Since we only spent 3 days in this beautiful city, we tried to taste as much of its flavors as possible. When I think of Italy, the first things that come to my mind are pizzas, pastas and ice creams but of course Italian cuisine is not limited to these.
Florence food and drink:
There are lots of good opportunities where you can eat traditional local foods in Florence .
Pappa al Pomodoro: A thick soup prepared with bread, tomatoes, garlic, basil and various spices.
Ribollita Soup: A thick soup prepared with various vegetables such as beans, carrots, celery etc.
Tuscan creamy white beans and spelt soup: A thick and very delicious soup prepared with ingredients such as white beans, garlic and parmesan
Panzanella: A salad prepared with ingredients such as tomatoes, crispy bread, onion and basil
Lampredetto: A type of street food similar to kokorec. Offal is used and after being cooked it is served in bread.
Bistecca Fiorentina: The most famous meat dish in the region. Especially raised beef is used. It is served rare but we asked for well done. In most restaurants, it is served as a portion of at least 1 kilo. A large portion is bone but the meet is still quite a lot. It is useful to pay attention to the portion size before ordering.
Risotto al nero di seppia: Risotto with cuttlefish
Pici Pasta: A type of pasta specific to the Florence region. It is found on the menu of almost every restaurant. It is usually made with only flour and water and rolled by hand.
Crostini de Fegato: An appetizer prepared with ingredients such as chicken liver, onion and capers and eaten by spreading on bread.
Bruscehetta: It is eaten as a starter. Toasted bread is flavored with olive oil and garlic and served with tomato seasoning on top.
Biscotti: Cookies baked with butter, with almonds, hazelnuts or dried fruit. Biscotti means twice baked. It is available in every bakery and patisserie in Florence. It is a truly delicious cookie.
Cannoli: A tube-shaped pastry with a creamy interior and a crispy exterior that you can find in all patisseries. There are plain, pistachio and nutella varieties.
Gelato: It is available almost everywhere and most of them are delicious
Flavors we experienced and restaurant recommendations:
All’Antico Vinaio: Sandwiches are really delicious. Since we traveled in February, there were no long lines at the door but I can’t imagine it in the summer. Although it melts quickly, there was still a line of at least 15 people in front of us even in this season. We had the “Beatrice” and liked it very much. You can have additional items added to your sandwich by paying an additional fee. Sandwich prices vary between 8-12 Euros. If you are not very hungry, it is big enough for two people to share one. We couldn’t finish it. It is 40 meters away from the Uffizi Gallery. Address: Via dei Neri, 76 R
All’Antico Vinario
Sandwiche – All’Antico Vinario
Trattoria ZaZa: One of the prominent restaurants in the city. We tried to get in without reservation but the line of 20-25 people in front of us scared us. We didn’t wait and made online reservation for the next night. The interior is quite cute, they added whatever they found to the decoration. The food is delicious, the staff is helpful and the prices are not too high. We ordered the local soup tasting plate, “Tris di minestre”, as starter. The most famous soups are Ribollita, Pappa al pomodoro & Tuscan creamy white beans and spelt soup served as a trio. As a main course, we ordered “Creamy Truffled sauce Ravioli” and Lasagna with wine. The Ravioli was really top-notch, we ate it by dipping bread in the sauce, that’s how good it was. The soups were also very good. The Lasagna is edible, but not very special. Address: Piazza del Mercato Centrale
Ribollita, Pappa al pomodoro & Tuscan creamy white beans and spelt soupCreamy Truffled sauce RavioliLazanya BologneseTrattoria ZaZa
Trattoria Katti : The food is delicious and the prices are reasonable. We had Bistecca Fiorentina here. Bruscehetta, bistecca fiorentina with potato garnish and a glass of wine is 30 Euros per person. The meat comes in a rather large portion. Since we don’t like meat rare, we ordered it well done. Trattoria Katti didn’t disappoint us, everything was delicious, especially the olive oil they used was very good. They apparently bring it specially made for the restaurant. Address: Via Faenze, 31.
Trattoria KattiBruschettaBistecca fiorentina
View on Art Rooftop Cocktail Bar : A rooftop bar with the most beautiful view of Santa Maria Del Fiore where you can eat or drink something with the view of the Duomo from above. We were lucky to find a seat in the front row as soon as we arrived. I can’t imagine the crowds in the summer. Address: Via Dei Medici, 6.
Florence Cathedral from View on Art Rooftop Cocktail Bar
Babae Restaurant (wine window ) : It is located in San Sprito area. If you wish, you can buy your drink from wine window like we did and drink it on the street or at the tables in front of the restaurant. It is very popular and locals prefer this place. Address: Via Santo Spirito, 21R
Babae RestaurantBabae wine window
Gino’s Bakery: We ate cannolis with pistachio and nutella and were pleased with their cannolis. My favorite is the pistachio one. Address: Via de’ Guicciardini, 3/5
Gino’s Bakery
Biscotti Bakery– II Cantuccio di San Lorenzo: Biscottis are very fresh and delicious at this bakery. Address: Via Faenza, 23/red
Biscotti
Pompi Tiramisu: I was a bit disappointed. I found it too oily and heavy. They have various kind of tiramisus but my favorite is the classical one. There are a few tables inside but take-away is possible. Via Faenza, 37/R
Pompi Tiramisu
La Strega Nocciola Galeteria Artigianale – Ice Cream: There was a long queue in front of it. I think main reason for the queue is that there was only one employee and he was both serving ice cream and looking at the cash register))) but it was worth to wait. Especially the cinnamon ice cream is delicious. It is very close to Duomo Square. Address: Via Ricosoli 16r
La Strega Nocciola Galeteria ArtigianaleGelato
Gelateria La Carraia – Ice Cream: Although it is not as delicious as the one we had at La Strega Nocciola Galeteria, it is good. The portion is generous. It is located in the Santo Spirito neighborhood. Address: Piazza Nazario Sauro, 25/r
Gelateria La Carraia
Caffe Gilli : We couldn’t go in because of lack of time but even if we had time, we would not preferre to go in. We read that the taste of the product are rare but the prices are expensive. At the bottom of Republica Square. Since it is a historical place, you can go inside and have a look.
Caffe Gilli
You will find below the link to my Visiting Uffizi Gallery blog
It is one of the oldest, largest and most visited galleries in the world and more than 2 million people visit every year. It was built in u-shaped structure near the Arno River, commissioned by Cosimo de Medici and designed by Vasari. It took more than 20 years to build. In addition to the master paintings of Michelangelo, Da Vinci, Botticelli, Titian, Rembrandt, Raphael, Caravaccio, Rubens, it is full of dozens of works and sculptures from the ancient Greek period. The ceiling decoration of Uffiizi is also magnificent. It took 4 hours of us to visit the gallery. After a while, your perception weakens, you get tired, and as the gallery starts to get crowded, the queues in front of the works get longer. The cafeteria in the museum is a good option to catch your breath. It is best to go in the morning during the opening. If you are not professionally interested in art or as hobby, most of the time, you may not understand what tells a painting, sculpture or architecture, and naturally, you may have difficulty of enjoying it. Taking a guided tour or an audio guide while visiting the galleries will make you better understand the paintings and increase your joy more, but it will also require an additional cost. In this article, you will find brief information about some important works which will make your job easier. I wish to contribute a small help to your visit to Uffizi.
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio: Italian baroque painter who lived between 1571-1610. He applied light and shadow very successfully in his works. He is an artist who made a difference by depicting religious and mythological scenes with ordinary human figures.
Medusa: One of the most important works in the gallery. The painting depicts the killing of the gorgon Medusa by the demigod Perseus. (Gorgons are terrifying female monsters with snake heads from Greek mythology.) Medusa turns those who look into her eyes into stone. Medusa has 2 other sisters. They do not have the ability to turn those who look into stone, but they have the ability to be immortal. Medusa thinks she is also immortal. While Perseus is on his way to kill Medusa, he encounters Athena and Athena warns him not to look into Medusa’s eyes and gives him a shield for protection. Caravaggio’s Medusa includes the moment when Perseus kills Medusa and the reflection of Medusa on the shield. The fear and surprise expression on Medusa’s face has been successfully conveyed. The artist used himself as a model in the work. 1st floor, room 90
Caravaggio – Medusa
Bacchus : In Greek mythology, Dionysus is the god of wine and fertility. He is known as Bacchus in Rome. Caravaggio has two Bacchus paintings, the one called “Sick Bacchus” is exhibited in the Galleria Borghese in Rome. In this one in Uffizi, Caravaggio depicts Bacchus as young and healthy. He used his friend Marrio Mitti as a model for Bacchus. In the painting, Bacchus has grapes and vines leafs on his head, he is lying on the bed and has a wine glass in his left hand. Caravaggio has depicted the god Bacchus in a humanized way. Bacchus is holding the wine glass as if he is going to offer it. The fruits in the basket are too ripe and some have started to root. This is used to describe the transience of worldly life. Caravaggio has reflected his own self-portrait in the wine jug on the table.
Caravaggio Bacchus
Sacrifice of Isaac – It tells the story of God sending an angel to prevent Abraham from sacrificing his only son Isaac. Giovanni Masaccio: He lived between 1401-1428 and was one of the early artists of the Italian Renaissance movement. He was one of the first painters to introduce the concept of perspective.
CaravaggioSacrifice of Isaac
Giovanni Masaccio: He was one of the early artists of the Italian Renaissance movement who lived between 1401 and 1428. She was one of the first painters to bring the understanding of perspective.
Madonna and Child: Painted in 1426. It was stolen and recovered after the war. Although there is no written document about the painting, it is assumed that it is Masaccio’ ‘s work because of its style. The two-dimensional work depicts Jesus as a joyful child. The halo over the heads of Mary and Jesus is superimposed to provide a sense of depth.
Giovanni Masaccio–Madonna and Child
Bartolomeo Manfredi: He was a successful Italian artist who lived between 1582-1622.
Roman Charity-(Roman philanthropy): The epic of a woman who secretly fed her father, who was sentenced to death by starvation, with her milk in ancient Greece was told. The father’s name was Cimon and the daughter’s name was Pero. Room 91
Bartolomeo Manfredi-Roman Charity
Filippo Lippi: He lived between 1457-1504. He was the son of the well-known painter Fra’ Lippo Lippi. He was born in Florance and an early Italian Renaissance artist.
St.Jerome: St. Jerome is depicted kneeling in front of the cross. (St. Jerome, or his real name Eusebius Hieronyemus, the person who most successfully translated the Bible into Latin, Bible scholar) He is one of the four great fathers of the Church.
Filippo Lippi–St.Jerome
Artemisia Gentileschi: Baroque artist born in Rome, who lived between 1593-1653. She is important in that she was the first female artist to be accepted to the academy in Florence at a time when female painters were not accepted. She is considered one of the most important artists after Caravaggio.
Judith Slaying Holofernos: The subject is about Judith, a Jewish woman, beheading the Assyrian general Holofernes after the invasion of the Jews by the Assyrians and her courage. Judith gets general Holofernes drunk and seduces him in order to protect her people from the Assyrians and then beheads him.
Artemisia Gentileschi – Judith Slaying Holofernos
Leonardo da Vinci: A Renaissance artist born in Florence, who lived between 1452-1519. In addition to painting, he was an architect, engineer and scientist.
Annunciation: The work, begun by his master Andrea del Verrocchio and mostly completed by Da Vinci between 1472-1476, depicts the announcement of Jesus’ coming to his mother, Mary. In the painting, Mary, a pious and virgin woman, is sitting and reading the Old Testament, the holy book on the table. Suddenly Gabriel appears in front of her and gives her the good news that Jesus will come. Mary’s left hand is raised in the air in surprise. The lily in Gabriel’s hand represents Mary’s purity and untouchedness.
Leonardo da Vinci – Annunciation
The Baptism of Christ: This wooden painting made by Da Vinci and his master Andrea del Verrocchio in 1472. Jesus and John the Baptist are depicted as being baptized by John the Baptist on the banks of the Jordan River according to the Bible. The arms of God are painted with golden rays and a white dove, which represents the holy spirit in Christianity, is located at the top of the painting with its wings outstretched. There are two angel figures holding his clothes next to Jesus. The one on the left was painted by Da Vinci, the one closer to Jesus was painted by Verrocchio, and it is said that Verroccio found Da Vinci’s angel more beautiful.
Leonardo da Vinci–The Baptism of Christ
Adoration of the Magi: In Leonardo’s unfinished work, Mary and the baby Jesus in the middle are surrounded by men who look at them in admiration in a semicircle.
Leonardo da Vinci–Adoration of the Magi
Michelangelo di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni: He was a sculptor, architect and painter who lived between 1475-1564. The Holy Family is the only painting on panel by Michelangelo, who was originally a sculptor.
Holy Family with St. John the Baptist: The 1506 work features the child Jesus, Mary, Joseph, and a figure that is assumed to be John the Baptist and resembles the child Jesus, along with naked male figures in the background. It is also known as the Doni Tondo, inspired by the name of Agnoli Doni, who commissioned the tondo, meaning round-circle. Second floor, 35th hall
Michelangelo–Holy Family with St.John the Baptist
Sandro Boticelli: He was an important Renaissance artist born in Florence and lived between 1445-1510.
The Birth of Venus : This painting, made between 1482-1486, depicts the moment when Venus, the goddess of love and beauty in Roman mythology (Aphrodite in Greek mythology), is born from the sea and comes to shore on a seashell. She is born and brings love and beauty to the world. On the left, Zephyr, the god of the west wind, and Chloris, embracing him, blow wind towards Venus, allowing the seashell to travel on the water. Roses, the symbol of Venus, are blown by the wind. Venus hides her private parts with her hands and hair in a moral stance. On the right side of the painting, a Horai (goddess symbolizing the seasons) is depicted running towards Venus to dress her. The fact that the clothes Horai holds are adorned with flowers reflects that they represent spring.
Boticelli – Nastica di Venere
Primavera (Spring): In the work dated 1482, Venus (Aphrodite), the goddess of love and beauty, is at the very center of the painting, with her head bowed and a halo around her head, resembling Mary. In the background are fruit trees and on the ground are flowers, a perfect spring painting. The three beauties known as the Charites (Aglaie, Thalia and Eupherosyne) on the left side of the painting shine with elegance. Botticelli obtained this color by using egg white when painting the fairies’ clothes. The male figure to the left of the fairies is Mercury. Mercury is dispersing the clouds with his snake-headed staff in his hand. The boy figure next to Venus’ head, her son Cupid (Eros), is blindfolded and is aiming his arrow at the three beauties, and is the messenger of a sudden love. The dressed figure on the other side of Venus is the goddess of flowers Flora (Chloris), who is holding the flowers she has collected in her lap. The figure next to Flora also depicts her transformation and capture by Zephyr, the god of the west wind, before transforming into the goddess of flowers. This transformation is depicted as flowers coming out of Flora’s mouth.
BoticelliPrimavera
Pallas and the Centaur: The woman in the painting is assumed to be Pallas (Athena). The centaur next to her is in a submissive stance. Centaurs are wild, horny and lustful creatures with half-human, half-horse bodies who live in the forest and hunt fairies. The centaur represents the cruel and wild instincts of mankind and uncontrolled lust. The painting depicts the submission of these emotions to virtue and intelligence.
Boticelli–Pallas and the Centaur
Titian Vecellio : The Venetian artist, also known as Titian, was a well-known and respected artist while he was alive. He is known for his unique brushwork and for obtaining richer colors by softening the colors with his fingers. He is one of the best Venetian artists.
Venus of Urbino: In the 1538 work of the Renaissance artist Titian, Venus is depicted as a seductive woman.
Tziano-Urbino Venüsü
Annibale Carracci: Italian baroque artist born in Bologna in 1560.
Venus with a Satyry and two Cubids- (La Baccante): In his painting Venus, two satyrs and the god of love are depicted. A satyr is a half-goat, half-human forest creature in Greek mythology. It is known as a faun in Roman mythology. It is human from the waist up and goat from the waist down.
Annibale Carracci-La Baccante
Pierro della Francesca: Italian Renaissance artist. In addition to painting, he was also interested in mathematics, geometry and perspective.
The Duke and Duchess of Urbino: In the painting, the Duke is depicted from the left because of the wound on his right side. His wife, standing opposite him, is also portrayed with her forehead open in accordance with the beauty concept of the period. Second floor, room no. 8.
Francesca-Portraits of Duke and Duchess of Urbino
Francesco de Rossi (also known as Artist Salviati): Florentine artist who lived between 1510-1563.
Christ Carrying the Cross: Jesus is walking towards Mount Calvary, the hill outside the borders of Jerusalem where he was crucified, with a cross on his back. This depiction was a very popular scene in the 16th century. The painting focuses on Jesus’ face.
Francesco de Rossi– Christ Carrying the Cross
Raffaello Sanzio da Urbino: Italian painter and architect of the Renaissance who lived between 1483-1520. He is known as the trio of the period, along with Leonardo and Michelangelo. Shapes are prominent in his works.
Portraits of Agnolo and Maddalena Doni: The painting of the wealthy merchant and his wife, who belonged to the Florentine noble family Strozzi, can be considered the beginning of the mature period of the artist’s works. Agnolo Doni, who was known to be stingy in his expenses outside of art, had the paintings made while Raphael was in Florence. Maddalena Doni is in a position with her hands on top of each other, similar to the Mona Lisa, but we see that Raphael paid more attention to clothes than Da Vinci. Maddalena Doni’s outfit is simple but confirms her wealth.
Raffaello-Portraits of Agnolo and Maddalena Doni
Madonna and Child with the Young St. John the Baptist (Madonna of the Goldfinch): The work is also known as the Goldfinch Madonna. Mary, the child Jesus and his peer John the Baptist are together. The child John has a goldfinch in his hand and Jesus wants to touch it. The goldfinch is thought to symbolize the cross. The holy book in Mary’s hand shows her faith. The background of the painting is calm, as in other Raphael paintings, which increases the power of the scene in front. Raphael made the work as a wedding gift for his friend Lorenzo Nasi, but Lorenzo Nasi’s house was destroyed in the earthquake of 1548 and the painting was shattered. After the first restoration, which was unsuccessful, it took its current form in 2002 with a correction that lasted 6 years and has been exhibited in the Uffizi Gallery since 2008.
Raffaello–Madonna of the Goldfinch
Giovanni Battista di Jocopo (Rosso Fiorentino): He was an artist born in Florence who lived between 1495-1540. Moving figures and is known for his bold use of color. He brought Italian Mannerism to France.
Angel Playing Lute: An angel is seen playing a musical instrument in a painting dated 1521. It is an example of the Mannerist style.
Giovanni Battista di Jocopo–Angel Playing Lute
Tribuna Room : The Tribuna room in the Uffizi Gallery is a magnificently beautiful room. You cannot enter it, you can only look inside through the door. The octagonal room was designed by Bernardo Bountalenti in 1584 for Francesco I de Medici. It is full of valuable antiques, paintings and sculptures.