Showing posts with label ITALY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ITALY. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Photo of the Day...


Lucca, Italy. Photo by: Chris De Luca

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Sunday, October 24, 2010

Photo of the Day...


Milan, Italy. Photo by: Kristi Butterfield

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Friday, September 24, 2010

Photo of the Day...


Rome, Italy. Photo by: Chuck Harris

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Friday, August 20, 2010

Photo of the Day...


Rimini, Italy. Photo Courtesy: Sunflower Beach Hostel

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Friday, July 9, 2010

Photo of the Day...


Tuscany, Italy. Photo by: Taryn Benesta

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Thursday, June 24, 2010

Photo of the Day...


Rome, Italy. Photo by: Sherrie Morgan

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Monday, June 21, 2010

Hostel of the Week...



ALLA VITE DORATA
in Venice, Italy, is a small and charming first class inn with budget traveler prices. Alla Vite Dorata was recently restored and is situated right in the heart of Venice's historic core, two steps from the Rialto Bridge and ten minutes from St. Marks Square, on the picturesque Venetian canal. The rooms at Alla Vite Dorata are uniquely furnished and each room is different from the next. Some rooms even feature an oversized window with a postcard view of the Venetian canals. In addition, all rooms have a private bathroom, satellite television, wi-fi internet access, a safe, mini bar, and air-conditioning/heat. When you are not in your comfortable room you will find right outside your door is the Santi Apostoli neighborhood. Santi Apostoli offers a great variety of restaurants and eateries that feature the savory traditional Venetian cuisine. Plus, there are a number of places to shop in the vicinity. Alla Vite Dorata also boasts impeccable service; the staff is nice and helpful and will guide you in and around the city. So, if you are looking for a hostel in Venice with charm and character, at a good price, then Alla Vite Dorata is for you.

Three Reasons to stay at ALLA VITE DORATA:

1. Rooms with a view. When you can point your camera out the window and get a postcard,
it doesn't get much better than that.
2. The Santi Apostoli neighborhood. Lots of food and shopping options right outside your doorstep.
3. The staff. Since Alla Vite Dorata is a smaller place they focus a lot of their attention on the service and it shows right when you walk into the inn.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Photo of the Day...


Pisa, Italy. Photo by: Robyn Pratt

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Thursday, June 3, 2010

Photo of the Day...


Venice, Italy. Photo by: Kerry Oski

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Thursday, March 25, 2010

Dirty Little Secrets...

FOOD FIND...

Arrosticini is a simple, yet delicious, dish that comes from the Abruzzo region of Italy. Typically served as a second course of meat or fish, it is most commonly made with lamb. The meat is cut into small pieces and pierced with a skewer, alternating fat and cubes of meat, to help keep the lamb juicy and tender. The skewers are then cooked over an open fire on a specially built grill, burning wood or charcoal, or even more traditionally, kindling from the local brush, such as grape vines or olive branches. The lamb has a mild flavor and, when cooked properly, will melt in your mouth. Like many Italian dishes, the meat is minimally seasoned, commonly with lemon, olive oil, and rosemary, and usually comes from a local source; sometimes, the cooks’ very own cattle. Most people serve arrosticini with other traditional dishes, like homemade sliced bread that has been soaked in extra virgin olive oil and, again in typical Italian tradition, accompanied by a glass of wine. Arrosticini are meant to be eaten with your hands, and pulled off the skewers with your teeth. The fresh, rustic taste of local ingredients keep this meal simple, but the clean, mild flavor of arrosticini is not to be underestimated. Due to its simplicity, arrosticini is now being produced both commercially, and in homemade fashion, outside of Abruzzo, and can even be found in few markets throughout Europe and North America. Once you get a taste of mouth watering arrosticini, you’ll find yourself craving it all of the time! To fulfill that craving, try out the recipe below:


Arrosticini

If you do not have a grill or barbecue, arrosticini can be cooked on a griddle or in the oven, provided they be well seasoned with oil, salt and freshly ground black pepper. Here's how:

-A minimum of 800 grams (4 cups) lean lamb, diced

-Extra virgin olive oil

-Rosemary sprigs

-Salt & pepper

-The juice of 1/2 lemon

Start your coals or light the heat under your griddle, and keep at a medium temperature, for the cooking.

Skewer the meat cubes neatly on well-oiled metal skewers or tiny disposable wooden kebab sticks (which you’ll have soaked briefly in water, so the heat won’t burn the wood). Marinate your kebabs in olive oil, rosemary, salt and pepper. Turn them over to ensure all sides soak up the flavors. Dribble over the lemon juice and roast them on the barbecue quickly, 2-3 minutes, turning a couple of times to ensure even cooking, while basting the arrosticini with more olive oil, using your rosemary sprig.

The shepherd’s tip:

Cosimo, my new shepherd friend from Calascio, tells me that arrosticini meat should not be too lean, the fat marbling should be about 25% of the total used, this will avoid the preparation to become too dry and toughen on the chew during roasting. Arrosticini should be mild flavored, not "muttony", and if properly cooked, will melt in your mouth. Also maintain the flames (or the heat) low so that the arrosticini won’t char. And always keep a bottle of Montepulciano d’Abruzzo handy when grilling arrosticini...

*Photo from romephotoblog.blogspot.com

*Recipe from agliooliopeperoncino.blogspot.com