A beautiful book by Charles Dickens with new illustrations. – Pictures from Italy
Brighten up a winter Monday with these colorful pictures of Sicily
Learn the secrets to a perfect cappuccino with this sweet video

A beautiful book by Charles Dickens with new illustrations. – Pictures from Italy
Brighten up a winter Monday with these colorful pictures of Sicily
Learn the secrets to a perfect cappuccino with this sweet video
Did you know that Rome has the highest concentration of mosaics in Italy? Buzz in Rome shows you where to find them all.
A plundered treasure is returned to Sicily.
The Cinque-Terre is a hiker’s paradise.
Today in Italy is the celebration of Santo Stefano, the day marking the announcement of the birth of Jesus and the arrival of the Three Wise Men
The history behind a favorite Italian holiday sweet treat.
Christmas in Venice
Celebrate a Tuscan Christmas
What to eat and where to wander in Palermo
Make sure your passport is up to date. If not, here are tips on how to renew it quickly.
A lost Leonardo, Found
From The Urbino Project 2012 – Archaeological discovery in the Marche
From Life in Italy – Ghost towns of Italy
From The LA Times – Roman art at the Getty in Los Angeles
From National Geographic – Photo Gallery: The Adventures of Marco Polo
From Discovery News – Mini-Colosseum Excavated in Rome
A ‘mini-Colosseum’ that lies beneath an airport may have hosted Roman emperors.
From The New York Times -Hiking Italy, Volcano to Volcano
“ If you’re seeking a memorable walking experience in Italy, climbing a volcano may not be the first thing you think of. And yet a hiking tour of four volcanoes in southern Italy — Mount Vesuvius, Stromboli, Vulcano and Mount Etna — is an experience that will remain vivid long after the smell of sulfur has faded….”
From BBC – Italian Wedding Traditions
“ …In my experience, Italian weddings are the ultimate gastric challenge. With an array of mouth-watering antipasti served buffet-style on arrival, I am usually full before I have even reached the table…”
From The Culture-ist – A Photo Essay of Life in Lake Como
“ Life in Lake Como is beautiful. The surrounding towns — peppered with Romanesque churches, medieval castles and neoclassical monuments — are laid back in the most Italian of ways….”
From 3 Pipe Problem – The Rebirth of Florence as Cultural Innovator?
“…When we think of Florence, we envision a strong spirit of competition and world-changing innovation. But is that still the case? Viewing the cultural achievements of the last hundred years, we need to reach back to the Florentine futurists of the 1920s and ‘30s, the early days of the Maggio Musicale and the advent of the present-day Italian fashion industry in the Sala Bianca of Palazzo Pitti in 1950s and ‘60s. But what about now?…”
From The Lonely Planet – Italy’s Best Kept Secrets
Wander off the beaten track in Italy and one thing is guaranteed – a sense of having found a real place, one of the joys of travelling somewhere that fewer people know about.
From The TravelBelles – View over the Rooftops in Vogogna, Italy
From Driving Like a Maniac – A Day with the Mosaics
Today’s recipe comes to you from the beautiful island of Sicily. Follow our chef’s recipe and treat your family and friends to an authentic Italian dessert!
1 2/3 cup flour
1 teaspoon cocoa powder
2 tablespoons sugar
pinch of salt
1 tablespoon of red wine
2 tablespoon melted butter
½ to ¾ cup water
Vegetable oil, for deep frying
Filling:
1 ½ pound of fresh ricotta cheese
½ cup sugar
½ cup chocolate chips or good dark chocolate, chopped
½ cup candied peel, finely sliced
4 glace cherries and icing sugar to decorate
Mix together the flour, cocoa powder, sugar, melted butter, and salt. Add enough wine to make a smooth, stretchable dough. Form into a ball, cover with a cloth and let stand at room temperature for about 1 hour.
Meanwhile drain your ricotta cheese. Add the sugar, chocolate chips and the candied fruit. Refrigerate for 30 minutes.
Heat enough vegetable oil in a deep pan to be able to submerge the shells.
Roll out the dough on a well-floured board to about 1/8 of an inch thick (or use a pasta machine). Cut out into squares, about 8cm/ 3 inch per side, and roll again until very thin. Wrap dough around tube by overlapping the 2 sides, sealing the overlapping sides with a little egg white. Be sure the edges are well sealed because they tend to pop open when frying.
Drop 1 or 2 of the tubes at a time into the hot oil. Fry until they are light brown and crisp. Place on paper towels to drain. Let the shells cool before removing them from the tubes. Do this until all of your dough is used.
Place filling in a piping bag with large nozzle and fill cold cannoli shells from both enda. Decorate each end with a piece of glace cherry and dust the cannoli with icing sugar.
From 360 Cities – Take a virtual trip to Siena or Venice or The Cinque Terre with this interactive panoramic photography blog.
From Journeywoman – Rebecca Bricker tells us her 25 things every woman should know about Florence.
“There’s so much to love about Florence. During the year I lived there, I was awed by its beauty, history and art. How could you not feel inspired when walking on ancient cobbles in the sandal steps of Dante, Michelangelo, Galileo, Machiavelli, Leonardo da Vinci – and Salvatore Ferragamo (whose flagship store at Palazzo Spini Feroni, Via Tornabuoni 2, has a shoe museum, fyi). Which brings me to my first tip if you’re planning a visit… “
From The Times of Malta – Eating well in Sicily
“Sicily offers spectacular scenery, as well as sun, sea and sand, but what sets it apart from other Mediterranean islands is its irresistible cuisine… “
From Wild About Travel – Learn about a breathtaking fresco near Pisa.
“ The magnificent Calci Charterhouse was one of the most unexpected surprises of my trip in an overlooked area of Tuscany, the one between Pisa and Lucca…. “
From Emiko Davis – Learn the history behind the saltless Tuscan bread.
“If there were one defining ingredient in a Tuscan kitchen, one absolutely essential part of every single meal, it would have to be bread; not just any bread, but pane toscano, Tuscan bread… “