See You in the Piazza is a delightful memoir by beloved author Frances Mayes, focusing on her travels throughout remote regions of Italy with her husband Ed, and sometimes with their 15-year old grandson, sometimes with friends. Our first trip to Italy was a month-long journey through Italy in a little red Fiat, a well-worn road atlas, and many guidebooks. This book brought back those days with their many travel tips regarding places to stay, favorite restaurants, regional wines and recipes throughout this lovely narrative speaking to these beautiful areas of Italy not frequented by tourists.
"As we drive into the Langhe, the rollicking knolls. . . . shine bright with brilliant green vineyards, every twig and leaf well tended. On higher hilltops, castle towns silhouette against the horizon. Tiny villages nestle in the dips of valleys, surrounded by regimented rows of nebbiolo grapes that will soon become the legendary Barolo or Barbaresco wines. We're moving through mile after mile of landscape painting."
"Called Chysopolis ('Golden City') in Byzantine times, Parma is now a snow-globe town--shake it and it dazzles--a seventeenth-century steel engraving of a city on a river, a place of music and opera, a solid market town, a stop on the antique via Emilia that ran from Rimini to Piacenza. And a major food destination because of--what else:--Parmigiano-Reggiano, plus the range of prosciuttos and other salume, and the reputation for a bountiful and varied table."
"A stellar lineup, as we find out during an easy, contemplative chance to experience each wine. . . . and, oh my, Saia, whose name is from the canal system for collecting water used by the Arabs centuries ago. Dark, bursting fruit, but with a ray of Sicilian sun in each bottle. That must be, as one swallow makes you think good thoughts."