Italy Food Itinerary, 10 Days 2026: Eat the Whole Spine
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: June 2026.
Ten days is enough to eat down Italy's spine and feel how radically the food changes every couple of hours on the train. Remember the golden rule: there is no Italian cuisine, only fiercely local ones, so order what each place is famous for. This route runs from Bologna and rich Emilia, through Tuscany and Rome, all the way south to Naples and the birthplace of pizza. One region per leg, a market or food tour in each.
It is all on the fast-train line, so no car. Base a few nights in each food capital, eat the regional classics, and pace the richness so you arrive hungry. Book the famous tables and tours ahead.
10-Day Italy Food Itinerary
Days 1-3: Emilia, the Richest Table
Bologna for tagliatelle al ragu and tortellini, with day trips to Modena for balsamic and Parma for Parmigiano and prosciutto. Start with a food tour. The most decadent eating in Italy.
Days 4-5: Tuscany
Florence and the hills: bistecca alla fiorentina, ribollita, pecorino, and a Chianti wine afternoon. Simpler, meatier, built on great ingredients and wine.
Days 6-7: Rome
The Roman classics: cacio e pepe, carbonara, amatriciana, fried artichokes, and suppli, in Trastevere, Testaccio, and the Ghetto, plus a morning market. Bold and porky.
Days 8-10: Naples and the South
End in Naples: true Neapolitan pizza, fried street food, seafood, and the pastries (sfogliatella, baba), with a day on the coast. The most soulful food in Italy.
Q&A: Eating Across Italy in 10 Days
Why go region by region?
Because Italy's food is intensely local; the same dish barely exists two regions apart. Eating Emilia's pasta, Tuscany's meat, Rome's offal classics, and Naples' pizza in place is the whole point and the way to eat best.
Do I need a car?
No. Bologna, Florence, Rome, and Naples are all on the high-speed line, thirty minutes to an hour apart. A car only helps for countryside wineries, which tours cover.
What is the biggest food mistake?
Ordering one region's dish in another (spaghetti bolognese does not exist), eating beside monuments, and cappuccino after lunch. Follow the local menu a few streets back from the sights.
Should I book food tours?
Yes, ideally on the first day in each city; a guide gets you into the right spots fast and explains the specialties. It anchors a region's eating before you explore on your own.
When should I go?
Fall for the harvest, truffles, and new wine, and spring is lovely too. Summer is hot and many family places shut in August, so the shoulder seasons eat best.