Showing posts with label Florence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Florence. Show all posts

Friday, May 16, 2014

Five Best Trattoria in Florence: Food, Price, Atmosphere

When you're traveling through Italy, it's all about the food. Good Italian food prepared with fresh ingredients. Below is a list of the best trattorie in the city of Florence based on a combination of food, price and atmosphere. 

Trattoria Toscana Gozzi Sergio
Piazza San Lorenzo, 8r
Telephone: +39 055 281 941
Lunch only; closed Sunday and part of August

Known simply as “da Sergio,” this authentic trattoria smack in the middle of the madness of Piazza San Lorenzo began life as a wine and olive oil shop nearly a century ago by the Gozzi family. Take a seat and you’ll instantly forget about the souvenir vendors just steps outside the door. The handwritten menu is thorough but rarely deviates from Tuscan specialties and peasant standards. Start with ribollita (a mere €5), the ubiquitous Florentine bread and bean soup or the passato di fagioli (just €4.5), a delicious pairing of beans and pasta. For your secondi, bistecca alla fiorentina (about €38 a kilo—and more than enough for two or three to share) is the item to order here—big and juicy—or lombatina di vitella or veal chop at just €12.

Trattoria da Mario
Via Rosina, 2r
Telephone: +39 055 218 550
Lunch only; closed Sunday and holidays
Cash only


Just off the Piazza Mercato Centrale, da Mario established itself as a wine bar more than 60 years ago and slowly morphed into a trattoria. The dining room is strictly utilitarian—a few small wooden tables dressed up in blue-checkered linen line white tiled walls, all in full view of a glassed-in kitchen. The menu changes daily (look for a handwritten list at the door and posted on the glass partition by the cash register) and includes traditional Tuscan food lovingly created from old family recipes. They don’t take reservations and are only open for lunch—so plan accordingly—but you will not be disappointed.

Trattoria Sostanza
Via della Porcellana, 25r
Telephone: +39 055 212 691
Closed Saturday and Sunday in the off-season, and most of August
Cash only 


Trattoria Sostanza, a simple storefront eatery just a few blocks northeast of Piazza Ognissanti, has been around for more than a century and still seems untouched by time. The long, narrow dining room is surprisingly bright thanks to the gleaming white tile walls. A large collection of old photos follows Sostanza’s history—it was once called, Il Troia, or “The Trough,” a name that many locals still use today. The atmosphere, like the food, is casual. No frills just simple Tuscan dishes at a fair price. Although their bistecca is memorable, skip the beef, and try their signature dish, petto di pollo al burro (butter chicken), two plump chicken breasts sautéed in butter, and served in a dinged-up metal casserole that has seen better days. (But oh, the stories that little casserole could tell.) Top off the experience with fresh, wild strawberries anointed in wine. Reservations essential.

Trattoria I’Raddi
Via Ardiglione, 47r
Telephone: +39 055 211 072
Closed Sunday


Located at the end of a dead-end street, I’Raddi is a little hard to find but worth the effort (look for the little hand painted sign on at the top of Via Ardiglione pointing the way). The eatery is small and unassuming but modern in its clean design, a reflection of its three young owners, one of whom is creative Chef Alfonso di Noia. His menu changes every two months, tracking the seasons of fresh produce that make an appearance at the local farmers’ market. Look for the hand-written piatti del giorno posted outside daily to check out their specials. Budget-minded travelers should head to I’Raddi at lunchtime Monday through Friday where they can score a serving of homemade pasta for less than €3! Delicious desserts beautifully presented. Call to make a reservation otherwise you’ll need to share a communal table. But, hey, that’s part of the fun at I’Raddi.

These trattorie and many more are all included in the book, Chow Italy: Eat Well, Spend Less (Florence 2014).  

Chow Italy: Florence 2014



Sunday, March 9, 2014

Traveling to Florence? Win a Copy of Chow Italy: Florence 2014


Goodreads Book Giveaway

Chow Italy by Christina Baglivi Tinglof

Chow Italy

by Christina Baglivi Tinglof

Giveaway ends April 02, 2014.
See the giveaway details at Goodreads.
Enter to win

Friday, May 6, 2011

Trattoria Casalinga: The Price is Right for This Eatery in Florence

Located near the Piazza Santo Spirito south of the Arno River, Trattoria Casalinga offers one of the best culinary deals in all of Florence. The place is sprawling. Set in a Renaissance building with lofty high ceilings, there are two large dining rooms crammed with simply-dressed tables. Unfortunately, the eatery lost most of its grand Renaissance appeal during renovations through the years. Modern pine panels line the walls, and plaster covers the once-beautiful cross-ribbed ceiling. In other words, it's no Pitti Palace (which, by the way, is close by). But what Casalinga lacks in design, it amply makes up for in good regional cooking at bargain prices.

We skip the Chianti tonight and opt for another variety of Tuscan grape, Montescudaio, light with a delicately dry flavor. The liter of house wine, coupled with a basket of fresh bread and rolls, makes us think we're in the right place.

Ignoring the regular menu, we choose our dinner from the piatti del giorno, or "the dishes of the day" hand printed on sheet of butcher paper. The ravioli alla panna, a generous helping of small, round pasta packed with creamy ricotta, aglow in a cream sauce and attractively garnished with bits of ham, is as sensational as the Florentine favorite pappardelle al coniglio, wide ribbon noodles flavorfully paired with a robust tomato-based rabbit sauce.

Tonight, like every night, Casalinga is crowded. Everyone from starving students and artists to international tourists pack the room or press their noses against the glass, ready to pounce on the next vacant table. Dinnertime chatter echoes loudly against the white-washed dining room walls. The energy is lively but not overbearing.

Feeling the pressure to eat and run, we proceed to our next course of faraona arrosto, a succulent, roasted guinea hen whose fresh, gamy flavor is far better than chicken, and trippa alla fiorentina, a Tuscan specialty of slowly braised tripe and minced beef in a hearty tomato sauce, dashingly presented with a healthy sprinkle of parmigiano cheese. Other dishes range from a hearty ribollita (a thick Tuscan soup with bread and beans) or tagliatelle panna e funghi (pasta with cream and mushrooms) to the delicate carpaccio di bresaola con rucola e parmigiano (thin slices of raw beef with arugula and Parmesan cheese) or cinghiale polenta e funghi (wild boar with wild mushrooms and polenta).

Follow the map to Trattoria Casalinga
After dinner, we walk a block to the Piazza Santo Spirito, where a concert is underway. The sounds of Mozart provide a wonderful dessert (instead of Casalinga's signature cantuccini or almond biscuits) as we sit with our backs against the outside wall of the massive cathedral.


Trattoria Casalinga
Via dei Michelozzi, 9
Phone: +39 06 218 624
Closed Sunday
website: http://www.trattorialacasalinga.it/
Approximate cost of our meal: 45 euro