Does Your Travel Budget Have Spare Dollars?
November 3rd, 2011
If it has, join us in Bologna, Italy for some serious eating
Bologna is the capital city of Emilia-Romagna, in the Po Valley of Northern Italy. It is the seventh largest city in terms of population and it is the heart of a metropolitan area of about 1,000,000 inhabitants. It is home to the world’s oldest university, fifth-largest church and 24 miles of elegant porticos. The problem is that you can miss them because of the temptation to spend all your time eating. Bologna is the culinary capital of a country that celebrates food.
The sights
In a nation of Premier League city breaks, Bologna is still on the bench, over-shadowed by the crowd-pleasers Florence, Venice and Rome. But it deserves a place on the pitch, and not just for the food. Piazza Maggiore and the adjoining Piazza Nettuno are the centre of the action. But there aren’t postcard stands or tour groups to be seen. Instead, businessmen bustle past and young Bolognese flirt around Neptune’s fountain. There is a great gelateria right there. Opposite the medieval palace on one side is the vast San Petronio Basilica, which you will admire between licks of ice cream.
The church
Work on the world’s fifth-largest church started in 1390, and it was designed to be grander than Saint Peter’s in Rome. But apparently when the Vatican got wind of this, funds were switched elsewhere. Its facade is still incomplete, but the lofty interior is worth seeing. The porticos are another feat of local craftsmanship. There is an uphill trek along a 2 mile long portico to the Sanctuary of Madonna di San Luca. At the end of the return journey you will find the Trattoria Meloncello, which serves the best meatballs in town. There’s no menu: a waiter lists the options, including the city’s most famous export. Don’t order spaghetti Bolognese here. It is a la ragu and served strictly with tagliatelle, a local pasta considered the perfect size to soak up the sauce.
Evening
By evening, Bologna bubbles. Walk along the shop-lined Via Independenzia, which leads to the main square. Here you will observe the passeggiata, the Italian evening stroll, to see, be seen and enjoy an aperitif or two along the way.
Nicknames
The city has three nicknames: la dotta (the learned), la grassa (the fat one) and la rossa (the red one). The learned are everywhere, the city’s students, a powerful force here since the university was established in 1088. The red refers to Bologna’s terracotta roofs and pinky-orange walls, but it also describes Bologna’s politics.
A rich city
The city of Bologna was selected to participate in the Universal Exposition of Shanghai 2010 together with 45 other cities from around the world. Bologna is also one of the richest cities in Italy, often ranking as one of the top cities in terms of quality of life in the country: it was ranked 5th in 2006, and 12th in 2007, out of 103 Italian cities. Bologna is a lively and cosmopolitan Italian college city, and it has spectacular history, art, cuisine, music and culture.
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