Sunday, 1 September 2013

Culture Shock

Just when I thought Northern Italy couldn't get any better (or bigger), it did. Mara and I spent the next three days in the Dolomites, a mountain range in the northern Italian Alps, that, according to the folks at UNESCO—because, yes, this is a UNESCO World Heritage Site—"features some of the most beautiful mountain landscapes anywhere, with vertical walls, sheer cliffs, and a high density of narrow, deep and long valleys."

Our first stop in the Dolomites was Madonna di Campiglio, a short drive from Riva del Garda. Known as a sophisticated resort town for well-heeled Europeans, Madonna is located on the densely forested western side of the Brenta group, to the west of the main Dolomite range. Although we were visiting outside of peak season, I didn't find the town to be terribly glitzy or glamourous, but I was thrilled to be staying at a charming, family-owned alpine hotel a little outside of Madonna's mall-like resort complexes, with spectacular views, to boot.

The Brentas are a year-round holiday destination, with formidable downhill runs in winter and vie ferrate routes in summer. While we were eager to explore the Parco Naturale Adamello-Brenta on foot, Mara and I weren't prepared to don harnesses and ropes on a three-day trek through the mountains. The alternative? Nordic walking. Initially, this seemed like a bit of a cop-out, but a good way to get out into the Brentas without a head for heights. It ended up being a lot of fun, and a decent workout. I'm definitely going to invest in a pair of these bad boys for Bloor Street.


Our room, Madonna di Campiglio


View from our room, Madonna di Campiglio


Nordic walking, Parco Naturale Adamello-Brenta


Mara and our guide, Maurizio, Parco Naturale Adamello-Brenta


Parco Naturale Adamello-Brenta

After our hike, Mara and I refuelled with some fresh Sambuco (the elderflower juice, not the liqueur), and spent the rest of the afternoon en route to San Cassiano, in the Alta Badia. The drive, though long, was staggeringly beautiful. High mountain passes led us from one charming Tyrolean village to the next, with each hairpin bend affording us an even greater view of the Dolomites' rugged crags and meadows strewn with mountain huts, or rifugios. Forget Highway 1. This place inspired Tolkien!


On the road

The next day, Mara and I backtracked to the Alpe di Siusi, Europe's largest alpine pasture, where we spent the day hiking and indulging in delectable Austro-Italian cuisine. A natural preserve, the meadow is speckled with wildflowers and grazing cattle and pretty, colourful ribbon disguising powerful electrical currents. After a quick and relatively painless electrocution (that did send me flying), we found ourselves a rifugio for me to recover at, and feasted on canederli, or knodel—a South Tyrolean specialty akin to a giant matzah ball—served by a family dressed in dirndl and lederhosen. Cue massive cultural disorientation.


Alpe di Siusi


Alpe di Siusi, pre-electrocution


Alpe di Siusi


 Alpe di Siusi


 Alpe di Siusi


 Alpe di Siusi


The only warning sign in all of the Alpe di Siusi, post-electrocution

Mara and I spent the rest of the afternoon in the Alpe di Siusi, and then drove back to San Cassiano via the breathtaking Grande Strada delle Dolomiti, or Great Dolomite Road. More high mountain passes, more hairpin bends. We had a casual supper at the hotel's low-key Wine Bar, whose standout dish included a lavender creme brulee. We went to bed a little less stuffed than the night before, thanks to a Michelin-starred meal that involved amuse-bouches, homemade breads, three apps (two of which were unordered), a pasta, a main, an (unordered) pre-dessert, a dessert and an (unordered) post-dessert, all with wines to match. I'm definitely not complaining, but I did feel as though if I didn't eat again for a few days—or weeks—that wouldn't be the worst thing in the world.


On the Great Dolomite Road


On the Great Dolomite Road


On the Great Dolomite Road


Our digs, San Cassiano

The following morning, Mara and I drove from San Cassiano through fancy schmancy Cortina d'Ampezzo (location of the 1956 Winter Olympics and the James Bond flick For Your Eyes Only), and then on to the Sesto Dolomites. We hiked around the Tre Cime di Lavaredo—the region's most distinctive peaks and one of the best-known mountain groups in the Alps—and were rewarded with gorgeous panoramas and views of the area's man-made caves (the Dolomites were the front line between Austria and Italy during World War I, and fortifications are still scattered throughout). Afterwards, we headed back to Cortina for casunziei, a local specialty of beet-filled ravioli doused in butter, parmesan and poppy seeds, that Mara and I had been coveting since our trip together began. 


Tre Cime di Lavaredo hike


Tre Cime di Lavaredo


Tre Cime di Lavaredo hike


Tre Cime di Lavaredo


Tre Cime di Lavaredo hike


Tre Cime di Lavaredo hike


Tre Cime di Lavaredo hike

A five hours' drive later, Mara and I found ourselves in Verona, alongside Rosanna and her friend, Adele. There, in one of the world's best preserved Roman amphitheatres and most famed opera houses, I watched, enthralled, as Verdi's Aida played out. I kind of felt like Julia Roberts in that scene from Pretty Woman; while there were no jewels, gowns or private jets, this was quite possibly the best introduction to the art form anyone could ever hope to have, and a grand finale to our trip through northern Italy.


Arena di Verona

Tuesday, 27 August 2013

From La Buca to La Garda

Eager to fulfill our lifelong dreams of becoming groupies to Cuban geriatrics, Mara and I decided to nix Cinque Terre and follow Orquesta Buena Vista Social Club to their next gig in Venice.

En route, I proposed we stop for lunch at Trattoria La Buca, a family-run trattoria in Zibello, about thirty kilometres from Parma, in Emilia-Romagna. I had read about this trattoria in Bill Buford's Heat, and was bent on sampling the famed hand-made pasta and culatello, based on this write-up in Buford's book:

"I went to Italy, where, during my first lunch, I ate a homemade pasta, and my life, in a small but enduring way, was never the same. [...] My friend had mentioned several dishes in addition to the pastas: eel, frog legs, trip, and culatello, a specialty of the village. Culo means "ass". Culatello translates loosely as "buttness" and is made from the hindquarters of a pig—boned, stuffed into a bladder, cured, and hung for two years in the damp local cellars. The method is deemed unmodern by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and culatello is forbidden in America."

We were beyond desperate to try the buttness.

When Mara and I arrived, we were greeted by Laura, who runs the show with her mother, Miriam, the fifth woman in successive generations to be handling the trattoria. Miriam, who so impressed Buford that she became a regular in his book, was in Milan filming an episode of MasterChef.

After a tour of the trattoria's cantina, where the culatelli were hung, "refrigerated by nothing more than the breezes off the Po [River]" (Buford's quite the poet), we settled on culatello, salame, tortelli di zuccatortelli di ricotta ed erbette and tagliatelle con culatello. We had skipped breakfast in preparation.

The culatello and the pasta were, as Buford observed, life-changing. And perhaps life-creating? In the throes of our food comas, Mara and I were joined by Laura's father, a 88-year-old with a penchant for the shaka sign who definitely wouldn't have been issued the senior rate at the movies. His secret for winding back the clock? Culatello.

Oh, buttness. The fountain of youth.


Trattoria La Buca


Culatello hanging in la catina


Il culatello


Tortelli di zucca and tortelli di ricotta ed erbette 

When we were finally able to make a move, we drove northeast to Riva del Garda, at the tip of Lago di Garda. Compared to Lago di Como, I found Garda and its lakeside towns to be overrun by tourists and a tad tacky—this is the home of Gardaland, after all. Riva del Garda, while still (over) developed, occupies both a scenic and a strategic position on the lake. Tucked into craggy mountains, and straddling the provinces of Lombardy, Trentino and Veneto, the town makes a good base for exploring much of northern Italy, and is renowned for its hiking trails and its two prevailing winds, which create perfect conditions for windsurfing.

We spent the rest of the evening getting pampered at our Lido Palace, a historic Liberty palazzo whose guests over the years have included Archduke Franz Ferdinand and King Vittorio Emanuele II. Our peers, no doubt.

The next day, based on the recommendation of the concierge at the hotel, who suggested we head for the "chirp, chirp, chirp" of the hills, we opted against the groupie life, and decided to drive to the Dolomites instead. After a stop at the nearby turquoise Lago di Tenno, and a windsurfing session for Mara, we were on our way.


Lido Palace


Lago di Garda


Lago di Tenno


Windsurfers, Riva del Garda