Where is alberobello puglia




















Bellavista Suite awakening with view House for Rent. Trulli Mater Domini — Stylishly elegant — Sleeps 7 - private pool.

Martina Franca. Trullo Belvedere - Holiday dreams come true! Ostuni , Salento. Trullo Vista Blu — And what a view!! Detached House in Ostuni. Detached House in Brindisi. Detached House in Ceglie Messapica. Our recipe of the week is a tasty appetizer dish by writer and blogger Coral Sisk. Tomatoes Al Gratin Apulia Style. Pomodori gratinati alla pugliese. Friselle Bread and Tomato Salad.

In Rione Aia Piccola, citizens of Alberobello, dressed in period costumes, demonstrate the use of original tools and explain how their ancestors lived and worked here.

In Rione Monti, grandmothers make pasta in different shapes: o recchiette , cavatelli , and vermicelli. The ladies readily take a time out to offer tastes of liqueurs made with apple seeds, basil or laurel leaves, and sweet cherries.

Nearby, artisans carve limestone into pinnacles and weave baskets. Guiseppe Maffei, architect and Cavaliere of Italy, explains the construction of trulli in his shop. Trullo Sovrano, now a museum, is an Alberobello trulli ensemble of fifteen connected domes. Its two-story structure illustrates the moment of passage and change for Alberobello. Puglia is known for its Cucina Povera literally poor kitchen , which means seasonal dishes prepared with fresh, local ingredients, whatever is at hand.

In this historically impoverished region, it also meant creative substitutions—wheat for meat, for example—and imaginative uses of vegetables, olive oil and herbs. It is world-class cooking!

Make sure you make a pitstop at the biggest trullo of them all, Trullo Sovrano. Declared a National Monument in , it's the only example in Alberobello of a trullo with two floors and was built in the 18th century. Today, it's a museum recreated to look as it did in its original form, complete with furnished bedrooms, kitchen and dining area, with an aesthetic that will appeal to interior design fans.

Next door to Trullo Sovrano is Terra Madre, which has quietly started to win critical acclaim for its farm-to-food approach. A wall has been knocked down so diners can look out onto the organic garden where the majority of produce is grown. The emphasis here is on fruit and vegetables, and the former hangs on trees until it reaches maturity so that the flavour is all the better. This is hearty, couldn't-be-fresher food that tastes as good as Mother Nature intended. Charming Trulli stays include breakfast here each morning, a buffet spanning pastries, cheeses and fruits.

Puglia is famed for its ceramics, thanks to its soil that's rich in red clay. The town of Grottaglie might be the ceramics capital, but you'll still find an abundance of pottery in Alberobello. The most traditional are simple terracotta jugs typically used for wine or water, but the modern abstract designs painted onto plates and mugs are also worth investing in.

Many local ceramics are handpainted with a rooster and a blue flower, a signature motif of Puglian ceramics and a symbol of fertility, richness and a long life. Many of the trullo roofs are crudely painted with whitewashed symbols, most of which relate to Christianity - such as the somewhat brutal image of Mary's pierced heart, which is pictured here.

The more opaque letters S, C, S and D relate to the saints, although no one concretely knows which. Others have astrological or Pagan roots, like the evil eye, for example. Mysterious and with a fairytale-like allure, the roofs of the trulli could well be a metaphor for the town of Alberobello itself.

Just beyond this, next to the Church of Santa Lucia, is a belvedere offering good views over the trulli , which seem even more pixie-like and weird when viewed en masse like this. Nearby is the town museum, the Museo del Territorio. This is a rather fabulous structure of over ten combined trulli. It contains small displays of agricultural and building equipment, a couple of rooms recreated in period style which give a good idea of how inhabitants used to live, and some spires from the tops of trulli.

Alberobello has a few other small museums, as well as the many trulli which bill themselves as museums or show trulli but are basically just souvenir shops. Since the tourist industry here is still developing, one suspects that there will soon be more.

However when we visited the staff were not terribly knowledgeable, couldn't understand a desire to explore the local countryside on foot, and were able to provide no more information than a photocopied town plan with English notes. Around the main tourist area there are many little bars and snack-shops. There are also several restaurants and pizzerias, some in trulli and at least one with an outside terrace. Down on the main street, Largo Martellotta, are more typical Italian bars and a few small food shops.

On Thursdays there is a great fruit and vegetable market here, where you can buy loads of local products, from watermelons 1 euro to piles of cherries and chicory. It's a good place to stock up if you're planning a picnic. For a good sit-down meal, there are two restaurants close together in the town centre which do serve tourists, but at 'normal' prices and with excellent food.

The Trullo d'Oro is in a trullo building. The cover charge is higher than normal but includes varied snacks and focaccia.

Starters include a vegetarian selection of antipasti which won't leave much room for the local pasta dishes Via Cavallotti 27, signposted from Corso Vittorio Emanuele. The best airports for Alberobello are Bari and Brindisi, both served by budget airlines from the United Kingdom. At Bari station the FSE platforms are beyond the mainline platforms - facing the front of the station, take a flight of steps leading down under the rails, through an entrance on the left.

There is a sign to Ferrovie Sud Est. They have a little ticket office on the platform. You'll probably need to ask to make sure you get on the correct small train - most travellers are regulars and there is little concern for announcements or signs.

The journey takes under two hours and is very scenic: after skirting some hideous modern urban sprawl, the one-track railway line passes through olive groves and orchards, among which you begin to see the first white-painted trulli. Brindisi Airport is close to Lecce, Puglia's other great tourist destination.

Although it will take some planning as there may not be flights every day, if you are planning to visit both Alberobello and Lecce it may make sense to fly into one airport and out of the other.

From Lecce there are little FSE trains heading towards Alberobello; check with station or train staff as you'll probably need to change in Martina Franca.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000