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Sicily Cooking Tours

 
     
     
 

A Paradise for Palate and Soul: Cooking & Italian Language
Tour #PRCL

Sample Itinerary
Tour dates and prices
To Reserve

Region: Tuscany

Setting: A Special In Depth Review: My Personal Six Day Experience

Picture yourself cooking in the big kitchen of a beautifully renovated, 13th century farmhouse on a Tuscan hilltop. You gaze out the window at the terraced hills of olive groves, vineyards and rustic gardens in a vast, peaceful valley. At the kitchen table you chop fresh sage, oregano and parsley, all from the herb garden below the window.

You blend chicken livers, fried veal, white wine, capers and lemon juice into a delicious cream to spread on little pieces of toast for appetizers. In the cross breeze created by the open windows herb, lemon and wine perfumes waft through the whole room.

One June I spent six days living, cooking and eating with Paola de Mari di Altamura and her father, Luigi, in their family home in a hamlet of 25 people, south of Florence. A tranquil paradise far from the world.

Paola and her sister, Simonetta, feisty entrepreneurs, run the cooking school as well as a language school in Florence. "What do you do?", I asked Luigi. With a big smile, he replied, "I help out and I eat." What a wonderful retirement!

Their rambling house accommodates six guests. My attic room thrilled me: a terracotta tiled ceiling supported by thick wood beams, a terracotta floor, and white walls with lots of pictures. There were shelves filled with books and ledges lined with dolls and an old gramophone.

Every morning I awoke to the music of swallows swooping from their nests under the roof and threw open the wooden shutters to admire the stunning panorama. I joined Steve from New York state and Keiko from Tokyo for a breakfast of espresso coffee with milk, tea, cake and fresh bread with jam.

Steve spoke only English. Keiko spoke some Italian and even less English. Luigi spoke only Italian. Luckily Paola and I spoke both languages and interpreted for the others. Friendly, knowledgeable Paola gave all our cooking lessons in fluent English and Italian. If you want to cook and eat Italian style AND improve your Italian in a lovely, peaceful refuge, this is perfect!

Following the very patient Paola's directions, we worked together every morning to create a splendid four course meal: appetizers, a pasta plate, a main plate and a dessert. It was hands-on; we chopped, sliced, blended, kneaded, rolled, stirred, layered, poured...and ate!

Every lunch time we gathered around the big table in the kitchen, with Luigi, our papa, at the head, and sampled wine from a different region of Italy. Luigi, a gracious, humorous, cultivated, down-to-earth gentleman, made us feel like part of a warm family circle.

"How did you start the cooking and language schools?" I asked Luigi over one of our dinners. "Oh, I have a daughter with a thousand ideas," he answered, smiling fondly at Paola.

Steve, a 40ish, sweet, wholesome fellow, treated me like his sister back home, teasing and poking me, snatching spoonfuls of my desserts and taking sips of my coffee. Quiet Keiko, in her late 20's and I in my mid 40's, found that despite our language barrier, we were kindred souls. We both adored good food, always appeared early for meals and loved wine which we kept pouring for each other.

My most memorable cooking experiences? Too numerous to list! One day Alvaro, a retired Tuscan chef, showed us how to make bruschetta appetizers over a wood burning fire in the kitchen hearth. We toasted small pieces of bread over the fire, rubbed garlic on both sides and spread tomatoes with fresh basil, olive oil and salt on top. Simple but delicious.

To make fresh pasta, we plunged our hands into a mountain of flour and egg yolks on a wooden board and rolled it out by hand and machine. Then we mixed freshly grated nutmeg with spinach and ricotta, stuffed the ravioli squares, boiled them and poured the melted butter and fresh sage sauce on top. Delicate and yummy!

Because of the hot weather and Steve's vegetarian diet, we cooked lighter dishes for many main courses. Zucchini stuffed with tuna, onion and breadcrumbs, seasoned with basil, nutmeg and parmesan cheese and topped with tomato sauce. Tuscan panzanella bread salad with fresh basil, raw onion and tomatoes. Eggplant parmesan with layers of eggplant, tomato sauce, and mozzarella and parmesan cheeses.

One day we marinated and simmered small pieces of chicken slowly, in lots of white wine, lemon juice, herbs, salt, pepper and olive oil. Some of the best chicken I had ever tasted! Mmmm!

If you don't have a sweet tooth, you'll develop one! Our desserts were absolutely divine. A lemon and almond cake. A pink tiramisu with huckleberries, blackberries, cherries, blueberries and raspberries. Almond biscuits to dip in vin santo dessert wine. A semifreddo--ladyfinger biscuits soaked in coffee with a marscapone, egg, sugar and coffee mixture poured on top. We could hardly wait the six hours while it set in the fridge. We made cream and vanilla ice creams too.

After lunch you can take a siesta or wander in the garden to gaze in awe at the panorama. You smell fragrant lavender bushes, jasmine flowers from the neighbour's tree and red, yellow and pink roses. At the herb garden you rub the rosemary, basil, oregano, sage, peppermint, and marjoram leaves between your fingers and inhale the fresh aromas. You saunter down the terraces of olive trees, deliberately left rustic, through wild grass and red poppies, tall dandelions, white daisies and other white, purple and yellow wild flowers. You pass cherry, pear and fig trees.

One afternoon Luigi and Paola drove us around their Chianti countryside stopping to stroll in Raddi and Castellina, where we visited a wine cellar, ceramic store and coffee bar. Another day we explored Siena with students studying Italian at our family's language school. Sometimes I didn't feel like leaving the property and soaked up all the tranquillity on a lounge chair in the sunny garden.

Other times we three ambled along the country roads. On one evening jaunt, the warm, quiet darkness became the perfect backdrop for hoards of fireflies fluttering among the trees twinkling like hundreds of small, white Christmas lights. Magical.

For our lighter evening meal, we happily finished our delectable leftovers or watched the sunset as we wined and dined on the patio at an excellent restaurant just a two minute walk away.

On our last morning Keiko and I got up at 6:00 to say goodbye to Steve, who was meeting five Italian women on a sailboat in northern Italy. At 8:30 Luigi and Paola drove Keiko and me to Greve to catch the bus to Florence. I overheard Luigi talking about me to Paola, "She is so likeable because she loves Italy." I thought, "After a week at their place, is it any wonder why?"


Sample Itinerary

Sunday
6:00 pm Arrival in Greve by bus from Florence. Transfer by private car to family's property
8:00 pm Welcome dinner with the family

Monday
8:30 am Breakfast. 9:30 am Hands on cooking class on 4 or 5 different recipes. 12:30 Lunch together of your creations and wine.
2:00 pm Italian language private class.
4:00 Free afternoon for relaxing with a good book in the garden or in front of the fire during wintertime or walking around discovering the area.
7:30 pm Light dinner at home, talking about Italy and Italian culture and lifestyle.

Tuesday
8:30 am Breakfast. 9:30 am Hands on cooking class. 12:30 Lunch together of your plates and wine.
2:00 pm Italian language private class. 4:00 pm Excursion in the Chianti area. 7:30 pm Light dinner at home.

Wednesday
8:30 am Breakfast. 9:30 am Hands on cooking class. 12:30 am Lunch and wine together
2:00 pm Italian language private class. 4:00 Free time. 7:30 pm Light dinner at home

Thursday
8:30 am Breakfast. 9:30 am Hands on cooking class. 12:30 Lunch and wine together.
2:00 pm Italian language private class. 4:00 pm Excursion to Siena for a cultural visit and shopping. 7:30 pm Light dinner at home.

Friday
8:30 am Breakfast. 9:30 am Hands on cooking class. 12:30 Lunch and wine together.
2:00 pm Italian language private class.
4:00 pm Transfer by private car to Greve and bus connection to Florence (arrival in Florence approx. 6:00 pm)

Optional excursions:
Food Market + Wine & Food Tasting - 130 Euro per person, about $190 CAD or $165 US
Walking afternoon with shopping in Siena - 130 Euro per person, about $190 CAD or $165 US
Wine and olive oil tasting tour - 130 Euro per person, about $190 CAD or $165 US
Herbs, Vines and Olives Walking tour - 130 Euro per person, about $190 CAD or $165 US
Outlet tour - visit to Gucci, Prada, D&G outlets. 250 Euro per person, about $370 CAD or $318 US

2007 Dates
 
2007 Prices Per Person

Cooking week package: All year, every week, any days.

No classes Dec 20-27, 2007


1830 Euros, about $2688 CAD, $2341 US

Single supplement: None.

Includes:

  • 5 nights accommodation - room with shared bath
  • breakfast at the B & B farmhouse
  • welcome dinner
  • 5 cooking lessons with bountiful lunch & wine
  • 2 excursions
  • transfer to/from Greve
  • light dinners at home
  • 2 free afternoons
  • 2 hours Italian language instruction for 5 afternoons Monday through Friday.

To Reserve:

Reservation policy: In order to confirm your space the booking form and deposit must be faxed to us 7 days from when you received it. Otherwise we may cancel your space on the cooking tour. We will only re-confirm your space once we receive your booking form and deposit.

Deposit: 30% of the tour price is due at the time of booking.

Balance due: balance due no later than 60 days before the start date. If the balance is not paid 60 days before the course starts, the school reserves the right to cancel the booking.

Cancellations and Refunds: 60 days prior to arrival date deposit is refunded less an administration charge of euros 60. If you cancel between 60 and 30 days deposit is non refundable. Cancellation less than 30 days prior to arrival date results in 100% of the amount is non refundable.

No exceptions for any reason including personal emergencies. Cancellations must be made in writing by the person who signed the booking form and will be effective from the date the school receives the cancellation notice. There is no refund for leaving the program early or arriving late.

Prices may be affected by international exchange rates fluctuations.

Do you have questions? Just e-mail or call "Mama" Margaret Cowan

E-mail: margaret@italycookingschools.com
Phone: 1-800-557-0370 or 604-681-4074 (Pacific Time)

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