OPMark:
Though I certainly hope you have an absolutely fabulous trip, I can't help but say that, despite all the wonderful things Florence has to offer, I pretty much hate that city (well, it's really more love/hate), in large measure on account of the inescapable and massive tourist presence (which is surely worse in summer than any other time of year - I found it overwhelming in early spring) but also for other reasons that can perhaps be just dismissed as personal eccentricities and need not be detailed or elucidated here. On the other hand, I find Siena, which also suffers from massive tourism but to a somewhat lesser degree than Florence, a city with a far more appealing soul. I also had much greater success consistently finding little, unassuming gems of restaurants in Siena than in Florence, where it seems to be almost as easy to eat badly (or at least disappointingly) as it is to eat well. Advice given elsewhere in this spago, though perhaps obvious, must be emphasised: seek out the peripheral and the locally frequented... Unfortunately, in Florence in summer, along with the many thousands of people willing to eat the dull and occasionally even nasty food of the obviously and even less obviously tourist joints, there are also lots and lots of more discriminating people trying to find the same out-of-the-way places that you might be looking for. In this regard, I strongly suspect you'll have an easier time of finding the genuine and the good in Lucca than in Florence or, for that matter, Rome (I've been to Lucca and think had a swell meal there but it was just a day outing from where I was staying up in Pietrasanta and that was some dozen years ago or more). Lucca is really charming.
There are a few minor points I'd like to make. Others have suggested 'picnicking' and that's always a great thing to do in Italy and, for that matter, anywhere in Europe, where interesting local sausages and cheeses and breads abound. In Florence, one runs into the (in my view bizarre) traditional bread without salt, but of course other, more tasty kinds of bread are available in riotous profusion. One 'cold cut' not to miss is finocchiona, a large salami-like sausage flavoured with fennel. Good finocchiona might justfy the whole trip.
For eating out, there are a number of good rosticcerie in Florence, that is, places that specialise in roasted meat, and if you find yourself having to buy a pig in a poke, make it a roasted pig (arista alla Fiorentina) from a rosticceria, which, it seems to me, is more likely to be unpretentiously good than many 'ristoranti', especially those on the main squares and streets with lots of tourist foot-traffic. There are other meaty delights in Florentine cuisine, such as the 'bistecca alla Fiorentina' and the 'cinghiale alla cacciatore' (wild boar, hunter style). If you like bunnies, 'pappardelle alla lepre' is a great, meaty primo, as is the 'penne alla Fiorentina' (tight sauce with a little tomato, ground veal, peas). If you like funky grains, try 'gran farro' or 'minestra di farro'. [Apologies if all this sort of general information is well known to you.]
I have one specific suggestion for a restaurant which I offer with some trepidation, namely:
La Garga, Via del Moro 48 (closed Sunday afternoons and Mondays).
This recommendation comes with a noteworthy caveat: I have been there only once and that was over twenty years ago, when the place was still quite new and my own culinary experience was still fairly limited. The owner and chef was then young and passionately committed to offering his own, innovative take on traditional Tuscan/Florentine dishes - that hardly sounds out of the ordinary these days but in the early '80's in Florence, that was not such a common thing. The place then was tiny (perhaps 6 or 7 tables, as I recall) and my brother and I have always remembered that dinner as one of the outstanding Italian restaurant meals we've had. The exact menu I have recorded in a notebook but I can't locate it at the moment. I do, however, remember that one of the secondi was a boar's cheek dish (guanciale, but not the cured version) and one of the primi was a plate of perfectly simple and perfectly executed ravioli di ricotta dressed in butter and sage. The place appears to be still going strong and the husband/wife team also apparently offers cooking classes. Here's a website, but it's in Italian:
http://firenze.lanetro.it/canales/desar ... sumen=2803 In the write-up there it states that the clientele is largely American and Japanese, but there are obviously tourists, such as yourself, who want to eat well and those who merely must feed, so I don't think that that is necessarily a bad indication. But again, this place is not a homey, traditional, mom-and-pop kind of place but rather the creation of an artistically inclined chef. If you come across or can obtain a review or opinion of La Garga from someone who's been there recently and the review or opinion is strongly positive, then I'd say it's quite likely the place is still very much worth a visit if you're looking for something above the basic trattoria/rosticceria level.
I have blethered too long and must away but will, insha'allah, offer a few comments on Rome in a second installment soon.
Alle Nerven exzitiert von dem gewürzten Wein -- Anwandlung von Todesahndungen -- Doppeltgänger --
- aus dem Tagebuch E.T.A. Hoffmanns, 6. Januar 1804.
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Na sir is na seachain an cath.