Yesterday I celebrated, along with my fellow students, passing exams and moving on to the next level of italian. We've all had a pretty hectic week of revision, experienced some jitters, and had lots of practice conversation and review of those pesky past tenses, passato prossimo and imperfetto.
By now, our group is able to converse in jerky sentences about most day-to-day things in italian. Often we mess up the tenses or use the wrong pronouns, but we're all progressing in the language. And after a couple of glasses of wine after school, we all seem to understand each other :-)
Last night, by way of celebration, we started off with drinks at the Cul-de-Sac, a tiny wine bar with a great selection of bottles. Cul-de-Sac is in the Piazza Pasquino, the square abutting the Piazza Navona and the piazza is home to Pasquino, one of Rome's talking statues.
Pasquino dates back to the 3rd century BC, and was unearthed in the Parione district of Rome in the 1500's. He's been the mouthpiece for Roman residents for over 500 years, mostly being covered with anti-government (and at one time, anti-papacy) satirical poems. Walk past on most days and the statue will be pasted with anti-establishment slogans and messages. From the outside tables at Cul-de-Sac, you can face Pasquino and raise a glass to him.
After dinner in the truly lovely Via della Pace, more wine, and a mixture of italian, english, french and flemish conversation we headed off home in different directions. My walk took me through the Campo de' Fiori, over the Ponte Sisto and on to the Via delle Cinque. It's been warmer and drier this week, and crowds of people were out enjoying the clear night. At 11.30, some groups of revellers were only just sitting down to dinner, and my local bar, the Ombre Rosse, was hotting up.
I had all good intentions of heading over to the Monti district today. It is a characterful, up-and-coming part of Rome and I've heard so many people praise its restaurants, tiny winding streets and artisan workshops. Monti is located slightly uphill away from the Colosseum and is described as a much less touristed, more "local" part of the city.
I took a detour through the Pigneto district and on to the Trevi Fountain, specifically looking for the Ace of Cups, incorporated into the Trevi fountain during construction. A local curiosity, I learned about it through one of my italian tutors back at home. At the time I made a mental note to look for the enormous stone cup, created by the fountain's architect Nicola Salvi. The story goes that as work on the fountain progressed, a local barber who had a shop in the piazza was very loud in his criticism. Salvi put the big travertine cup in front of Barbershop to block the barber's view (and his criticism, presumably).
Up behind the Trevi, and approaching the Quirinal Hill, I headed back down past the recently re-opened excavations of Trajan's Market.
Around 2pm I was getting hungry and the rain started to fall. Having come out without an umbrella I was getting drenched, and eventually ducked into a doorway near Trajan's column. That doorway opened into the Enoteca Provincia Romana.
So, the upshot is, I still haven't visited Monti. But I spent a fantastic couple of hours looking over the excavations of Trajan's Market from my table inside the enoteca while the rain fell. The Provincia Romana showcases products from the Lazio district (of which Rome is part) - from Affile to Zaporolo, my menu informed me - and a very good lunch, with wine, is 15 euros.
Tonerelli filled with spinach and ricotta, sauced with slow braised pork and sage is the best pasta I've ever eaten. With a glass of light red wine, and espresso and biscotti to follow, I'm in food heaven.
Well done Liz ; great to hear you passed the exam & move onward and upward. Fair enough to treat yourself to a celebratory lunch and vino !
ReplyDeleteHi Chris,
ReplyDeleteI always seem to find time for food and wine! Lovely to hear from you and see you soon.
:-)
Liz x