Florence

Saturday, April 4, 1998

The train pulls into Florence and we take a short taxi ride to the hotel. It's right in the middle of everything and our room is huge (compared to every other place, but not big by American standards). It even has a TV and a phone (the TV was never even turned on.)

Our hotel in an alley in Florence

We unpack and head to lunch at Trattoria Za-Za, a great place. We split a Crostini Napolitana - bruschetta with tomatoes, oregano, oil, mozzarella and basil. Keith has the ribolitta, a double boiled cabbage stew with beans and bread chunks, with was excellent and Jill has spaghetti verde with gorgonzola which was also great. Keith had the roast pork(also good) and Jill had slices of tomato with cheese, oil and oregano/basil. We both have Tuscan beans on the side and 3/4 carafe of red wine.

From there we head to the Accademia Museum. We had to stand in line for a bit before we got inside. We spend more time browsing than in any other museum so far - probably because of all of Michelangelo's statues, including the great David. We are starting to get a feel for how intense this guy really was. We head back to the hotel for an afternoon nap and then a stop at Festival de Gelato for Nutella and Kinder Egg gelatos.

David. Uncensored.

We decide to also try to get the Uffizi gallery in today so we head across town, browsing through the stands as we go (Florence was full of street vendors selling mostly leather goods.) We cross the piazza della Signoria, which has lots of statues including replicas of David and several other famous works, and then we check out the line at Uffizi. We decide its not worth it (we later discover the line was shorter than any other time, but still very long) and head for Ponte Vecchio, a famous bridge over the Arno River.

Jill on the Ponte Vecchio

After strolling by the expensive jewelry stores on the bridge, we turn towards Piazzale Michelangiolo, a square atop a hill with a good view of all of Florence and the Tuscan hills. I promise Jill a pair of new shoes if she goes with me to the top, so we set off. The view from the top is worth it!

Florence from Piazzale Michelangiolo. Ponte Vecchio is the bridge on the left and il Duomo is the church with the large dome.

il Duomo

Ponte Vecchio

Keith on Piazzale Michelangiolo

We hung around a bit and then head back across the river. We go through piazza San Croce and Jill gets a pair of shoes. We hang around outside of a pizzeria that has a star next to it in the guidebook, but they finally open the door and tell us they are completely reserved. We head back towards the hotel and stop at Pizzeria I Ghibellini for dinner. We split an Antipasto Gran Buffet (a big plate form the buffet) and a carafe of red wine. At one point, three people come in and the older lady in the group is carrying her poodle. It sits at the table with them throughout the meal. Jill has a salami and peppers pizza and Keith goes for the house special - prosciutto, sausage and mascarpone cheese. We end up splitting both pizzas. We take a few pictures of the lady with her dog (they didn't turn out without a flash) and we steal the not empty bottle of Chianti from the table next to us when they leave. Keith also has a Vin Santo with biscotti which is strong, but good.

We stop on the way home at a weird, Mexican-theme bar and we try Grappa for the first time - it's sort of like everclear. Jill gets hooked on a new drink - espresso with Bailey's. She has two and Keith has one and then we head back to the hotel.

Sunday, April 5, 1998

We sleep in again! We wander around for a bit, have a couple of cappuccinos, a croissant and half a sandwich, and then go into the Medici Chapels. (The Medici family helped fund much of the renaissance art in Florence. The Chapels were their family tomb's.) There is more great work by Mich in the Chapel. We decide to try the Uffizi Gallery again, but the line is even worse. We cross Ponte Vecchio again and head for San Spirito (just another square) for lunch. Unfortunately, the place we wanted to go to hasn't opened yet and looks mostly reserved. So we stop in a little place by Piazza de Pitti (the Pitti family competed with the Medici's for a while, but were eventually overtaken by them.)

The service is a little slow, but the food looks good. I have Pasta Ametriciana (red sauce with ham) and roast pork and Jill has a green salad and some good tortellini. We should have tried the pizza - by the time we left, the place was packed, including lots of kids who came for pizza after church. We stop somewhere else for espresso and after-eight mints (mints we will sorely miss when we return to the U.S.)

I promise Jill another pair of shoes and we start the hike up the Boboli Gardens (the gardens that go with the Pitti family palace.) Another great view, this time with more of the country-side.

Jill in the Boboli Gardens

Keith and the Tuscan countryside from the top of the Boboli Gardens

Ditto with Jill

We do some more shopping (unsuccessfully), have a couple of gelatos at the world-famous Vivoli (Jill has a riso (rice) flavored gelato that is really good). We head back to the hotel to take a nap and for Jill to call her mom.

After our nap, its raining, but we still do a little shopping, stop in a wine bar for a few glasses and a calzone pizza snack and then take another short break waiting for the restaurant to open. It rained all afternoon and evening, but that didn't slow us down much.

We head to La Latini, getting there right when open - luckily, since right after us, the place fills up (and its a big place) and a long line starts. We sit next to a couple from Atlanta that we talk to all night. It's an all-you-can-eat and drink for one set price. We start with a mix of cold cuts and crostini (all good) and then we move on the bean soup (all of us - when the guy said what are choices were, it sounded like yadda, yadda, yadda, and bean soup, so we had the soup). It was also good. The couple next to us has a glass of wine each, while Jill and I manage to polish off the rest of the bottle (and this isn't your normal bottle, we're talking a liter and a half.) Jill and I both have the roast veal which was excellent, while the couple next to us has roast lamb and roast squab (a bird about the same size as a pigeon, hmmm, what a coincidence.) Jill feels sorry for them and shares her veal - Keith has nothing left to share. We have strawberries and ice cream and then Vin Santo with Biscotti. This is perhaps the neatest place we ate on the whole trip. We head home, stopping for espresso with Bailey's on the way.

Monday, April 6, 1998

Today's list of sites is just St. Lorenz and il Duomo, so we weren't to pressured to race and get things done. We went to the St. Lorenz church which was the Medici private chapel and then to il Duomo. We looked around inside the church but by now we've seen so many its hard to impress us. We decide to put off climbing to the top of the dome and take a break (it's cold and Keith is a little sick.) Our short break turns into a medium one and we stretch it till lunch. Lunch was Trattoria Le Mossacce. It was probably Jill's favorite meal in Tuscany. We got it from Frommer's and although close to the Duomo (the heavy tourist area of Florence) it was a pleasantly local and not tourist crowd. Jill had ribolitta, mixed salad and lasagna and Keith had ravioli, veal rolls in tomato sauce and we shared 1/4 carafe wine (quartino carafe vino rosso della casa).

After lunch we waited an hour to climb the Duomo - 463 steps and no lift. It was not a bad climb and you stop half way up on a balcony inside the church looking down on the altar. It gave us a good look at the fresco painting on the top of the dome. Once we got to the top it was a breathtaking view but dizzying. We were on the "nipple" of the dome. Jill wouldn't get close to the railing except for a picture of us taken by another American couple.

il Duomo from the side. You can see the platform at the top that we climbed to

Jill climbing il Duomo. Notice the curved wall of the inside of the dome. The dome is double-walled with stairs between the two walls.

Keith and Jill on top of the dome. Jill's smile looks a little nervous

Jill getting ready to descend from the top. Still looks nervous

Keith descending inside the dome

We left the dome and walked to our chosen dinner spot to make reservations. Keith, who by now has a raging cold, begs for a nap and heads home, while Jill finds a bank machine, a clinique makeup store and a ceramics shop. She finds a couple of souvenirs and then turns in for a nap too.

After the nap, we head out shoe shopping and gelato eating. Keith finally found a nice soft leather pair of shoes with minutes to spare before dinner. We had changed into nice khakis and a skirt and sandals for Jill. It felt good to be dressed up. Dinner was Trattoria Antellesi and Keith finally has the signature Tuscan dish - T-Bone steak. We split bruschetta and the first course was noodles with sausage and gorgonzola and seafood risotto. Jill's main dish was veal stew (veal steak with an onion wine sauce.) We had a good bottle of wine although there was sand in the bottom of the bottle and then great Tiramisu. We called it an early night on account of Keith's cold.

Tuesday, April 7, 1998

We wake up and after a shower, Keith's cold is feeling better. He takes the challenge of fitting everything in our big bag. We are heavier by some ceramics and shoes. We get a couple of cappuccinos and a pastry for Keith and a half sandwich for Jill (this has become our standard breakfast - plus another couple cappuccinos as a mid-morning snack) and then head to the train station for our train to Bologna.