Roma—Ciao e Arrivederci!

03-13 November 2019

We took the long route from Spoleto back to Rome and saw more countryside of Umbria and Lazio.

Just when we were getting into the groove, our seven-month adventure is over. How do we say goodbye to our generous relatives and the friends we made from south to north? We are coping by starting to talk about where we will go on our next trip here. More of Sicily. Perhaps Brescia. Some relatives highly recommend Puglia and Sardegna.

In Rome we caught up with cousins, including Giuliano at his 90th birthday party! We also walked around central Rome to reconnect with sites we have seen before but walked by briskly. This time, for example, we really scrutinized Bernini’s Fountain of Four Rivers in the Piazza Navona.

We have also been busy weighing our luggage. Not ourselves! We are strategizing about how to fit everything with only one additional bag. Our flight leaves at 6:00 AM, so we will leave Luciana’s at 3:00 AM by taxi driven by one of her former students.

Returned the Rental

First things first. We returned the rental car to the Fiumicino Airport. A bit of an adventure to find a gas station nearby. Lots of extra mileage and extra time just to fill the tank.

2,175 kilometers in 34 days with this rental car
We took the express train from the airport back to Rome.
Termini
For lunch we went to the newish Il Mercato Centrale along the side of the train station, which Is bustling with customers. Bruna N. urged us to go.
Mercato Centrale is like the mercato in Florence, but a little smaller, easier to navigate, and more upscale. Good food.
Truffle hotdogs! See what we mean by upscale food?

Wanderings

Bonnie’s Six-Mile Tour

We spent a day walking around sites in central Rome. Just after exiting the Cavour metro stop, Bonnie unexpectedly discovered Via Suburra, in the Monti district, which she often reads about in books on Ancient Rome. At first, she was skeptical that it was the same street, but it fit the description perfectly. It is a narrow, slightly twisting street, at a lower level than the surrounding streets, and leading directly to the forum of Augustus. In ancient times it was busy and known for crime. Now it is central to a lovely gentrifying neighborhood.

Forum of Augustus. Emperors built and enlarged existing forums (in honor of themselves) where public business was conducted daily. Later, some popes did this too. Piazza Navona is an example.
Fountain of the turtles
Those Matteis get around!
The Tiber
Palazzo Farnese as redesigned by Michangelo
Campo di’ Fiori at the end of the day . . .
. . . as you can see.
After seven months, Bonnie can easily give directions in Italian about which non-dairy chocolate gelato she wants.
Pasquino, a third-century BC statue where people post anonymous complaints (and wishes).
Piazza Navona
Bernini vs. Borromini
We made it back to Trattoria da Enzo in the southern end of the Trastevere. Gino Primo introduced Robert to this small, genuine Roman place in the early 90s. Back then, you would see mechanics, business people, and a few tourists at lunch. Now, it is mostly American tourists. The good news is that the food is still great and reasonably priced.
If you don’t make reservations Enzo’s, expect a wait.
Fried artichoke. Very Roman.
Zucchini flowers with cheese inside
Rigatoni amatriciana
Punterelle with achovies, olive oil, and lemon

Piazza del Campidoglio

The pope asked Michelangelo to redesign this space. He oriented it toward the Vatican and away from the forum. A statement of who was more powerful.

Museo Capitolini

We can’t remember ever going to this museum, but it is terrific. Don’t know why we missed it before. And the view from the terrace at sunset is fabulous, with huge flocks of swallows circling.

Abbazia di Santa Maria di Farfa

Adriana and Gino Secondo treated us to a visit to this abbey, an hour outside of Rome. The Benedictine abbey was founded in the 5th century and at its height of power between the 8th and 12th centuries. Went through some hard times (invasions) and then a resurgence in the 7th century during a wave of Irish monasticism that spread through Italy. During the 9th century it was one of the most important monasteries in Europe. It was independent of the pope, and under the protection of Charlemagne. But during that time, those pesky Saracens sacked and burned the monastery. Later in the 11th century, it regained power and wealth. Shops and homes built around it sold a variety of wares, often those made by the monks. They still do.

Lots of olive orchards in the area. This one was abandoned, leaving lots of fruit on the trees.
Gino Secondo
Lots of shops surrounding the abbey, but most were closed on the day we were there. The pasta shop was open, but when Adriana tried to buy fresh pasta, she was informed that on Wednesdays, all their fresh pasta goes to the Vatican.
The home of the nuns
One tower remains.
School group ready for their tour. School field trip groups are everywhere in Italy.

Lunch

Part of our treat was lunch served by the nuns. They are in Brigadine order founded in Ireland. Their mission is education.

Having nuns serve Robert pasta must have triggered some deep admiration from his days at Saint Matthew School.
A rare moment of Gino Secondo drinking water.

Guided Tour

Another part of our day was a guided tour of the abbey and church.

Photo rotated 90 degrees to see the carved faces.
An example of Cosmateque paving. This intricate stonework is derived from the Byzantine style and was popular around Rome in medieval times.
During a restoration, they turned this slab of marble over to discover . . .
. . . this.

Cucina Luciana!

Luciana made passatelli for Robert! Robert assisted. It is made with breadcrumbs, grated cheese, zest of lemon, and grated nutmeg. Cooked in a beef broth that Luciana made. Robert’s mom often made this for the family. At home they called the dish “worms.” You can also serve this without broth, with a simple sugo of mushrooms and truffles, as we had in Frontone.

From Oderzo. On the dry side.
From Oderzo. On the sweet side.

Dinner at Bruna and Tuillio’s

Bruna (yes another cousin) and Tuillio invited us to a great dinner at their apartment in northwest Rome. Bruna’s mom was a first cousin of Robert’s dad (Berardi side of the family). We met for the first time in May at the beginning of our trip in Rome and again in Isola Fossara in August when we were in Serra. An added treat was seeing their daughter Flaminia and her two boys, Tito and Eduardo, who zoomed around and ate everything in site.

Bonnie was able to evaluate her progress in Italian, because when she met Bruna in May, she was completely unable to understand Bruna’s quiet but rapid-fire Italian. This time Bonnie understood almost everything Bruna said.

Zio Giuliano’s 90th Birthday Celebration

Zio Giuilano is Robert’s father’s first cousin. (So Robert’s first cousin once removed.) Giuliano’s mother was a sister of Robert’s grandfather. His daughter Micaela and her husband Maurizio held a celebration at their home. Guests included Walter’s son and family, Gabriella and Dinesh from Tuscany, Adriana and Gino Secondo, Luciana, and B+B. Micaela is an art historian specializing in tours of the Vatican collection. Maurizio is an architect, and we admired the new stainless steel and teak bathroom he designed for their apartment. Stunning.

Robert joked with Maurizio saying that the only problem with the party was that there was not enough wine! We started with champagne, went on to a white wine from Pesaro, followed by an Amarone (very good!), and a moscato dessert wine that went well with the birthday cake. Also lots to eat.

We asked Giuliano how he got involved in the film industry and he said his brother Walter found him a job. His first experience was on the production side of the famous film Umberto D. He went on to work with De Sica, Fellini, Rossellini, and others. Giuliano became an assistant director on many films and then transitioned to distribution for a large theater chain. He remembers the night that he, his brother, a very young Sophia Loren, and some others were eating dinner after work, when Carlo Ponti walked over to the table to say hello. Giuliano saw Carlo lock eyes on Sophia and knew this was a momentous event.

Robert commented on some of the artwork in the room and learned that the pieces were character sketches from some of the films that Zio Giuliano was involved with, showing Anna Magnani, Juliette Messina, and others. This led to Zio Giuliano showing us this newspaper article written in 2017 about his career in the film world.
Translation of caption: ”La Dolce Vita. Above starting on the left, Giuliano Benelli with Federico Fellini and Anita Ekberg. Above with the producer Angelo Rizzoli. To the left Benelli today and in the past during a promotion with a minister of the time. To the right, a toast with the beautiful Anita Ekberg.”
Robert asked Zio Giuliano if he had copies of the Sophia Loren fumetti (graphic romance novels) that his brother Walter directed. Giuliano showed us this book that contains many of the editions, including one below that includes Sophia, Zio Giuliano, and Zio Alfredo (father of Luciana and Adriana). Pretty cool!

Zia Vula

Yes. Another cousin. Vula married Giulio Bartolini. His mother Zaira was one of Robert’s father’s aunts (a sister of Nonno Delfo). She met Giulio in Greece during WWII. She lives in Rome’s Olympic Village constructed in 1960. At the age of 94 and a bit hard of hearing, she lives alone. For the summer months, she joins her son Paolo and his wife Franca at their home on a Greek island close to Athens. When there, she loves to sit on her balcony to look at the beach and the people strolling by.

We had a great conversation with her about her life. She took many classes at the university in Rome with a focus on history and art. She is an optimist at heart and only spoke about the positive things in life. A good role model to say the least. It was a delightful visit.

Olympic Village
1962 – Olympic swimming venue with Giulio and Vula’s three sons.
1962 – L-R: Stefano, Paolo, Zio Alfredo, Vula, Adriana, Giulio, Giorgio, Abramo, and Emma

Lunch with Gino Primo e Giulio Secondo!

One last get together with Gino Primo.

Via Nomentana
(L-R) B+, Giulio Secondo, Marta, Gino Primo, B, and Luciana
Giulio and Marta

Excellence—Roman Food Exhibition

Held in Renzo Piano’s new exhibition hall La Nuvola (The Cloud). We were guests of Sandro and Claudio whom we met when we took their olive oil workshop in Todi. They were exhibiting there for the first time. Located in EUR (Esposizione Universale Roma) built by Mussolini for a world exposition, La Nuvola stands in stark contrast to the facist architecture of the late 1930s.

The exhibition held a variety offerings, including olive oil, wine, gelato, health foods, cured meats, and, of course, chocolate.

Renzo Piano’s La Nuvola
Our hosts—Claudia and Alessandro with their olive oils
Bonnie caught in the act of sampling persimmon gelato!
Bonnie sampling raw chocolate (delicious) and comparing notes on the selection at Rainbow Grocery in San Francisco.

Bacon, Freud,
The School of London

Courtyard rain cover and funnel
Very cool way of keeping the courtyard dry, but at the same time giving us an understanding of how much water is falling.

Farewell Dinner

Next Stop—San Francisco!

Rome and More Cousins in Tuscany

Yes. Rome again. Mostly errands, but also a pleasant Sunday lunch with the Roman cousins. Then off to Tuscany to reunite with one of Robert’s long-lost second cousins.

Rome

It was a simple drive from Naples to Rome. Although getting out of Naples in morning rush hour traffic was terrifying for Bonnie, who was only half awake. Cars and scooters coming from all directions at all times on twisting streets at high volume. All with scrapes and dents. Pedestrians stepping into traffic unexpectedly. But Robert, the driver, was undeterred.

Wanderings

We did a quick errand in Rome near the upper end of the Spanish Steps. (Bonnie needed new sneakers.) We were surprised to see many less tourists than a few months ago. As we walked to and from our bus stop, in some areas of central Rome we hardly saw any people at all. A pleasant change from Naples and from the busy summer months.

Since our last time in Rome, the city has banned people from sitting on the Spanish Steps. The stairs seem empty.

Marta’s New Job!

Cousin Marta, a college student, picked up another job near the store where she works part-time. The restaurant serves piadine (Another name for crescia. Or is crescia another name for piadine?). Very nice casual place. Very good food for a light dinner. And it is near our favorite gelateria Gori. So, dessert after dinner is a must.

Dinner at Adriana and Gino Secondo’s

Adriana and Gino Secondo invited us for dinner at their home in Monterotondo—about 30 minutes outside of Rome. Great food (as always). And Gino did his part too (serving that is).

Lasagna
Bob Colegrove—I am sure Adriana will fix you lasagna when you make it to Rome.
Seven layers—no mozzarella—bechamel.
Coniglio con porchetta.
Extra course—trippa!
Sardegnian sweets

Porta di Roma on a Sunday evening

Porta di Roma is a LARGE shopping mall about 15 minutes from Luciana’s home. We’ve been there before. But this time when we got there about 6:00 PM on a Sunday night it was packed.

The red lights indicate the parking stall is occupied.

Traded in the Leased Car

Our car lease was expiring, and turning in the car was very easy. Because we had full insurance coverage, they were not concerned about the “few” dents and scrapes Robert picked up in our journeys. Then we went to Hertz for a rental car. Robert is not happy. The car is totally banged up and the interior is filthy. More to follow with Hertz when Robert returns home.

7,580 miles in 5.5 months on the leased car

Another Cousin!

Yes. One more second cousin. Gabriella. Her mother Ebe was first cousin to Robert’s dad Abramo. (Remember that his dad had six aunts on the Sabbatini side of the family.) Robert needs to do a family tree!

Gabriella and her husband Dinesh live in San Casciano dei Bagni, Province of Siena. The town has been known since ancient times for its thermal baths—public and private.

Gabriella practiced psychiatry for many years in Britain’s public health system, dealing with extreme mental illness. She had some great stories to tell. Her husband, Dinesh Sethi, also a doctor, recently retired at the mandatory age of 62 from the World Health Organization where he specialized in injuries including those from war and land mines. Like all good professionals, he is now consulting for a few months each year.

After living part time in San Casciano for a few years, they bought a property outside of town and renovated a farm house from the 1700s. An exquisite job especially when we learned that the ground floor was the quarters for cattle and pigs. The separate guest house where we stayed was used for the sheep. The garden was nonexistent except for the cypress trees, a few olives, and some oaks. You drive up to the home on a very long gravel road. The house is set on a hill overlooking a big sweep of Tuscany. Quite a view. It is always changing with the light and cloud-fog cover.

Robert had not seen Gabriella since 1974 when she visited London near where Robert was working. It was great for him to reconnect and to meet her nephew Matteo. Matteo‘s mom Patrizia (Gabriella’s older sister) is an archaeologist and has done extensive work in Laos, Vietnam, and Myanmar. She specializes in areas that have been badly impacted by war.

We made it a point to invite ourselves to come again the next time we make it to Italy! We think that Gabriella and Dinesh agreed.

Patrizia, Gabriella, Ebe (L-R)—1962
Note: Gabriella’s hair style has not changed!
Garden harvest
The kitchen. Once a place for cattle. The pigs were housed beyond the arch.
Matteo Cucarzi (chef and son of Patrizia Zolese)
Guest house (old sheep barn)

Pienza

Gabriella and Dinesh took us on a drive to see a few sites in the UNESCO-recognized countryside. Despite the rain, we made it to Pienza and explored a medieval church.

Pienza—Sante Messe

Pienza—Wanderings

Fall crocus

Arezzo

On our way to Florence, we stopped off in Arezzo for lunch and a walk. Worth a half-day excursion. Much of the city near the train station suffered heavy bombing in WWII. But the city is now lively, attractive, affluent, and known for antiques.

The Berardi family gets around!

Arezzo—Basilica di San Francesco

Had a nice lunch in a local trattoria.

Next stop—Firenze!

Sketches—Part 2

21-30 Maggio 2019

Tra Consenza e Sorrento-21 Maggio 2019-iPad
Limoncello Shop – Sorrento-22 Maggio 2019 – iPad
Sorrento-22 Maggio 2019 – iPad
Sorrento-22 Maggio 2019 – iPad
Tattoo Wedding-Sorrento-23 Maggio 2019 – iPad
Sorrento-23 Maggio 2019 – iPad
Sorrento-23 Maggio 2019
Trastevere, Roma-26Maggio2019-iPad
Leonardo-Testaccio, Roma-25Maggio2019-iPad
Pantheon, Roma-26 Maggio 2019-iPad
Piazza Trilussa, Roma-26 Maggio 2019-iPad
Piazza del Popolo, Roma – 29 Maggio 2109-iPad
Spanish Steps – Roma – 29 Maggio 2019 – iPad

Rome: Sleep, Phones, and Gelato

16-19 November 2019

Ready for takeoff
Ready to board flight from Amsterdam to Rome

After the long, but reasonably comfortable flight on KLM (viewing many episodes of Sabrina the Teenage Witch downloaded from Netflix and hourly exercises to keep Bonnie’s broken elbow from swelling up), and a five-hour layover at the bustling Schiphol airport of Amsterdam, finally Roma. Cousin Adriana and Gino collected us at Fumicino, piloted through an hour of heavy rush hour traffic, and deposited us at the apartment of cousin Luciana and daughter, university-student Marta in the Montesacro neighborhood for Italian language immersion and major sleeps. Robert 12 hours. Bonnie, as always, the sleep queen, 21 hours.   

Afternoon walk

The next day Marta, Luciana, and Robert set off to get SIM phone chips. For Bonnie a TIM chip and Robert a Vodafone chip to hedge our bets on reception throughout Italy. Vodaphone has a great offer of unlimited phone, text messaging in Europe, and 40 gigs of data usage but would not accept an American credit card! So off to get a Postale debit card. But this required a Codice Fiscale from the government office. Then back to the post office. Finally back to Vodaphone to discover we got the wrong debit card. At this point, Marta used her card to fund Robert’s phone.

Ponte Nomentana, Roman bridge over the Aniene River in the Montesacro neighborhood
Luciana’s daily visit for the newspaper

Later during an afternoon walk in the leafy green Roman neighborhood, Marta steered us to the top-rated gelateria in the city—Gori. Black sesame for Marta, Triniterio soy chocolate for Bonnie, vanilla with mixed fruit for Robert.

Street lined with cercis (redbud) trees in bloom
Dinner with Luciana and Marta

Friday we picked up a Peugeot wagon. The rest of the afternoon was taken up with the confusion of registering our presence in Italy with the local police. A confusion of paperwork at the police station. For dinner, a true Montesacro pinsa. Less puffy than the ones sold at a restaurant near Sixth Street in San Francisco. Then a stop at the neighborhood cannabis shop—basically a large closet set up as an automat without a live person in sight. Only things to smoke. Quite pricey.

Successful drive from the airport
No need for a caption
Lots for sale for Easter

Style notes for women of all ages in this neighborhood: jeans, white sneakers, small down coat or light-weight black leather jacket. Gold accessories. Large bag. Add cigarette, dark glasses, and phone. Maybe a scarf.

Vineria 19 dal 1949
Pinsa con fiore di zucchini e alice

Tomorrow we drive to Serra Sant’Abbondio. Its newest citizen is Robert.