The closest to soccer
The closest to soccer
In the 1930s, the Ambrosiana-Internazionale team, with Castellazzi, Alemandi, De Manzano, Meazza, Faccio, Levratto, Bitto, Agosteo, Cerasoli, Frione and Serantoni, felt at home in Ristorante Boeucc, in Milan.
Ostaria Antico Dolo
Located in the Rialto market area, in the beating heart of Venice, the Ristorante Antico Dolo is part of a fifteenth-century building where, at the time of the Serenissima, there was a famous house of tolerance. In 1434 a bàcaro, an ancient Venetian term that still identifies the typical taverns scattered among the calli and wrinkles of the lagoon city, was opened here to “refresh” customers exhausted by the performances just consumed on the upper floors. Taken over in 1989 by Bruno Ruffini and his family, it still offers what for centuries was the real speciality of the house: the trippa rissa (different types of offal boiled according to an antique recipe), now as then accompanied by dry white wine from nearby Dolo, a stunning town in the Riviera del Brenta.
Ristorante Giannino dal 1899
A wine tavern with a kitchen. That was the Giannino when it all began, when Milan was not yet a metropolis and the international jet set was yet to come. The fame of this restaurant spread far and wide from the moment it was founded, and in over 120 years of history, it has become one of the icons of Milanese gastronomic tradition. Gregory Peck and Maria Callas, Grace Kelly and Ian Fleming have been just some of its illustrious guests. Recent renovation work, under the watchful eye of the proprietor, Antonio Fantini, has returned it to the almost aristocratic elegance of its glorious past. Refinement and discretion reign once more in the rooms of the Giannino.
Grand Hotel Parker’s
For a century and a half, it has witnessed history in the making:
King Victor Emmanuel II, Lenin, Oscar Wilde, Robert Louis
Stevenson and the brightest stars of Hollywood have all stayed
here. The hotel was chosen for the Allied command during the war
and, in recent years, for President Eltsin and his delegation.
The original Art Nouveau facade and the elegant interiors, the
glorious furnishings and historic library with its 700 nineteenth
and twentieth-century volumes have all been beautifully preserved.
PALACE GRAND HOTEL VARESE
A perfectly intact Liberty-style masterpiece by the architect
Sommaruga, it is set in a park on the Colle Campigli, with views
over the lakes all the way to Monte Rosa. All is Belle Époque: the
building, entrance canopies, the lobby with its seven-metre tall
windows, the halls, bar, restaurant, chandeliers, wall sconces,
frescoes, ornaments, forged iron, and marble and wooden
staircases. Wilhelmina of the Netherlands spent a month here,
Umberto of Savoy came when it was a war hospital, Tamagno
played cards with Mascagni and Puccini, King Farouk came with
fabulous women, and Nureyev drove people mad with his whims.
Ristorante Taverna Rovita
Time takes its time in the “City of 44 Churches”. Also at the Taverna Rovita we can relish the details and let our eyes wander dreamily across the eighteenth-century tiles of the fireplace and the original beams on the ceiling. Initially a friary and then a taverna, it is a haven of excellence where one can discover the delights of Lucanian cuisine in one of the most picturesque alleyways in Maratea. Everything here – the seven tables, the ceramics by master craftsmen on show in the room – invites us to take things slowly. The most memorable visit was by Guttuso, who devoted a painting to the Taverna Rovita. And then there is the proprietor, Mariastella Gambardella, who accompanies us on a journey through the finest dishes of local cuisine.
Ristorante Poldino
From the Medici to Napoleon, by way of the Savoys and presidents of the Italian Republic: the whole history of Italy is written in the San Rossore estate. Here, just a few miles from Pisa, stands a bastion of traditional Tuscan food and wines. For three generations, the Ristorante Poldino has been home to the finest regional specialties, a place where the colours and aromas of the estate blend with the flavours of dishes like no other. Wild boar and deer, pecorino cheese and beach honey are at the heart of the cuisine at the Poldino, to be enjoyed in a delightful, historic nineteenth-century building.
Osteria Il Governo 1801
Next to the four numbers that spell out 1801, carved into the granite of the entrance door, stand the initials of Francesco Bazzoni, the innkeeper at the time. Since then, the magical walls of the Osteria il Governo have told the story of a distant age, of Carbonari and libertarian uprisings. Here Silvio Pellico spent his last night of freedom, amid the dreams of great men determined to create a unified Italy. And here, today as then, one can enjoy the simplicity of a platter of cold cuts and cheeses beneath the pergola in the garden, or enjoy the ever-renewed menu since the days of Justinian’s taberna. A few years ago, Pietro Giuseppe Bazzoni, the seventh direct descendant of the founder, rediscovered the history of this place, where every shelf and photograph tell us more than any history book.
Trattoria Alla Vedova
Almost nothing has changed since wine and salt were sold here, along with minestrone and barbecued meat sold by weight. The welcoming fire, or fogolâr, that greets guests with its delicious aromas is still in its place today, at the Trattoria alla Vedova. And yet the origins of this restaurant in Udine are lost in time. One just need look through the family objects that fill the rooms to relive the story of Signora Felicita, who in 1924 was already known by all simply as la vedue – “the widow”. The atmosphere has remained the same, with the loving touch of the Zamarian family, who have preserved all the enchantment of an ancient world.
Pensione Accademia – Villa Maravege
Entering the Hotel Pensione Accademia in Venice is like returning to the splendours of the Serenissima. The Villa Maravege still preserves traces of its origins as a seventeenth-century aristocratic residence. An atmosphere adored by Iosif Brodskij, the Nobel laureate in Literature in 1987, and other guests of international renown, such as Sir Laurence Olivier and Marcello Mastroianni. Since the 1950s, the Pensione Accademia has been run by the Salmaso family, who have preserved all the charm of the warm, welcoming rooms of the Villa, one of the few hotels in Venice to have no fewer than two gardens.
Caffè Valiani
In the 14th century, Valiani was the site of the Oratory of St. Anthony. In 1864, when the café was built over the ruins, many treasures came to light, treasures such as the walls with frescoes from the school of Giotto. Some of its best known clients were Verdi, Rossini, Bellini, Leoncavallo, Giordano and Puccini. Another reason for visiting Valiani? Take a quiet browse around its Art Gallery.









