Adventure

Travel Tips: Outdoor Activities

If you Google Umbria, the first result will be a Wikipedia article that says “Umbria is a region of historic and modern central Italy.” And while the article covers basic facts about the region, the best way to learn about the area is to talk to people who live, eat, and explore in Umbria. Every Tuesday, we’ll be sharing expert travel advice from native (or nearly-native) Umbrians so that you can live vicariously through their words, or take their tips to heart and travel to Italy yourself.

As spring rolls in with summer close on it’s heels, people are beginning to venture outdoors. And while you might be familiar with activities in your own backyard, trying to find something to do in a foreign country might be a bit daunting. Flipping through brochures or scouring the internet for travel guides is one solution, but if you ask a local, you’re more likely to experience the area like the locals do.

Marco Palermi, travel expert and your guide at our vacation house rental in Umbria, joined us in our Georgetown location last month for our Travel Tuesday cocktail event and shared his secrets to getting the most out of your Umbrian trip. Here’s what he had to say about outdoor activities:

There are a lot of different activities that people can do in the area. Hiking is very popular for guests. The trails through Mount Subasio are well marked, and there are many trails that follow the Topino river from the house. Those trails are very good because they are flat, which makes them easy for leisurely walking. This is great for families with young kids. The trails are also the best way to go bird watching–we see a lot of Airone (a kind of stork) walking in the water near the main bridge.

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Basilica di Santa Maria degli Angeli in Assisi

People can bike on the trails as well, and if it’s something you’re interested in during your visit, we can suggest routes that will last anywhere from 40 minutes to an hour and a half. For example, a favorite bike trip is from Cannara to the lower part of Spello, where a road takes you towards Santa Maria degli Angeli, and then back to the house. It’s also possible to take bikes on the train to reach some of the most popular and beautiful destinations for outdoor exploring, like Lake Trasimeno and the Spoleto or Trevi areas.

For those interested in running, you can use the same trails as for hiking and biking. During the winter, typically a Sunday in mid-December, there is a race called Invernalissima of Assisi that anyone can sign up for. Pros can run the 21 km course, and for those less used to running there is a 5km run. There is also a run from Perugia and Assisi every two or three years, so if that’s something that interests you, let us know and we can find out when it is happening. Finally there is the “Marcia Della Pace” every year between September and October, which is a peace march that anyone can join without pre-registering. It’s a great way to meet lots of people while walking from Perugia to Assisi.

Explore the outdoors in Umbria Read more

If you Google Umbria, the first result will be a Wikipedia article that says “Umbria is a region of historic and modern ...

Deborah’s Italian Adventure

This week, we hear from Deborah, who has been combing every nook and corner of Italy for fabulous new products to stock the Via Umbria shelves.

For the past 12 days, I’ve been traveling the roads of Italy on a 19-day food buying tour. I’ve seen more of Italy then I ever expected to, and we’ve already traveled from the far northern edges to the very tip of the heel in Puglia. In a few days, we head to Sicily.

My companions on this journey have been quite interesting, and I’ve travelled with friends old and new. Scott, our butcher, joined me for the Northern leg of the journey, and I think he’s tasted more chocolate that he’s eaten in his entire life. Rissa, who has been instrumental in establishing our food program, is here with me in the South. 

This hillside view in Montepulciano, Tuscany is enough to make anybody jealous.
This hillside view in Montepulciano, Tuscany is enough to make anybody jealous.

I’ve also travelled with the Chef and owner of a restaurant in Traverse City, a restaurant owner in Nashville and his videographer, a Lithuanian with several different food-related businesses in Vilnius, and a woman from Northern Michigan who is earning her sommelier certification and working at a wine shop. Conversations in the van and around the table have covered everything from hiring to “what do you suppose is in this dish?” to “have you tried this wine?” The opportunity to spend time with everyone has been invaluable, and we’ve had a great time getting to know each other. I hope we will stay in touch.

Sampling delicious spreads by Villa Reale.
Sampling delicious spreads by Villa Reale.

From the start, Suzy and Bill have always emphasized the importance of the product. What’s in it, who made it, and ultimately, the quality. As a result, Via Umbria has shelves filled with amazing products made by people they’ve met personally, in facilities they have visited. That’s what I am doing on trip, and I’ve found it so humbling. For every producer we meet, this is very serious business. Careful thought and extreme care go into every detail of each visit and tasting. We have been feted in very small communities where restaurants and producers work together to find both creative and traditional ways of pairing their products with local, seasonal foods and wines.

Rissa gets a glimpse inside the facility at Gluti Niente, an organic, gluten-free pasta producer.
Rissa suits up for a facility tour at Gluti Niente, a gluten-free pasta producer in Salerno.

Almost every company we’ve seen is family-run, from the five generations of nougat and chocolate experts at Barbero to the brother-and sister enterprise Gluti Niente, a high-quality gluten-free pasta business entering its second year. And although it isn’t family-owned, Latteria di Cameri, which makes amazing gorgonzola dolce, is controlled by a consortium of dairy farmers who collectively set the standards for the cheese production. The stories of all of these producers are an integral part of their products, and it’s amazing to see the attention they devote to every step of the process, from the initial idea to the final packaging.

I can’t wait to share photos of the rest of my trip with you! Hopefully when you see them, you’ll feel a bit of what I do every time I step out of the van.

Ciao for now!

Deborah

Discovering the finest foods of Italy Read more

This week, we hear from Deborah, who has been combing every nook and corner of Italy for fabulous new products to stock the ...

Dishing With Chef Jennifer McIlvaine

Acclaimed chef Jennifer McIlvaine has lead a whirlwind of dinners and cooking classes this week at Via Umbria as part of our Terre Margaritelli Takeover. Today, we sat down to chat about camp grills, eno-gastronomic tours, and her transcontinental culinary journey.

How did you get your start as a chef?

Like most people, I started out working in French-based restaurants. Eventually, I worked at an Italian restaurant in Seattle, and then opened a street food business called Bruschettina. This was way before all of the food trucks. I was one of the first people doing street food in Seattle.

What made you decide to do that?

People would go to these hip, chic farmer’s markets all over Seattle to buy organic produce, but there was nothing to eat at the markets except hotdogs and crepes. So I had this idea to cook at farmer’s markets. I would get vegetables from the farmers, bread from the organic bread guys, and then I’d make toppings. I had camp grills, so I would toast the bread and then list the toppings on a little chalkboard saying where I got all the ingredients. It was huge, actually.

Jennifer working the camp grills.
Jennifer working the camp grills.

How did you get from Seattle to Italy?

While I was doing Bruschettina, I won an internship through the women’s chef association to work on an agriturismo in Tuscany. While I was there I would cook private dinners, which is how I met my husband, Federico. Like any good Umbrian, he was like, “No, you can’t be in Tuscany! Come to Umbria!” So on the weekend I would visit him and meet various producers. Then he worked a lot in Seattle after I went back, and eventually we moved to Umbria.

This way for Umbrian agriturismo !
This way to an Umbrian agriturismo !

And that’s when you started working at Il Bacco Felice in Foglino.

Right. I worked for a very well-known chef Salvatore Denaro. It was a crazy learning experience. I had to jump into the Italian way of cooking, which is completely different. Half the time, Salvatore would lay out ingredients and I just had to magically know what to do with them. And I didn’t know! I had no idea. And I didn’t speak the language. But that’s also where I learned how to work a fire grill. We don’t have those in the States unless you’re camping! It was great. After working there on and off for about a year, I opened up my own restaurant, Trattoria Basiliko.

What was that like?

My partner was a woman who had a restaurant around the corner in Foglino. I was in the kitchen and she was in the front of the house. We ran that for about two years. but we both got pregnant at about the same time, so that was the end of that.

How did you get into leading eno-gastronomic tours?

It started very organically. About a year after my daughter was born, somebody was visiting and asked me to to take them to a farm, because when I had my restaurant I was one of the few people who actually went to the farms to buy the meat and produce. Then somebody else asked me to do a cooking class. It started slowly, through word of mouth, and just kind of took off. When people rent villas, especially Bill and Suzy’s house, I cook for them and teach cooking classes. I also do food and wine tours of the area. Lots of cycling, hiking, horseback riding. It’s active stuff, but there’s always food and wine involved. So maybe after cycling, there’s a picnic lunch in the middle of the valley, or after horseback riding we have lunch at Federico’s winery.

The perfect spot for a late lunch.
The perfect spot for a late lunch.

How do you like to cook at home?

We live in the center of an old medieval town, so we have a fireplace in the middle of our kitchen. In the winter, it’s going all the time. I do a lot of cooking on the fireplace … meat, fish … I’ve done pasta over the fire. It’s not easy, but it’s great if you have time.

Learn the tricks of the trade from Jennifer before she leaves town at our Hands On Pizza Party this Sunday! And if you’d like to meet her in Umbria, you’re always welcome to stay at the Via Umbria villa.

 

 

Jennifer's culinary journey Read more

Acclaimed chef Jennifer McIlvaine has lead a whirlwind of dinners and cooking classes this week at Via Umbria as part of our Terre Margaritelli ...

Food and Wine Tour

For those of you fully indoctrinated into the Via Umbria lifestyle, you are well aware of our friendship with Chef and Restauranteur Simone Proietti-Pesci. At his newly re-opened restaurant in Bevagna, he serves up dishes all by himself in his tiny kitchen. Everything he creates is an extension of himself and his region; he crafts meals with care, love, and intent, with a dash of character on top to finish.

Local Mushrooms
Local Mushrooms

On the Food and Wine Tour, our new stateside chef, Vickie Reh, worked side by side with Simone in his kitchen, preparing a meal for everyone on the tour. A few bottle of fabulous local wine were procured, corks popped, and gentle conversation began before the first plate arrived. And then another. And then another. And then another.

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With the ingredients bought and collected that day, these two chefs created an Umbrian meal to remember. And one that we will hopefully be able to recreate stateside when we open.

Simone's business partner, Ombretta, pours wine for the first dishes
Simone’s business partner, Ombretta, pours wine for the first dishes

Our guests were able to discover the thrill of a single – channel kitchen, savor the dishes served with much love, and share the effervescence and friendship that comes naturally to Simone. While the food Simone produces is always stellar, the mood his restaurant and manner put you in are ever more important. You are not just a guest, you are a new friend.

Simone

Couscous as a first plate
Couscous as a first plate

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Ombretta gets a hug
Ombretta gets a hug
Arugula, Almond, and Pomegranate salad
Arugula, Almond, and Pomegranate salad

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Vickie prepares the second course
Vickie prepares the second course

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Local Meat
Local Meat

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Handmade tortellini
Handmade tortellini
The pasta is a hit
The pasta is a hit

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A Simone Classic - deconstructed lasagna
A Simone Classic – deconstructed lasagna
Grilling the mushrooms
Grilling the mushrooms

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Simone's partner and dishwasher observe
Simone’s partner, Desiderio, and the dishwasher observe the calculated madness

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The finale - fall apple torte
The finale – a fall apple torte

Simone

Being at Simone’s, it is easy to feel at home…that is if your home had a private Italian chef (and you can hire him here in the USA, in January!). A relaxed atmosphere, perfect wine, and haute cuisine that makes you feel comfortable made for a night to remember.

Simone will be returning to the United States in January for his annual dinners – in your home and at Via Umbria in Georgetown. Email suzy@viaumbria.com for advance registration, interest, and questions. We can’t wait to share the dishes and personality of our dear friend with you.

 

Ci Vediamo!

–Via Umbria

 

Cooking and Eating with Simone Read more

For those of you fully indoctrinated into the Via Umbria lifestyle, you are well aware of our friendship with Chef and Restauranteur ...

Food and Wine Tour

Taking some time out of their busy harvest day, the crew at the Cipolloni mill in Foligno welcomed the guests of our Food and Wine Tour to watch the fresh pressing of this years EVOO.

 

After a tour of the press, we were treated to some snacks over a wood burning grill, focused on the olive oil. As our Chef and Somm, Vickie Reh, says:

The dish could not have been simpler–charred potatoes and onions, salt and pepper, and that incredible oil. I would like to say the surroundings didn’t hurt, it was fall in Umbria after all, but the simplicity and perfection of that dish were flawless—easily one of the best dishes I have ever had and I feel like I would have loved it just as much no matter where I was. It will be nigh on impossible to recreate. After all, I don’t have Colfiorito potatoes or onions from Cannara, let alone new oil pressed only minutes before, but I will try. The lesson was clear and it is one I preach on a daily basis. Buy the best ingredients possible and get out of their way. Deliciousness will follow.

 

We hope you enjoy the photos from this eye-opening day! If you want some of this magical oil for yourself, we carry it over at our online store.

Arriving at the Mill
Arriving at the mill
The just-harvested olives
The just-harvested olives

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Bill and Suzy with the owners of the mill
Bill and Suzy with the owners of the mill

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Inside of the mill

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Peering into the olive press
Peering into the olive press

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the press _DSC0075

Oil right out of the press
Oil right out of the press

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Hot off the grill - we await hungrily
Hot off the grill – we await hungrily
Fresh grilled onions and potatoes with olive oil
Fresh grilled onions and potatoes with olive oil
Cannara onions
Cannara onions
The final product
The final product

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Ci Vediamo!

–Via Umbria

 

 

 

 

Cipolloni Olive Oil Mill Read more

Taking some time out of their busy harvest day, the crew at the Cipolloni mill in Foligno welcomed the guests of our Food and ...

Food and Wine Tour

For those of you who know Via Umbria, you know we are closely tied with the Geribi Studio in Deruta.

The hand-painted designs are the brainchild of Gerardo Ribigini, who inherited the studio from his father, but the workmanship reflects the talents of his wife, Assunta, and their children, Frederico and Claudia. Over three generations, they have sustained a family business that embodies the quality and integrity of true Italian artistry. Gerardo’s unique vision imbues the historic designs of the Renaissance with fresh colors and modern motifs.

On our tour, we were lucky enough to stop by the studio for lunch with the Geribi family. Eating lunch surrounded by all of their pieces was a treat indeed!

 

Gerardo and Suzy
Gerardo and Suzy

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In partnership with Geribi, Via Umbria is pleased to make the craftsmanship and striking palette of Deruta accessible to American customers. They are a beautiful expression of the rich history that thrives in the bountiful region of Umbria.

 

Ci Vediamo!

–Via Umbria

Lunch at the Geribi Studio Read more

For those of you who know Via Umbria, you know we are closely tied with the Geribi Studio in Deruta. The hand-painted designs ...

Food and Wine Tour

After a thorough tour around the Il Molino grove, and speaking with Annalisa Torzilli on everything that goes into the final product, we were able to sit down as a group and enjoy the fruits of the labor.

There is something magical about walking through the storied trees that produce olive oil that goes into almost every dish. To be able to share new flavors with new friends, and eat olive oil in the very place it was just pressed, is part of what makes Umbria so special. Here are our photos from lunch at the Il Molino farm.

 

Press Pressed Oil
Fresh Pressed Oil

Marco Palermi of Via Umbria

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Umbrian Flatbread

 

Food and Wine Tour Il Molino

 

 

Fresh Mozzarella di Bufala
Fresh Mozzarella di Bufala

Grilled Eggplant

Torta

Pie

Ci Vediamo!

– Via Umbria

Lunch at Il Molino Read more

After a thorough tour around the Il Molino grove, and speaking with Annalisa Torzilli on everything that goes into the final product, we ...

Truffle Hunting Part II

After a thrilling morning hunting trufflesthe guests of the food and wine tour get to enter the magical kitchen of Gabriella Bianconi. She lets us smell each type of truffle (there are many different types for different uses!) as she gently incorporates them into a myriad of tasting dishes. Once we understand the general characteristics of each truffle, we sit down for a full meal where we delight in simple yet rich dishes. It’s truffle season: feast your eyes.

white truffles
White truffles
Instant mashed potatoes with truffles, which we will carry in our store
Instant mashed potatoes with truffles, which we will carry in our store

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All of the different types of Truffles to sample
All of the different types of Truffles for us to sample
Tartufi Bianconi
Gabriella Bianconi tells us the secrets of the truffle. Via Umbria Wine Director Vickie Reh listens in the background.
Mache with cheese
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Truffled Eggs
Truffled Eggs
Umbria Truffles
A drizzle of truffle honey adds sophistication to so many dishes
The pre-meal crostini platter
The pre-meal crostini platter

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The simple delight of eating what you have just found!
The simple delight of eating what you have just found!
Scrambled egg with truffles
Scrambled egg with truffles

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Precious Black Truffle
Precious Black Truffle

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Did this photoset make your mouth water? Luckily for you, we will carry most of these products in our new store, as well as offering fresh truffle dinners. So stay tuned..soon you will be able to have a truffle feast of your own!

 

Ci Vediamo!

 

–Via Umbria

Time to eat the prize! Read more

After a thrilling morning hunting truffles, the guests of the food and wine tour get to enter the magical kitchen of Gabriella Bianconi. She ...

Photo diary

Il Molino

We visually take you though our day at Il Molino in our latest installment of our photodiaries.

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A wonderful day was had by all. We can’t wait to serve this new pressed oil in Georgetown this winter.

 

Ci Vediamo!

–Via Umbria

 

 

All about our Il Molino Visit Read more

We visually take you though our day at Il Molino in our latest installment of our photodiaries.   ...

Truffle Hunting Part I

One of the delights of doing a Food and Wine tour in the fall is truffle season. We get the amazing opportunity to see where and how this elusive fungus is obtained! Truffle Hunting

The hunt is on as our truffle hound, Camilla, sniffs out the first treat of the day. _DSC0058 _DSC0068

Truffles cannot be cultivated by humans, and so these specially trained dogs seek them out, using their noses to find the hidden treasure slightly below a layer of dirt. _DSC0079 _DSC0094 _DSC0096

The smell of the truffles is enchanting!

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A successful hunt! And now, back to the kitchen to cook up the goodies…

 

Stat tuned for part II: in the kitchen!

 

Ci Vediamo!

–Via Umbria

 

 

 

 

In the Forest Read more

One of the delights of doing a Food and Wine tour in the fall is truffle season. We get the amazing opportunity ...

Photodiary: Food and Wine Tour

After a day of gathering, walking, and eating, what’s a slightly jet-lagged crew to do?

SpritzTime

Head to Bevagna for the classic ritual of #spritzoclockin the restaurant of our good friend, restaurant owner, and chef Simone

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Our group nestled into the evening hour, apperitivo drinks in hand.

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And with a little visit from Salvatore, the hour was complete.

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Then back to the nearby Fattoria Del Gelso, where our caretaker Marco was busy prepping a simple Umbrian dinner.

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After a perfect, and perfectly tiring day, what you really need is a home-cooked meal and some local wine.

 

Stay tuned to see where our crew is off to tomorrow!

 

Ci Vediamo!

 

Via Umbria

 

 

 

 

Day I Part II Read more

After a day of gathering, walking, and eating, what's a slightly jet-lagged crew to do? Head to Bevagna for the classic ritual of ...