View in: Desktop
Copyright @2024 TigerDroppings.com. All rights reserved.
- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Posted by
Message
Rome/Tuscany/Florence
Posted by Ruxins Rascals on 2/9/19 at 9:49 am00
We will be spending 8-9 days in Rome, Florence, and Tuscany in May. Looking to maybe take some tours of wineries or take a cooking class. Does anyone have recommendations of things to do / not to do outside of the normal site seeing activities?
TIA
TIA
re: Rome/Tuscany/FlorencePosted by Civildawg on 2/9/19 at 11:45 am to Ruxins Rascals
We used a company called grape wine tours and it was great. Can’t recommend them enough
re: Rome/Tuscany/FlorencePosted by AbitaFan08 on 2/9/19 at 11:59 am to Ruxins Rascals
We had a fantastic cooking class in this woman’s apartment in Florence. I’ll get the info later and post it for you. Highly recommend it.
re: Rome/Tuscany/FlorencePosted by geauxpurple on 2/9/19 at 12:38 pm to Ruxins Rascals
We spent 10 days in Tuscany last April. We went to the wineries on our own. The big one was Antinori which is just south of Florence and was just north of where we ere staying. There are many others in the Chianti Classico region. We went to Montepulciano and Montalcino which are the two great wine towns in Tuscany. ..........If you are looking for a tour guide, check out Dario Castagno www.dariocastagno.com . We rarely have tour guides, but we took his "Behind the Scenes of the Palio" tour in Siena where he takes you on a tour of the Caterpillar Contrada headquarters and explains the history of the Palio horse race. He is also affiliated with Tregole, a small family owned winery that we visited.
re: Rome/Tuscany/FlorencePosted by lsurulzes88 on 2/10/19 at 6:03 pm to Ruxins Rascals
One tour we did in Rome that I highly recommend to everyone going was Le Domus Romane di Palazzo Valentini. It's two old villas underground that were discovered during a renovation. They put glass floors and walls throughout the whole thing and use modern projection to enhance the areas that were destroyed over time. It was a nice, relaxing time and an awesome way to see preserved architecture that you would have to use your imagination for otherwise.
TD SponsorTD Fan
USA
Member since 2001
USA
Member since 2001
Thank you for supporting our sponsors Posted by Site Sponsor to Everyone
Advertisement
re: Rome/Tuscany/FlorencePosted by kciDAtaE on 2/10/19 at 7:02 pm to Ruxins Rascals
Rome by Limo
Luca will tailor a trip for whatever you want. And drive you around
Luca will tailor a trip for whatever you want. And drive you around
re: Rome/Tuscany/FlorencePosted by Ten Bears on 2/11/19 at 10:15 am to Ruxins Rascals
I know you have probably booked your trip....
1) Spend no more than 2 days in Rome, and
2) Spend a lot of time in Florence
3)Spend the remainder in Capri
1) Spend no more than 2 days in Rome, and
2) Spend a lot of time in Florence
3)Spend the remainder in Capri
re: Rome/Tuscany/FlorencePosted by Ruxins Rascals on 2/11/19 at 12:10 pm to AbitaFan08
quote:
We had a fantastic cooking class in this woman’s apartment in Florence. I’ll get the info later and post it for you. Highly recommend it.
I am very interested. Please post this information when you get a chance.
re: Rome/Tuscany/FlorencePosted by AbitaFan08 on 2/11/19 at 12:15 pm to Ruxins Rascals
Sorry I completely forgot to get back to you on this.
Here is a link to her website. Like I said, it was really great to get to go into her home and cook with her. We preferred it to doing a cooking class at a restaurant or industrial kitchen - it just felt more authentic. She was really friendly and did a great job explaining the process of how to make everything.
Also a good tip: check out Ora D'Aria for lunch. It's a Michelin Star restaurant, but they recently started doing a lunch menu that's only 35 Euros/person. Great way to eat at a nice restaurant but not spend a lot of money. Chef Marco was in the kitchen and was really nice to talk to about the food. He even signed our menu for us to bring home.
Here is a link to her website. Like I said, it was really great to get to go into her home and cook with her. We preferred it to doing a cooking class at a restaurant or industrial kitchen - it just felt more authentic. She was really friendly and did a great job explaining the process of how to make everything.
Also a good tip: check out Ora D'Aria for lunch. It's a Michelin Star restaurant, but they recently started doing a lunch menu that's only 35 Euros/person. Great way to eat at a nice restaurant but not spend a lot of money. Chef Marco was in the kitchen and was really nice to talk to about the food. He even signed our menu for us to bring home.
This post was edited on 2/11 at 12:21 pm
quote:
1) Spend no more than 2 days in Rome, and
2) Spend a lot of time in Florence
3)Spend the remainder in Capri
Gotta disagree on this one. Yes, Florence is great. But Rome for 2 days is just laughable, unless you have *zero* interest in history, art history, the ancient world, church history, architecture, or related topics. Rome isn't a relaxing place, but it is absolutely fascinating. It is layer upon layer of civilization, with archaeological sites around every corner.
Back to top
Follow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News