There is no such thing as "Italian food." There is Neapolitan food, Bolognese food, Sicilian food, Sardinian food, Pugliese food โ and each one is as different from the others as French cuisine is from Japanese. A Roman would no sooner put cream in carbonara than a Neapolitan would put pineapple on pizza. A Bolognese would weep at the suggestion of spaghetti bolognese (it's tagliatelle, 7mm wide, registered at the Chamber of Commerce). Italy doesn't have a cuisine. Italy has 20 cuisines that happen to share a peninsula. This guide maps the essential dishes and wines, region by region, so you eat like a local everywhere โ not like a tourist anywhere.
Plan my food tour โThe canon: Carbonara (guanciale, pecorino, egg, pepper โ NO cream, NO garlic, NO onion), Cacio e Pepe (pecorino + pepper, deceptively simple, brutally difficult), Amatriciana (guanciale, pecorino, tomato, from Amatrice), Carciofi alla Giudia (deep-fried artichokes, Jewish Quarter invention). Wine: Frascati Superiore DOCG, Est! Est!! Est!!! di Montefiascone (named because a bishop's wine scout was so excited he wrote "Est!" three times).
The holy trinity: Pizza Margherita (โฌ5 at Da Michele), Ragรน Napoletano (beef braised 6+ hours in tomato, served on ziti), Sfogliatella (riccia = crispy, frolla = soft โ the debate is eternal). Also essential: Parmigiana di melanzane (eggplant parmesan, invented HERE not in Parma), Limoncello (from Amalfi Coast lemons). Wine: Greco di Tufo, Fiano di Avellino, Taurasi (Campania's "Barolo of the South").
The stars: Orecchiette con cime di rapa (ear-shaped pasta with turnip tops โ bitter, green, perfect), Bombette (stuffed pork rolls grilled in Cisternino fornelli), Focaccia Barese (potato-tomato-olive, not pizza), Burrata (mozzarella filled with cream and stracciatella โ invented in Andria in 1956). Wine: Primitivo di Manduria (the grape that became California's Zinfandel), Negroamaro, Verdeca.
The feast: Arancini (fried rice balls, โฌ2 โ the perfect street food), Pasta alla Norma (eggplant, tomato, ricotta salata โ Catania's masterpiece), Cannoli (sheep ricotta, filled to order or walk out), Cassata (the baroque cake that looks like a cathedral). Also: Couscous (Trapani's Arab heritage), Granita con brioche (breakfast in summer). Wine: Nero d'Avola, Etna Rosso (volcanic terroir), Marsala, Passito di Pantelleria.
The mothership: Tortellini in brodo (in BROTH, never cream), Tagliatelle al ragรน (NOT spaghetti bolognese), Lasagna verde (with bรฉchamel, not ricotta), Piadina romagnola (Romagna flatbread). The holy products: Parmigiano-Reggiano (aged 24-36 months), Prosciutto di Parma, Aceto Balsamico Tradizionale di Modena (aged 12-25 years, โฌ40-200/bottle โ NOT the โฌ3 supermarket version). Wine: Lambrusco (sparkling red, seriously underrated), Sangiovese di Romagna.
The aristocrats: Vitello Tonnato (cold veal with tuna sauce โ sounds wrong, tastes extraordinary), Agnolotti del Plin (tiny pinched pasta, meat-filled, served in napkin), Bagna Cร uda (warm anchovy-garlic dip for vegetables โ social eating, winter essential), Bollito Misto (7 cuts of boiled meat with 7 sauces โ a ceremony, not a dinner). The crown: Tartufo Bianco d'Alba (white truffle, Oct-Dec, โฌ3,000-5,000/kg โ see our truffle guide). Wine: Barolo, Barbaresco, Barbera d'Asti, Nebbiolo.
The island apart: Porceddu (spit-roast suckling pig over myrtle), Culurgiones (hand-pinched potato pasta), Fregola con arselle (toasted semolina with clams), Bottarga (pressed mullet roe, grated over pasta), Seadas (fried cheese pastry with bitter honey). Wine: Cannonau (3x antioxidants of other reds โ the centenarian wine), Vermentino di Gallura DOCG, Carignano del Sulcis.
From a โฌ3 panino in Naples to a โฌ300 truffle dinner in Alba โ we build food itineraries that make your palate the protagonist.
Plan my food tour โ free