Giorno 03 · Venerdì 26 Giugno
The Crossing East
Fri 26 Jun · MMXXVI
“Sixty-five minutes east, and the plain of Lombardy gives way to the food valley of Italy.”
The first Frecciarossa of the trip slides out of Milano Centrale at half past eight. By ten, the porticoes; by half twelve, the ragù.
L'Orario · Hour by Hour
07:30
A taxi through the waking city to the great fascist-era vault of Milano Centrale.
Apri in Maps ↗08:30
Business cabin, 300 kilometers per hour across the Po valley. Arrival 09:35 — sixty-five minutes, door to door.
09:50
A twelfth-century building in the cathedral's shadow, two steps off Piazza Maggiore.
Apri in Maps ↗10:30
The medieval market grid in full voice: Tamburini's mortadella counters, Paolo Atti's bread, the fish-and-fruit theater of the Mercato di Mezzo.
Apri in Maps ↗12:30
Handmade tagliatelle al ragù — the dish the rest of the world keeps misnaming. Watch the sfogline rolling pasta in the window.
Apri in Maps ↗14:00
Europe's oldest university (1088), the anatomical theater's carved spectators, then the vertigo of the two leaning towers — Asinelli and her drunken sister Garisenda — and out into Piazza Maggiore.
Apri in Maps ↗18:00
A glass of Pignoletto — or dry Lambrusco, properly chilled — on the great raised slab of the piazza, the whole city strolling past.
Apri in Maps ↗20:00
Tortellini in capon broth under walls papered with photographs of opera singers. Never cream. Never.
Apri in Maps ↗The Keystone · La Grassa, La Dotta, La Rossa
Bologna answers to three epithets. La Grassa, the fat one, for a cuisine built on egg pasta, pork, and parmesan. La Dotta, the learned one, for the university that has been arguing since 1088 — older than the Magna Carta, older than the Notre-Dame. La Rossa, the red one, for forty kilometers of terracotta porticoes — and for its politics.
The two towers are the keystone image: Asinelli, 97 meters of twelfth-century ambition, and beside it Garisenda, abandoned mid-build when the ground gave way, leaning harder than Pisa. Dante saw it and put the lean into the Inferno.
Walk the porticoes slowly. They were built so the city could think, trade, and argue out of the rain — a cloister the size of a whole town.
La Tavola · The Table
Sfoglia Rina
Via Castiglione 5/b
Handmade Tagliatelle al Ragù — and do not say the other name for it.
Apri in Maps ↗Trattoria Anna Maria
Via delle Belle Arti 17/A
Handmade Tortellini in Brodo — capon broth, rolled by the sfogline.
Apri in Maps ↗L'Album · Giorno 03
Una Nota Da Portare Dentro
A city that eats well, argues well, and shelters every walker under its arches — hospitality as architecture.