Saturday, July 8, 2017

Sorrento17 by D. Wilmot

First stop on the Pizza Giro d'Italia





On Tuesday, 21 June around noon we took a taxi from our house to the local, Lafayette, CA metro (BART) which took us to SFO International Terminal where we boarded a Lufthansa A-380 for Frankfurt (often called Bankfurt). From Frankfurt we took a Lufthansa  A320 for Roma (Fiumicino) where we arrived about 2pm Wednesday. From there we took the Leonardo Express train to Stazione Termini, Rome. Not a fast train but the smoothest rails I've enjoyed. At Termini we boarded the fast train to Napoli, from the Napoli main station we boarded the rickety, slow Circumvesuviana train which goes clockwise around Golfo di Napoli to Sorrento to arrive in time for dinner.

But alas, Miccio's Pizzeria (best I've ever tasted and more later why Miccio is no longer in business) has been taken over by a new ristorante-Miseria e Nobilta. There we had average but filling marinara and margherita pizza and asked what happened to the previous owner. They new owners really didn't know but said Miccio was working at a family restaurant in Castellammare di Stabia. 

The very nice Hotel Mignon http://www.sorrentohotelmignon.com/
had been renovated so we have a room over the street which has very little auto traffic.

Sometimes considerable foot traffic but the glass doors to our patio are quite thick and block even loud music and fireworks. We slept well and enjoyed the very nice breakfast bar in a side garden snugged to the kitchen with citrus overhanging our table. Most available space in Sorrento has citrus intertwined with buildings


 


After breakfast we walked down to the ferry terminal for a ride to Napoli. We recently discovered that Napoli was having a pizza festival and we started hiking along the waterfront. The NPV https://www.pizzavillage.it/levento/  ran from 17-25 June (Giugno). Still hiking, hiking. We arrived a bit after 3PM only to find out that it would not start until 6PM. The pizza village along the Napoli shore looked very good. Each participant had an outdoor oven, a rick of wood (good pizza requires forno di legna - wood oven that burns at 800F or above) but no participants. Darn. So we started hiking back to where there was a hotel with a taxi parada and we taxied back to the ferry terminal. We had some below average pizza waiting for the ferry back to Sorrento and a hike back up the cliff. We never figured out a way to attend the NPV and get back to Sorrento before the train and ferry stop running. We have tentative plans for Iberia 2019 summer (out to Azores and Madeira) but when we return to Campania (region around Napoli) we plan to research (they move NPV round on the calendar every year) and might spend time in a Napoli hotel and not worry about getting back to Sorrento. We plan to lunch at Pizza Antica da Michele a Napoli which has been serving pizza since 1870. In 2014 we ate at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antica_Pizzeria_Port'Alba where they invented pizza cerca 1830. Good pizza.



Below Hotel Mignon (sort of snugged up against it) is a wonderful restaurant, (O'Parruchiano) http://www.parrucchiano.com/en/index.php


Next day we lunched there. Sharon had the fish grill: calamari (I can't have due to cholesterol), spada, tonno red tuna. I had the tonno, minestrone, cozze marinara e spinaci (spinach).





After lunch (pranzo) we walked around the restaurant and then along Corso Italia to Parco di Villa Fiorentino where I got to sit in some very old Fiats and we admired the citrus grove and garden outback.




Next day we walked the streets northward along the top of the cliffs and lunched at Ristorante Meating along Via Della Pieta which caters to carnivores but we split a very nice marinara pizza (€4) and a bowl of cozze (mussels or mejillones) with pepper in lemon water (€7).  Quite good. Lots of oregano on the pizza. Nice hot forno a legna (wood fire oven). These must be heated quite a while before baking. They run 800-1,000F. A Roma we can't get real pizza (not the square focaccia things) until evening as they don't like to run that hot oven until evening. No cheese, of course as it was a marinara.




Following day we walked over to a restaurant overlooking the Golfo with a beautiful interior with lovely marble columns but it was closed. Later research revealed that it was actually a wedding restaurant owned by a nearby hotel. Walking west the street descended to Marina Grande and walked to the end of the street against a cliff.

Walked back and perched at an outdoor bar where I had a cup of tea and Sharon had una birra (beer). The bar belonged to the Soul & Fish restaurant which was not yet open. Moving over to it when it opened, Sharon had the best seabass we've ever tasted (they called Il Branzino) and I had raw (I think) salmon which was way tender and tasted good €45. We will certainly return.



Then we got our good exercise hiking back up 160' to Corso Italia.


Next day we hiked up to the Circumvesuviano stazione di treni and boarded the train to Napoli. This line runs only from Napoli a Sorrento e torno (return). It was hot. It was full before we got there so it was SRO but standing in the hinge area between cars. We got off in Stazione Garibaldi a Napoli and hiked down the street to Pizza Antica da Michele. It was reputed to always have a line out the door but we walked in and had una tavola right away. My vote: new king di pizze, especially now that Miccio's a Sorrento closed. €9 for our marinara pizza e due birre. After lunch we hiked down about a mile, maybe more to the Porta di Traghetti (ferry port). Unfortunately our ferry back to Sorrento was a catamaran jet ferry. The a/c did not cool us much and the boat went much faster than the regular one with moderate swell, so nauseated Sharon. Up the cliff to Hotel Mignon. 
















Back down to Marina Grande next day and back to Soul & Fish where I had the Branzino (wonderful again), then we hiked further along the southern edge of Marina Grande as far as we could go along the water and hiked back up to Hotel Mignon.


The following day we hiked up to the Tuesday open air market of fruit, vegetables and clothing. No purchases. Stopped by a cemetery nearby where I sat in the shade on some nice cool marble and watched small birds wandering amongst headstones and two cats chasing each other there while Sharon took a census of dead people without resurrecting any.




Meating was closed so we lunched at one of the pizza places nearby. Not as good.




Next day we hiked out along the cliffs east of Sorrento where we found an abandoned hotel along the cliff edge that still had some nice plantings and Sharon fantasized about restoring it.



Following day we returned to O'Parruchiano. I don't usually like spada much but they served me the best I've ever tasted and Sharon had tube pasta with monkfish sauce, that too was wonderful. We then went for a passeggiata down to a park above the cliff edge where we could sit and look out over Il Golfo. On the way back we stopped for a granita and got to know Giuseppe, the lively owner. We had granita corretta (with a shot of vodka or limoncello). Great cooler. We returned often for a granita or limoncello (made from the rinds of huge lemons that grow along the Amalfi coast over the hill behind or from large lemons grown locally in Sorrento) and enjoyable conversations with Giuseppe who had lots of patter for his customers. "A happy wife makes good life." Well he is usually right. gius.apreda@gmail.com



During one of our conversations with Giuseppe he asked which was our favorite place to eat in Sorrento. Dick lamented that Miccio's was no longer open and we had to find another pizza ristorante. Giuseppe then told us why Miccio was no longer open and it was for a bureaucratic reason, a very typical Italian situation. Per Giuseppe after Miccio had spend a lot of money buying a custom made cover for his outdoor patio he was told he could not have it so he closed his business and moved to a city closer to Napoli.

Many days we would walk down to Piazza della Vittoria where we could usually find a bench in the shade and a breeze and look out over Il Golfo watching the many ferries, superyachts, speedboats (cigar boats) and fishing boats heading for Napoli, Capri (KAHpree), Amalfi and Ischia.









Following day we walked down to the cliff edge. Hung out at back of one of the hotels that was having a wedding photographs taken. The wedding was held at Chiesa e Convento di San Francesco.


Then walked down the switchback stone path to the beach water: Spiaggia San Francesco. Not much beach but we rented two chaises e una ombrella to lay in the shade. Paulo at Hotel Mignon had recommended Bagni Salvatore.

Hundreds of ombrelle on decks sitting on boulder breakwaters. I waited until I felt overheated before descending a steel ladder to the water then swam out, under the floating rope and swam some way out into Il Golfo. Water was cool but not cold. After a 20 minute swim I was back under the ombrella next to Sharon. Reheated for ½ hour before going back in. Went a bit further out into Il Golfo giving the few boats nearby leeway.

There was another path down to the water and I wanted to try using it to ascend back up the cliff. but it was owned by a hotel up at clifftop and the path traversed several tunnels in and out of the cliff face and would end in the hotel's basement so we instead walked back up the switchback. A limoncello with Giuseppe. 
 


Next day we walked along Via Arancia that runs just outside the south side of the old city wall. The road ascended the cliff just west of the Sorrento plateau.



We had been researching The Garden Restaurant just off Corso Italia for a while so for our last pranzo we walked up the stairs to a very nice restaurant under the same kind of trellises as O'Parruchiano.



I had a sliced avocado with tasty large shrimp and delicious bacalau (salted cod) which I love and this was at least as good as we had in '11 a Porto. Sharon very much enjoyed salmon topped with toasted hazelnuts.

A few days back Sharon had discovered that there is a faster Circumvesuviana train called Campania Express and this morning we lugged our luggage up Via Arancia to the stazione di treni. We got a printout with a QKR on it. After we figured out how to get through the gate with that, we tried finding our coach #1 but didn't and a train person said we could sit anywhere. Had to stand until we got to Pompeii but the a/c was very good and the train wheels actually felt round.

Sunday, June 18, 2017

Pizza Giro Italia



It has been awhile since I posted any updates so now would be a good time to let everyone know about our 2017 tour. Again we are heading to Italia with a short hop up to A'dam to see some friends and for me to enjoy the reopened Rijksmuseum (at last) and to drink some jenever at Wynand Fockink.

But why call this trip Pizza Giro you ask well that is easy to explain. Our first stop will be in Sorrento just across the Golfo di Napoli where the 2017 NPV (Napoli Pizza Village) will be held. The plan is to take the ferry across and walk down to where the festival will be held. If we don't see a pizza Dick will eat then there is always Sri Lankan food to eat. Yes, Sri Lankan restaurants are in Napoli. For the rest of the trip the plan is to sample pizza from each region of Italia. There are some regional pizzaz we are already aware of that we don't like. Tondo pizza may mean round but it doesn't mean it is cooked in a wood fired oven and pizza al ligna is what we consider the best.

The rest of the giro (tour) will have us taking the train down to Villa San Giovanni in Calabria. There we will take another ferry or hydrofoil to Messina Sicily. We have toured a lot of Sicily already and have sailed through the Strait of Messina but we did not get a chance to tour Messina. The original plan was to take the train to Taranto along the Ionian coastline of Italia. For those who understand know the Italian train system know that the schedule changes every 90 days or so. The train schedule changed but the trip will still take 7 hours and we will get to see the Ionian sea but not as much as we would have as our trip now takes us across La Sila. This part of Italia is what was once Magna Grecia but very little remains of the ancient Greek architecture and monuments that once thrived here. Many wars with neighboring villages seemed to bankrupt everyone. From Taranto we will continue on to Brindisi, Bari, Pescara, Desenzano del Garda, Firenze, and Roma. If you follow this on a map you will notice that the trip is being done antiorario.

Picture


The trip begins on June 20th and we will be back September 19th. See everyone soon.

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Not being morbid just thinking about where to be at the end of this trip called life.

So this post is really more about a personal passion of mine and many of my friends are aware of this strange passion. I like to visit cemeteries. I know that I am not the only one as there are books and online groups of other like minded folks. Here is a link on Pinterest and another at Travel+Leisure.

It isn't anything dark or sinister but rather one of contemplation of what do I want anyone, who should pass by my final repose, to experience. To determine that I have visited many different final resting places around the world and here are a few of my favorite photos. Many are quirky and many are sublime. But in the end I am certain the person being memorialized didn't think about what their final spot would look like.

For myself I am down to two choices a green burial either in Mill Valley or Sacramento or cremation with interment at Mountain View Cemetery in Oakland. As they say TBD.


La Recoleta Cemetery, Buenos Aires

María Eva Duarte de Perón, Duarte family tomb in La Recoleta Cemetery

Pyramids often are popular
As are crosses and angels

Dr, Jesus Martinez tomb looked like a ATM or Post Office to me.


Similar tombs in the same area at La Recoleta Cemetery, Buenos Aires.

Lakeside Memorial Lawn


My parents niche.

Grave Markers at Nieuwe Ooster in Amsterdam 

Rädecker father (d 1921) and mother. (d 1936) Designed by Rädecker son Anton, one of the creators of the National Monument on Dam Square. 

Not certain what was being depicted. 

Joannes Benedictus van Heutsz (3 February 1851 – 11 July 1924) was a Dutch military officer who was appointed governor general of the Dutch East Indies in 1904.


Thérèse Schwartze (1851-1918). The statue in white Carrara marble was made by Georgine Schwartze, the sister of Therese after her remains were moved from the Zorgvlied cemetery.
  
Albert Hahn (deceased in 1918). Famous caricaturist and poster designer. Monument by Hildo Krop represents the labor movement: the working class which strides to a bright future.
Two other markers from about the same time period. 




Wally Tax (1948 - 2005) he was the founder and frontman of the Nederbeat group The Outsiders (1959–1969) and the rock group Tax Free (1969–1971). A fundraiser concert was performed to purchase this marker at Nieuwe Ooster. 


Pretty sure they are not originally form the Netherlands.


A couple who probably did not own a luxury car in life but will be forever memorialized with one.

Grave Markers at Zorgvlied in Amsterdam






Petrus Leonardus Maria Giele (1956-1999) was a Dutch artist , poet , designer and decorator and a major source of inspiration for a large group of Amsterdam artists. A design for a monument by artist Joep van Lieshout initially faced much resistance. The Giele Skull is a purple polyester cabin in the shape of a skull in which family and friends of the artist can open. The cabin is locked with two padlocks and only a few family members and friends have a key.

Don't know anything about this person but the grave is in a section called Paradiso.













At least there is a bench to sit down at this gravesite.

Elisabeth Otter-Knoll 


Man at table.

Cimitero Monumentale di Milano







Again a pyramid.