THE REGION
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Puglia, Italy
" Remember
Tuscany in the eighties? Umbria in the nineties?
This is Puglia's moment. It's a place on the verge "
Travel & Leisure
Magazine, July 2004.
"I must admit I am very high on Puglia . In my opinion this is the next " Tuscany " for the American traveler; it is exotic, yet accessible, its people are poets and thinkers and workers, and when it all mixes together, it works and is user friendly". Mario Batali.
Bountiful
Puglia
Today's
modern Puglia is still largely undiscovered. However, many
of the most prominent publications, travellers, and food experts
are quickly discovering the region and it won't stay that way
for too much longer. Catching the right unspoiled place at
just the right moment is very much an art. Ideally, you want
a place with a comfortable infrastructure and a cool "vibe",
but also a place where the masses of tourists are still a few
years off. This is Puglia right now.
Puglia
is the region that occupies the heel and spur of what is
often referred to as the "boot" in
southeastern Italy . While it features some of the finest cuisine
in the country, the tour buses and camcorder-crowds haven't
discovered it yet.
The region is awash in sunshine
that produces radiant, intensely flavoured fruits and vegetables
and powerful wines. Your home for the week will be the charming
city of Lecce, the capital of Puglia's Salento area. Lecce,
sometimes called "the Florence of the south," is a fascinating
city that juxtaposes ostentatious wonders of Baroque art against
a backdrop of simple, authentic rural life.
Although Puglia is the vacation destination of many
Italians drawn to beautiful beaches and art-filled cities, it remains
one of Italy's most untouched regions: you will find open air food
markets unsurpassed anywhere in the world, welcoming Apulian vendors
communicating in a mix of dialect and gestures, and food that tastes
like it has just been plucked from the bountiful earth. |
"Specialising
in small, intimate hands-on classes based on
personalised instruction and individual attention."
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Your
accomodations will be in our charming Bed & Breakfast,
located in the historical center of Lecce . Your host, Silvestro
Silvestori, and his enthusiastic staff are waiting to welcome
you and introduce you to this untouched gem of a region!
View a detailed map of southern Italy at:
http://www.italy-weather-and-maps.com/italy/maps/pugliamap.php
View our Puglia Photo Gallery
Lecce, Italy
While
it's true that you are coming to get to know the folks
in our market, cook in our stable and eat and drink in
our garden, none of that makes any sense without understanding
the context of the place where it all happens. First,
we're in Puglia, Italy's heartland. You only need to
travel on a train for an hour to get a sense of the lay
of the land, and how that might transfer into both the
culture and cuisine. But we're also in the Salento, the
Salentine peninsula, the thin stretch of rich-soiled
land lapped by two different seas. And finally, our school
is based in the historic, walled city center of Lecce,
the aristocratic capital, citta d’arte (city of
art), famous all over Italy for stunning baroque architecture
carved from the soft, local stone that allows dizzying
flights of fancy. Like all core and periphery cultures,
any real understanding of the city naturally involves
an understanding of the countryside, and vice versa.
It's a fascinating place, by any standards.
What this means to our students is complex: Although we are
only an afternoon train ride from Rome, we are a universe away
from the touristy, most over-crowded parts of Tuscany. While
traveling this distance may seem a hassle, it has actually benefited
the area tremendously by discouraging the crowds that demand
that Italy transform itself into Disney-versions of their perception
of Italy and the tourists that prefer to see things through the
eyepieces of camcorders. In short, the vibrant local culture
is still a vibrant local culture. It takes real work to penetrate
it, but the payoffs are enormous. And real.
Lecce
is a small, safe city. Other Italians often call it The Florence
of the South, which is fitting, because both of these regions
share a profound sense of beauty and a prominence as a cultural
capital. But if 'Barcelona of Italy' has yet to catch on, it’s only a matter of time. Carved out of a soft stone,
pietra leccesse, the baroque facades seem to undulate, escaping
the bounds of physics. On first look an observer's natural response
is often mildly blasphemous. However, more careful consideration
will reveal a mix of "nationalistic" styles and epochs
that provide deeper insight into the history of the Salentini
as well as the reoccurring tale of struggle, loss and eventual
acceptance of outside influences.
Even
in modern Italy i Salentini view themselves as Italian only
beyond Italy's borders or when a national team wins a place
in a cup playoff. Rome, they’ll tell you, is a wonderful
place to visit, but it might as well be France. Dialect is spoken
in grocery stores and public markets, at the hair salons and
between subjects at elementary school. What the sensitive foreigner
will take away is the profound sense of historical poverty, and
how that has rendered life beautiful in a way that never comes
with bounty. Simple pleasures define the Puglian life: kicking
a ball in a square; gathering the evening's dinner greens in
a nearby field; placing a few flowers at the feet of a statue
of the Madonna; chattering, gregarious teenagers sitting on the
church steps all night; mechanics fashioning their only 'Open
for business' sign from two tires placed on the street, one horizontal,
the other vertical and stuck down into the first.
Life here has always been about making do, and over time, i
Salentini have developed a sort of genius for it. The phrase
'self-reliance' still means a lot here. It's not difficult to
find folks that still cut their own fire wood, can their own
tomatoes, make their own cheese, but never make a fuss about
any of it. This self-reliant frugality is echoed in the food
here, which is always simple, honest and extraordinary in flavour,
rich with bursting, ripe fruits and plump, muscular vegetables.
Here, it's not so much a way of eating as a way of living. It
is Italy's soul food. And it will leave its mark on you.
View our Lecce Photo Gallery
Activities
Lecce is something of a minor hub in southern
Italy: it is easy to connect to both other Italian cities,
as well as ferries bound for Greece. Many of our guests
elect to spend a few days in the arrival city—inevitably Roma—then
come to cook with us for the week, spending a few additional
days in the south, afterward.
View
our Students Gallery
Once booked, we are at your disposal regarding help with arrangements. During your stay we will continually consult maps, guide books and the internet, perfect for your future travel plans. Not only can we recommend other cities but we would be happy to call ahead and book your stay, and even dinner reservations, if need be.
Please
do not hesitate to contact
us inquiring
about any particular activity—the south has it all.
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