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4 mind-blowing food and drink moments you can only have on Kangaroo Island
4 mind-blowing food and drink moments you can only have on Kangaroo Island

The Advertiser

time3 days ago

  • The Advertiser

4 mind-blowing food and drink moments you can only have on Kangaroo Island

The Ligurian bees may be from Italy, but having been brought to Kangaroo Island in 1884, their population here is believed to be the purest strain in the world - meaning, they have never been crossbred with any other variety of bees. Taste their unique honey at Clifford's, the oldest honey farm on the island (dating back to 1993), then fill your bags with all sorts of goodies - from honey-infused chutneys, dressings, sauces, marinades and lollies to gifts like honey soaps, honey candles and teatowels with bee motif. The best part of the visit has to be the honey-infused ice-cream. Owner Jenny Clifford came up with the recipe 31 years ago, and has kept it close to her chest ever since, meaning you can only enjoy its delicious creaminess on the farm where it's made.

4 mind-blowing food and drink moments you can only have on Kangaroo Island
4 mind-blowing food and drink moments you can only have on Kangaroo Island

Canberra Times

time3 days ago

  • Canberra Times

4 mind-blowing food and drink moments you can only have on Kangaroo Island

The Ligurian bees may be from Italy, but having been brought to Kangaroo Island in 1884, their population here is believed to be the purest strain in the world - meaning, they have never been crossbred with any other variety of bees. Taste their unique honey at Clifford's, the oldest honey farm on the island (dating back to 1993), then fill your bags with all sorts of goodies - from honey-infused chutneys, dressings, sauces, marinades and lollies to gifts like honey soaps, honey candles and teatowels with bee motif. The best part of the visit has to be the honey-infused ice-cream. Owner Jenny Clifford came up with the recipe 31 years ago, and has kept it close to her chest ever since, meaning you can only enjoy its delicious creaminess on the farm where it's made.

The loveliness of Ligurian wine
The loveliness of Ligurian wine

Spectator

time7 days ago

  • Spectator

The loveliness of Ligurian wine

We were talking about Italy: where and when to sojourn. I confessed to so many gaps. It is years since I visited Genoa and I know that the Ligurian coast has innumerable hidden treasures. There are the well-publicised places, such as Portofino and San Remo, which I am sure are pleasant enough out of season. But for many months they are likely to resemble an eastern extension of Monaco. Small is the key word. We are not dealing with the mighty names from Piedmont. In Liguria many of the local wine producers have tiny plots, sometimes only a couple of acres. They will supply the local restaurants which also draw on local ingredients and recipes: just as nonna made it. Visitors are welcomed. These people are confident in their own way of life. It is almost a prelapsarian existence, drawing on and delighting in the bounty of nature. Liguria has an ambassador in London. He has no formal post, but he ought to be one of Italy's cultural attachés – or certainly its vinicultural one. I have written about Nicola Bodano before, but it is hard to keep him off the page. Few if any of my friends bring such effervescent joy to the search for interesting wines: the desire and pursuit of the bottle. At the beginning of the festivity, Nicola announced that there would be a departure from tradition. We would enjoy a vegetarian meal. A further innovation: for our aperitif, we had a vermentino. Nothing unusual in that, except that this was a vermentino nero. It worked well with an olive-soaked focaccia. Robustness followed.

Dreamy new night train to connect Rome and Marseille this summer
Dreamy new night train to connect Rome and Marseille this summer

Euronews

time28-05-2025

  • Euronews

Dreamy new night train to connect Rome and Marseille this summer

With languid summer days around the corner, a long, leisurely train journey between two dreamy destinations is just the ticket. The good news for travellers is that Italy is about to restart a rail route that fulfils that desire to a tee. The blissfully named Espresso Riviera is returning to the rails after a successful summer season last year, with a slight change in route. The night train will link Rome to Marseille, offering passengers a slow, scenic connection between Italy's culture-rich capital and the French Riviera. The Espresso Riviera is part of Italy's tourist train initiative, which sees a relaunched vintage fleet ferrying visitors to some of the most picturesque spots within the country's borders and beyond. The service, operated by FS Treni Turistici, will run on weekends between 4 July and 30 August, with tickets already on sale. Passengers can choose to travel in a sleeping car with private compartments or a more affordable couchette. Trains depart from Roma Termini station on Friday evening, arriving in Marseille on Saturday morning. The return train leaves from Marseille on Saturday and arrives in the Italian capital on Sunday morning. The service travels along one of the most spectacular coastal routes in the Mediterranean - a good reason to wake up early in the morning to admire the view. There is also a daytime alternative from Genoa, with private lounges and seats in first class and second class, if you want a bit longer to gaze out at the sea. The company says it is planning a departure from Milan, too, that will run straight to Genoa and link northern Italy to France directly. There will be catering available on board for the entire route, offering dinner, breakfast and a bar service. The aim is to facilitate "not only holidaymakers departing from the capital, increasingly looking for a varied offer of service levels on board the train, but also tourist flows towards western Liguria, finally offering a service without changes from Genoa to Ventimiglia and France," said Luigi Cantamessa, CEO of FS Treni Turistici Italiani. On the way, the Espresso Riviera will stop at several tempting destinations. Sanremo is a smart coastal resort on Italy's Ligurian coast with a famous casino, while just over the border into France is Menton, a medieval town jutting out into the sea renowned for its prized lemons. After that, the train pulls in at the glamorous seaside resort towns of Monaco-Monte Carlo and Cannes. After departing from Rome, the full route will stop at Genoa, Savona, Alassia, Imperia, Sanremo, and Ventimiglia in Italy, and Menton, Monaco, Nice, Cannes, Saint-Raphaël–Valescure, Toulon and Marseille in France. While last year the route terminated in Nice, this year the extension to Marseille gives travellers the chance to explore a vibrant port city that has come under the spotlight in recent years.

Lesser-known Italian towns on Lake Como and the Italian Riviera
Lesser-known Italian towns on Lake Como and the Italian Riviera

Yahoo

time23-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Lesser-known Italian towns on Lake Como and the Italian Riviera

Most world travelers are familiar with the popular and often over-touristed cities in Italy such as Rome, Florence, Milan, and Naples, but there are lesser-known locales found on the Italian Riviera and in the Lake Como area that offer equally authentic experiences in Italian food, art, and cultural history. Here's how to plan your dream Italian holiday to three towns in Northwest Italy—without the crowds. Situated on the coast of the Ligurian Sea just south of Genoa and north of Cinque Terre, Rapallo is known for its temperate winters and leisurely Ligurian lifestyle. This Italian Riviera town of 30,000 residents has been a haven for numerous artists, writers, and poets such as Ernest Hemmingway, W.B. Yeats, Ezra Pound, Robert Lowell, Friedrich Nietzsche, Max Beerbohm, and Finnish composer Jean Sibelius. In recognition of its cultural heritage, Rapallo created an Art Nouveau monument known as Chiosco della Musica on its waterfront in 1929. Today, the palm-lined promenade has become a path past other noteable landmarks—including the Castello di Rapallo (Rapallo Castle), a statue of Christopher Columbus, and the Basilica of Saints Gervasio and Protasio. Visitors can arrange a walking tour or take a leisurely passeggiata (stroll) along the water on their own. A must-see sight in Rapallo, the Museo del Merletto (Lace Museum) is housed in a former private villa and dedicated to the preservation of local lacemakers. The collection includes over 5,000 lace artifacts and designs, but it is also a hub where traditional lace is created and exported throughout Italy. While visiting this town, art lovers should stop by an outpost of the Rome-based NUAR Gallery located at the Grand Hotel Bristol. This immersive art space showcases site-specific installations that feature artists' work, including abstract and figurative art as well as sculpture and photography exhibitions. For the Epicurious traveler, a culinary tour is one of the best ways to explore Rapallo. Guido Porrati, the owner of ParlaComeMangi, offers guests a hands-on Genovese pesto-making experience in his traditional Ligurian bottega or deli shop. ParlaComeMangi also offers a tour that includes a visit to a green market (think farmers' market) and continues through the narrow alleyways of the Rapallo's historic center for local wine and olive oil tastings. Guests on the tour also get to taste regional specialties such as focaccia al formaggio and pansotti, a pot-bellied pasta with walnut sauce. Travelers can explore the well-known Mercato del Giovedi on their own. This well-knonwn market is located on the Lungomare Vittorio Veneto promenade. (Related: This little-known region may have Italy's best wines.) During its high season from April through October, Rapallo attracts nearly twice its population, and yet, there's a tranquil vibe throughout the town's historic center in contrast to the high-profile neighboring towns accessible by Rapallo's ferry service. Rapallo's pier is located along the waterfront promenade where ferries transport visitors to Portofino, Santa Margherita Ligure, and San Fruttuoso, as well as Cinque Terre. The ferry service runs year-round that offer panoramic views from the sea and averages around U.S. $15 (one way). Visitors who choose to take the 30-minute ferry ride along the Gulf of Tigullio to Portofino disembark onto a small cosmopolitan square surrounded by designer boutiques, cafés, and buzzy restaurants like da I Gemelli. The restaurant's owners, identical twins Paolo and Matteo Giovannini, follow in the footsteps of eight generations of restaurateurs that date back to 1850. Recipes from their grandmother's Ligurian cookbook include signature dishes such as spaghetti ai muscoli tritati and trenette al pesto alla Portofino, both of which are nicely complemented by post-prandial gelato at Dolce & Gabbana's Caffè Excelsior along the harbor. (Related: Northern Italy's 'problem bears' show the challenges of rewilding carnivores.) Grand Hotel Bristol Spa Resort: Located a short walk from Rapallo's historic town center, this pale pink Belle Époque palazzo overlooks the Gulf of Tigullio. The hotel has 80 rooms and suites and most have private balconies. Built in 1904, the five-star Grand Hotel Bristol Spa Resort has the Michelin-listed restaurant Le Cupole on-site, which features a rooftop terrace. Hotel guest experiences include cooking classes, private boat tours, Vespa and e-bike adventures, sunset cruises, diving and snorkeling, and a cable car to the hilltop Sanctuary of hotel's 21,000-square-foot Erre Spa functions as 21st-century Roman baths, complete with hydrotherapeutic saunas and pools, while the hotel's nearby Marina di Bardi Beach Club offers guests a private beach with a on-site seafood restaurant. (Related: A guide to Lake Como's highlights—villas, promenades and aperitivo spots not to miss.) Situated on the eastern shore of Lake Como and surrounded by the botanical gardens of Villa Cipressi and Villa Monastero, Varenna is home to less than a thousand residents and hosts hundreds of wedding celebrations throughout its high season. Visitors to Varenna, who wander the verdant landscape surrounding Villa Cipressi, may encounter impromptu marriage proposals on the three-level terraced gardens that slopes down to the lake's shoreline. Built between the 15th and 19th centuries, the gardens are listed in Italy's directory of most beautiful gardens and the various plant species include cypress, palm, tamarisk, magnolia, myrtle, gardenia, lemon, and American agave, as well as numerous seasonal species. The various terraces and stairways lead down to a pair of iconic gates that open onto the lake where visitors await their turn for a photograph amidst the wisteria. The citizens of Varenna purchased Villa Cipressi in 1980, and today, it houses a four-star hotel that hosts numerous nuptials and celebrations. On the last Sunday in July, Varenna celebrates Festa della Regina with fireworks and dinner in honor of Queen Victoria's visit in 1838. The neighboring Villa Monastero, which was once a 12th-century Cistercian convent and later a private residence, opened to the public in 2003 as a fine arts museum with artworks, furniture, and décor from the former owners. While you're here, don't miss out on visiting the Scanagatta Ornithological Museum, which features more than 800 specimens of birds and mammals. It's just a short walk from Villa Monastero. For panoramic views of Varenna, Lake Como, and beyond, travelers should make their way to Castello di Vezio, a medieval military outpost with an owl aviary. It's location high on a bluff overlooking the town make it ideal spot for scenic views. From March through November, the gardens and dungeons here are open to the public, as is the tower, where weekend sundown is celebrated with aperitivos (pre-dinner drinks) served on the terrace. (Related: 7 must-do experiences in Italy's stunning Lombardy region.) Hotel Villa Cipressi: Facing directly onto Lake Como, this four-star hotel is an elegant complex of buildings, gardens, and fountains that date from the 14th century. Hotel guests have the option to dine at the neighboring Hotel Royal Victoria for breakfast and dinner where the fine dining restaurant Visteria offers lakefront seating. Visteria's menu showcases regional seafood and artisanal pastas such as fusillo with squid, red shrimp, and seaweed as well as risotto with green peas, buffalo cream, and blue lobster. The chef's signature chocolate cigar with confectionery ash provides a pleasing post-prandial buzz without the smoke. Directly across from Varenna, the town of Menaggio sits on the western shore of Lake Como. Menaggio is located down the road from Tremezzo and Villa Carlotta. The ferry service from Varenna and Bellagio arrives along the lakefront promenade, which is lined with grand hotels and villas that date back to the 18th century. According to Silvia Ballerini, a local who hails from the neighboring village of Carate Urio, 'Menaggio is where people come for laidback luxury in contrast to the white-glove, mandatory-jacket scene of other Lake Como resorts.' Home to less than 4,000 residents, Menaggio, was once a walled city with a 10th-century castle, and today, comprises three hamlets and the town center. A one-kilometer (more than a half mile) historic walk starts near the tourist office at Menaggio's Piazza Garibaldi and ascends on narrow cobblestone streets to the medieval Castello di Menaggio and the Church of San Carlo with its bell tower. On the town's waterfront, visitors may spot a 32-foot column of Carrara marble. It is the Monumento alla Tessitrice, a commemorative monument to the female silk weavers of the region. Other area landmarks include the 12th-century Leaning Bell Tower located in the hamlet of Nobiallo and remnants of the Antica Strada Regina, the Roman royal road that ran along the western shore of Lake Como. (Related: On the shores of Lake Iseo: exploring Italy's lesser-known lake district.) Today's equivalent of that ancient road is Menaggio's lakeshore promenade, one of the most elegant in the region and notable for its palm trees, pergolas, and landscaped median. A favorite of locals and visitors, the promenade follows the lakeshore from Piazza Garibaldi in the town center to the town beach where the former Lido di Menaggio has been transformed into Victoria Beach, a brand-new lakefront beach club complete with restaurant, bars, private beach, and two infinity pools. In nearby Tremezzo (a 10-minute drive from Menaggio), the 17th-century Villa Carlotta features several sculptures by Italian sculptor Antonio Canova, as well as tapestries, paintings, and period furnishings spanning 300 years. The landscaped grounds includes gardens that span over nearly 20 acres and include fern valley, citrus tunnels, succulents, English roses, camellias, and 150 varieties of rhododendrons and azaleas. Villa Carlotta also has picnic areas and a playground, as well as an on-site bistro, Bistrot Villa Carlotta, located in a former greenhouse. For visitors who wish to cross the lake, Menaggio's ferry terminal is in the town center and offers year-round service to both Bellagio and Varenna. A one-way, 15-minute journey costs less than U.S. $10, depending on the season. Grand Hotel Victoria: With its expansive front lawn, this five-star hotel that was originally a villa was commissioned by the Milanese marquis Giorgio II Clerici in the late 17th century. His great-grandson, who was also an art collector, completed his passion project. Today, the Grand Hotel Victoria remains a favorite for travelers seeking a sanctuary away from the crowds. Public spaces in the recently renovated hotel are marked by grand staircases and massive chandeliers, while the rooms are exemplars of Italian contemporary design with touch screens, coffee machines, and spacious balconies and bathrooms. The hotel's signature Erre Spa is the largest spa on Lake Como at nearly 13,000 square feet and includes tropical waterfalls, saunas and steam rooms, and a 65-foot heated indoor pool. At the hotel's Lago restaurant, guests dine on a veranda with unobstructed lake views. The hotel's private boat and launch makes it easy to dart back and forth across the lake for day trips to sites like Villa del Balbianello, where scenes from movies such as Star Wars: Attack of the Clones and Casino Royale were filmed. (Related: 6 unforgettable Italy hotels, from Tuscany and Lake Como to Rome and Milan.) This trip was created with the support of R Collection Hotels and Team Kindred PR. Mark Thompson is a New York-based freelance writer and member of The Authors Guild and SATW. He has been a resident artist at MacDowell, Yaddo, and Blue Mountain Center, and has a Ph.D. in American Studies.

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