the area is Prosecco and the grape which is Glera) Fresh  citrus aromas and  flavors  with good bubbles. In the Veneto, Prosecco is  always served in a white wine glass.  Veneto $16-20.

di Lenardo Vineyards Grave Del Friuli

1.TOH! Da Uva Friulano- Friulano Friuli D.O.C. Grave, 100% Friuliano(Tocai)  It is a soft well balanced wine. Friuli, under $15

2.Sauvignon.I.G.T Venezia Giulia, a vine blend of Sauvignon Blanc and    Sancerre clones, aromatic  with aromas and flavors of sage and melon. Well    balanced with good acidity. Friuli ,under $15

3.Pass the Cookies I.G.T. (Great name for a dessert wine) Venezia Giulia 100%  Verduzzo. Harvested late and dried three months on the racks. Dried fruit aromas and flavors with undertones of caramel. It is a 500ml but still a great deal for under. Friuli , under $15

Azienda Agricola Travignoli Villa Travignoli Chianti Rufina D.O.C.G.   100% Sangiovese.  Aromas and flavors of red fruit, and real sangiovese character. Tuscany $15

Monte Antico  Toscana I.G.T.85% Sangiovese..% 10 Cabernet Sauvignon and 5% Merlot. Red berry aromas and flavors and good acidity. Tuscany $14

Masciarelli

1. Trebbiano d’ Abruzzo  D.O.C. Citrus aromas and flavors with undertones of apple.  Abruzzo, $13

2. Montepullciano d’Abruzzo D.O.C. Red berry aromas and flavors, a hint of cherry and a touch of tobacco,.Abruzza, $13

Cusumano  Benuara  70%Nero d’Avola and 30% Syrah, Sicily I.G.T. Aromatic with red and black fruit . Usually I do not like Nero d’Avola blended with Syrah, but the wine is in stainless steel and 20hl barrels and it works very well. Sicily $15-18

Sella and Mosca Cannonau Riserva  di Sardinia D.O.C. 100% Cannonau.  Red fruit with hints of spices and herbs and very earthly. Sardinia   $15

Agricole Vallone

Vigna Flamino  Riserva Brindisi Rosso D.O.C. Mostly Negroamaro with Malvasis Nrea and Moltipulicano.  Red fruit aromas and flavors with a under tones of prune. Puglia $15

Cantina Sociale Cooperativa Copertino  Copertino Riserva D.O.C. 95% Negroammaro and 5% Malvasia Nera  Black and red fruit aromas and flavors with hint  a of  tobacco. Puglia $15

D.O.C. 100% Negroamaro, aromas and flavors of red fruit with a hint of prune, Puglia  $15

Source:  These wine suggestions are taken verbatim from the wonderful wine blog “  Charles Scicolone on Wine”…Mr. Scicolone is a true expert on Italian wines…he has lectured on vino d’italia for the Italy America Chamber of Commerce,  La Cucina Italiana Magazine, the Italian Trade Commission, The Wine Media Guild and The Smithsonian Institute.  If his sir name ‘Scicolone’ sounds familiar it is likely due to the prominence of his wife, Michele, author of among other fine Italian cookbooks, “The Italian Slow Cooker”,  “The Sopranos Family Cookbook”.   Please visit his website: http://charlesscicolone.wordpress.com.

Toscano Ristoranti to Dazzle the Palate…

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

> Gambero Rosso
Piazza della Vittoria 13, San Vincenzo
Chef: Fulvio Pierangelini; Cuisine: creative / modern
The simple elegance of an historical establishment, on the port of San Vincenzo, reflects the characteristics of an elegant imaginative cuisine that has managed to remain simple and solid.  2 Michelin stars. Specialities: Chickpea purée with shrimps. Burrata soup with grey mullet ravioli. Bass with Sienese Cinta pancetta.

> Osteria di Passignano
Via Passignano 33 , Passignano
Inside the old late 19th Century wine cellar, of the Antinori marquises
Chef: Nicola Damiani; Cuisine: creative / modern
Enchanting location: beside the abbey, in the late nineteenth-century cellars of the Marquises of Antinori; on a par with the modern-style cuisine firmly rooted in the past.
1 Michelin star.

> Pane e Vino
Piazza Signorelli, 27, Cortona
Chef: Oliviero Zoccoloni; Cuisine: traditional
Taverna Pane e Vino is a restaurant located inside a cantina of a 14th century palazzo.
The Tavern has a menu consisting of authentic tuscan food with an extensive wine list that includes more than 900 labels. Outside seating is available.  Specialities: Bruschettas, cured meats, local cheeses, traditional soups, fresh pastas and home made desserts.

> Antica Trattoria Botteganova
Via Chiantigiana 29, per Montevarchi
Chef: Michele Sorrentino;  Cuisine: Seafood and Tuscan specialities
An unassuming building greets you from the outside; inside you will be surprised by the elegant interior, which is full of charm, with its refined tables and comfortable little armchairs. Choice Tuscan cuisine, reinterpreted by the chef.
1 Michelin star.  Specialities: Fettunta with zolfini beans. Fillet of herb-marinated tuna with chickpea cream. Spelt risotto with crispy vegetables and Leghorn cockerel ragout.

> Frateria di Padre Eligio
Al Convento di San Francesco Nord-Ovest, Cetona
Chef: Walter Tripodi;  Cuisine: regional
In a park, a medieval Franciscan monastery, managed by a community of former drug users, exclusive bedrooms, creative cuisine: mystical influences and tempting “sins” such as wine.

> La Grotta
Via di S. Biagio, 15,  Montepulciano
Chef: Cristina Mazzuoli;  Cuisine: Tuscan / creative
La Grotta is located in a old stable of the 14th century with a nice garden for the summer.  Specialities: Pecorino cheese soufflè with asparagus sauce, tuscan croutons with a topping of duck liver and Vin Santo sauce, tuscan tomato and basil soup, Pappardelle with guinea-fowl and prunes, Boned quails flavoured with garlic and rosemary, Cherry tart with pear sorbet.

Pienza> La Terrazza del Chiostro
Viale Rossellino, 26, Pienza
Chef: Michele Armenio; Cuisine: traditional / creative
Tradition and new discoveries meet in the cusine of “La Terrazza del Chiostro” located in the heart of Pienza in an ancient convent of the 15th century with a splendid view into the Orcia valley. Framed in a refined harmony by fantasy of the chef, the colours of the wine-cellars and the heartfelt hospitality of the staff.   Specialities: local meat and daily fresh fish.