Italy Food Itinerary, 7 Days 2026: Region by Region
Autore: La Redazione di www.tourleaderpro.com
Last updated: June 2026.
The single most important thing to know before you plan a food trip to Italy: there is no such thing as Italian food. There is Bolognese food, Tuscan food, Roman food, Neapolitan food, each fiercely local and different. So this 7-day route eats one region at a time, north to center, and never asks a city to cook another city's dishes. Order what the place is famous for and you will eat like a king.
This route runs by train, no car needed: Bologna and Emilia, then Tuscany, then Rome. One food city per leg, a market or a food tour in each, and long lunches as the main event. Book the famous tables and the tours ahead.
7-Day Italy Food Itinerary
Days 1-2: Bologna and Emilia
Italy's richest eating: tagliatelle al ragu, tortellini, mortadella in Bologna, with a day trip to Modena for balsamic or Parma for Parmigiano and prosciutto. A food tour on arrival sets the scene.
Days 3-4: Tuscany
Florence and the hills: the bistecca alla fiorentina, ribollita, pecorino, and a Chianti wine afternoon among the vines. Heartier, simpler, and built around great meat and wine.
Days 5-7: Rome
The Roman classics done right: cacio e pepe, carbonara, amatriciana, fried artichokes, and suppli, eaten in Trastevere, Testaccio, and the Ghetto, with a morning at a Roman market. A delicious finish.
Q&A: Eating Across Italy in a Week
Is there one Italian cuisine?
No, and that is the key to eating well here. Italy's food is intensely regional, so order what a place is known for: ragu in Bologna, steak in Tuscany, cacio e pepe in Rome. Asking for another region's dish marks you as a tourist and disappoints.
Should I do a food tour?
Yes, especially on your first day in each city; a good guide gets you into the right spots and explains the local specialties. It is the fastest way to eat well and avoid the tourist traps.
What is the biggest food mistake tourists make?
Ordering spaghetti bolognese (not a real dish), chicken with pasta, or a cappuccino after lunch, and eating beside the big monuments. Eat where locals eat, a few streets back, and follow regional menus.
Can I do this without a car?
Easily; Bologna, Florence, and Rome are all on the fast-train line, half an hour to ninety minutes apart. A car only helps for deep-countryside wineries, which a tour covers anyway.
When should I go?
Fall is glorious for food, with the harvest, truffles, and new wine, and spring is lovely too. Summer is hot and many family-run places close in August, so the shoulder seasons eat best.