logo
From Aristocracy to Authenticity: Cook with a Real Duchess at Butera 28 Apartments in Palermo

From Aristocracy to Authenticity: Cook with a Real Duchess at Butera 28 Apartments in Palermo

'Cooking together is a way of preserving our history. Every dish tells a story, not just of Sicily, but of our family's place in it.'— Duchess Nicoletta Lanza Tomasi
PALERMO, ITALY, July 27, 2025 / EINPresswire.com / -- In an age of curated experiences and instant itineraries, Butera 28 Apartments offers something deeply personal and genuinely Sicilian: cooking with a real Duchess inside a historic palazzo.
Tucked within the storied walls of Palazzo Lanza Tomasi, Butera 28 Apartments invites guests to share in the traditions of Italian nobility - beginning in the kitchen. Duchess Nicoletta Lanza Tomasi opens her private kitchen to residents for hands-on cooking classes rooted in family heritage and local ingredients.
From Market to Table
The experience begins with a walk through one of Palermo's vibrant street markets, Il Capo. Alongside the Duchess herself, guests learn to choose the freshest seasonal produce, seafood, and local specialities - from fragrant wild fennel to sun-ripened tomatoes and salted ricotta.
Back at the palazzo's 18th-century kitchen, participants learn to prepare a selection of traditional dishes, including trapanese pesto, swordfish rolls, biancomangiare, pistachio pesto, or handmade panelle. The classes are relaxed, engaging, and rich with family stories.
'Cooking together is a way of preserving our history,' says the Duchess. 'Every dish tells a story, not just of Sicily, but of our family's place in it.'
The meal culminates with a shared lunch or dinner in the palazzo's grand dining room, complete with wine pairings and views of the Tyrrhenian Sea. These classes offer a full-circle culinary immersion - both intimate and indulgent.
After lunch, the experience concludes with a private tour of the historic Palazzo, offering a glimpse into the legacy of Prince Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa, the celebrated author of The Leopard (Il Gattopardo).
A Cultural Feast
Butera 28 Apartments is more than just a place to stay. It is part of one of Palermo's most historic and culturally significant buildings. The Palazzo Lanza Tomasi is the last home of Prince Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa, the author of the internationally acclaimed novel Il Gattopardo (The Leopard).
Published posthumously in 1958 and later adapted into a film starring Burt Lancaster and Claudia Cardinale, The Leopard tells the story of an aristocratic family's decline during the Risorgimento. It remains a touchstone of modern Italian literature. In 2025, the novel found renewed relevance through a Netflix original series based on the book, drawing international attention to Lampedusa's life and legacy.
Visitors to Butera 28 Apartments have the rare opportunity to see Lampedusa's original manuscript on display within the palazzo's private museum - an intimate experience for literature lovers and scholars alike. The museum, curated by the Duke and Duchess of Palma, also houses first editions, family portraits, and artefacts that bring the era of The Leopard vividly to life.
Living Heritage for Today's Traveller
According to the Italian Ministry of Culture, interest in literary tourism has grown by 39% since 2021, and heritage-based travel now ranks among the top five motivations for visiting Sicily. Meanwhile, food-focused travel remains one of the region's strongest draws, with over 70% of international visitors citing gastronomy as a key reason for their trip.
Palermo itself is also experiencing a renaissance. With over 300 days of sunshine annually and average winter temperatures above 15°C, the city has become one of Europe's top emerging destinations for remote workers and digital nomads. A 2025 study by the Mediterranean Institute for Urban Innovation found that long-stay visitor numbers in Palermo grew by 81% between 2021 and 2024 - driven by an influx of creatives, freelancers, and entrepreneurs seeking connection, culture, and quality of life.
Butera 28 Apartments masterfully combines all of these experiences. Guests are not just observers - they participate in the rhythms of Sicilian life, from market to table, and from story to setting.
Whether you're a seasoned cook, a literary enthusiast, or a cultural traveller in search of meaning, A Day Cooking with the Duchess offers a rare and unforgettable experience. It is personal, profound, and grounded in the lived legacy of a noble Sicilian family.
Book your stay and culinary experience at www.palazzolanzatomasi.it to discover the soul of Palermo from inside its most historic walls.
Duchess Nicoletta Lanza Tomasi
Palazzo Lanza Tomasi
+39 348 000 7673
[email protected]
Visit us on social media:
Instagram
Facebook
Legal Disclaimer:
EIN Presswire provides this news content 'as is' without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Pope Leo XIV gets rock star's welcome at Catholic influencer festival
Pope Leo XIV gets rock star's welcome at Catholic influencer festival

Associated Press

time3 hours ago

  • Associated Press

Pope Leo XIV gets rock star's welcome at Catholic influencer festival

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Leo XIV on Tuesday received a rock star's welcome at the Vatican's festival of Catholic influencers — priests, nuns and ordinary faithful who use their social media presence to preach and teach the faith — as he urged them to ensure that human relations don't suffer with the spread of digital ecosystems and artificial intelligence. History's first American pope was mobbed by hundreds of influencers, their cellphones hoisted high to stream the encounter, when he arrived in St. Peter's Basilica after a special Mass. The pilgrims have descended on Rome for a special Holy Year celebration of so-called 'digital missionaries,' part of the Vatican's weeklong Jubilee for young people that culminates this weekend with a vigil and Mass in a vast field on Rome's outskirts. Leo thanked the young people for using their digital platforms to spread the faith, and he gamely posed for selfies. But he warned them about neglecting human relationships in their pursuit of clicks and followers, and cautioned them to not fall prey to fake news and the 'frivolity' of online encounters. 'It is not simply a matter of generating content, but of creating an encounter between hearts,' Leo said in a speech that showed his ease switching from Italian to Spanish to English. 'Be agents of communion, capable of breaking down the logic of division and polarization, of individualism and egocentrism.' 'It is up to us – to each one of you – to ensure that this culture remains human,' he said. 'Our mission – your mission – is to nurture a culture of Christian humanism, and to do so together' in what he called the only networks that really matter: of friendship, love and the 'network of God.' Warnings against going off-message For the past two days, the Vatican's message to the young influencers has been one of thanks for their social media evangelizing, but also a warning to not allow their posting to go off-message or to neglect the human dimension of all encounters. For Leo, the issue is particularly heartfelt since he has said that addressing the threat to humanity posed by AI will be a priority of his pontificate. The Rev. David McCallum, an American Jesuit who heads a leadership development program and presented Monday, held periodic breaks with instructions for those in the audience to actually speak with the person next to them, for up to 10 minutes at a time. Cardinal Antonio Tagle, the head of the Vatican's evangelization office, urged the influencers to avoid anything that smacks of false advertising, coercion or brainwashing in their posting, or to use their platform to make money. He noted that he himself had been victim of a fake video advertising arthritis medicine. 'Brothers and sisters, be discerning,' Tagle told the influencers in his homily at Tuesday's Mass. A mini World Youth Day in Rome Tuesday began with groups of influencers and young pilgrims passing through the basilica's Holy Door, a rite of passage for the estimated 32 million people participating in the Vatican's 2025 Holy Year celebrations. This week, downtown Rome swarmed with energetic masses of teenage Catholic scouts, church and Catholic school groups. It all had the vibe of a scaled-down World Youth Day, the once-every-three-year Catholic Woodstock festival that was inaugurated by St. John Paul II. The most recent one in Lisbon, Portugal went viral thanks to the Rev. Guilherme Peixoto, a village priest in northern Portugal who also happens to be a DJ. He's in Rome this week, though it's not clear if he will reprise his now-famous set that woke the young people up before Pope Francis' final Mass in Lisbon. In it, he spliced into the set both St. John Paul II's exhortation to young people to 'be not afraid' and Francis' appeal in Lisbon that the church has room for everyone, 'todos, todos, todos.' ___ Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP's collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

Mauro Porcini loves surprising the board room
Mauro Porcini loves surprising the board room

Fast Company

time3 hours ago

  • Fast Company

Mauro Porcini loves surprising the board room

Mauro Porcini became the world's first chief design officer at 3M, before taking the role at PepsiCo and, now, Samsung. But despite defining what it means for a designer to take a seat in the C-suite, he admits that, for a few decades now, he's ceased to fit anywhere perfectly. 'Designers see me as a business person. The business people see me as a designer. I'm there in the middle between the two worlds, like I'm Italian and American. I'm both of them,' laments Porcini, before flipping this self-critique on its head. '[But that means] I'm exotic in Italy, and I'm exotic in America. Now I'm exotic in Korea.' Porcini captures these dualities in the way he styles himself. With roots in Varese, Italy, he grew up alongside the Missoni family, and into his early 20s, he became friends with many of Italy's most prominent voices in fashion. To this day, he has a penchant for Italian luxury brands like Gucci, Prada, and Valentino. But he insists that he's not afraid to mix them with drops from Zara. A longtime collector of fine footwear, his latest obsession is a Gucci x Adidas collab, which he owns in six colors. (He recently added their gold-clad loafer to his collection.) The pieces showcase the materials and silhouettes of Gucci, but with the three stripes of Adidas. It's an unexpected mashup that adds a signature to just about anything Porcini wears these days. 'The shoe has always been very powerful, because you can go crazy with the shoes. You can be really different. And for a man, it's an easy accent,' says Porcini. 'But then you go into these boardrooms, and you need to pitch investments of millions of dollars, or hundreds of millions of dollars, so rebalancing that with a jacket or blazer—something that reminds them that you're still part of that [business culture is essential]. So you're not going there with just a T-shit and sneakers.' Porcini adores a double-breasted wool coat, and his latest is a custom commission from Golden Goose, embroidered with cities from his life: Milan, Dublin, Minneapolis, New York, and Seoul. The overall effect is that Porcini has been mixing classic suit silhouettes with hints of sport (I've even seen him mix trousers with a track pant piping into his look). It's perpetually surprising without being heavy-handed; intentional without feeling try-hard. 'Each of us has different ways of dressing, but show that you have an original point of view. Because this is what designers do,' says Porcini. 'They look at reality, they look at their world, and have a unique and original point of view on what they need to do. So through your dress, communicate that kind of original point of view. And communicate the confidence of sharing it.' For Porcini, dressing well is a tool to be taken seriously as a creative in business, but its base is about self-acceptance, love, and expression. As he learned as a teenager reading the 1926 allegory One, No One, and One Hundred Thousand by Luigi Pirandello—in which a man becomes so obsessed with the shape of his nose that it ultimately destroys his life—you cannot let people's perception of you dilute who you are. 'You need to have the peace of mind and the awareness that people will judge you, not on the basis of just what you do, but on the basis of who they are,' says Porcini. 'And you need to be okay with it.' Describe your style in a sentence. A mix of creativity, confidence, self-love, but also love for the world. What's the one piece in your closet you'll never get rid of? There is a trouser that I painted when I was, I think I was 17, and I still have it, even if, obviously it doesn't fit anymore. I have more than one, but there is one that I really love. I started to paint on clothing, and I started to sell this clothing to make a little bit of money. I paid for my driving school in this way. When I was 18, I even sold one to my teacher who was giving me driving lessons. How long does it take you to get dressed in the morning? Super quick. Between the time I wake up and leave, it's 45 minutes. And that includes emails, breakfast, shower, and getting dressed. What do you wear to a big meeting? I try to have a touch of creativity that creates surprise in the room and talks about my belonging to the creative community. But then I blended with a code that is more accepted by the audience, the business community. I try to create that comfort and discomfort together. What's the best piece of fashion advice you've ever gotten? It was not articulated in one sentence, but it's literally, be yourself and be unique. Don't be a slave to fashion. Your pieces don't need to be the latest. They need to be something that makes sense for you and makes sense for what you want to project to the world.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store