Hello Mark, this is an excellent production, very nicely done, I have seen many food bloggers but this is exceptional, I thoroughly enjoyed the way you explain the food, location, the ambience, the presentation and everything in between. this is by far one of my favourites, thanks very much.
International Foodie Guide Errr...can I break the eggs in your basket? He is pretty incompetent and got served a supermarket shelf spumante (Ferrari Brut) considering it a prosecco which it isn't. The difference is substantial, Ferrari is a cheap bottle here in Italy (around 10-11 euros) while prosecco starts off from 30 euros at least. The video is well done though you see there is someone who knows about lighting, filming and editing behind it.
People need to take cues from you on how to interact respectfully and learn from their servers. Just love watching you enjoy and do food reviews. You are fabulous at what you do!!!!
Through your videos I’ve grown more curious about Italy and I’ve been watching so many videos on their food that I can name them right away now 😂 I love the way you describe food. Many other travel bloggers only describe food as “delicious” or “it’s good” and that’s about it. Also love how much work you put into your videos every time. Bravo :)
Thank you so much for such great feedback. Italy is just gets a hold of you and doesn't let go, there is so much diversity between the regions in such a small landscape, which makes it fun and always a new experience! Thanks for watching my friend!
Thy Renaissance The best part about Italy is that anywhere you go you'll find surprising and marvelous things and great food. Everybody thinks Italy is "Roma, Venezia, Firenze" because they are the most advertised (and truly incredible although they have become too "turisty") but actually there are DOZENS of incredible cities and town all with fabulous architecture and shockingly good restaurants. To name a few (I'm Italian and live in Italy) from north to south: Verona, Milano, Bergamo Alta, Treviso, Parma, Siena, Orvieto, Napoli (and the Reggia of Caserta, probably the most beautiful palace in Europe with among the rest a fountain...that is 3Km/2miles long!), Bari, Otranto, Palermo, Siracusa. Just for an idea...take a look at Otranto: images.app.goo.gl/hivbfSVLnfN1a4Ct5
ClaudeMagicbox I agree. I come from Singapore and whenever I see someone posting on Instagram that they went to Italy, I already know what to expect. It’s always the same few cities that they visit. Ever since covid, I’ve found out so much more to Italy and the cuisines that each region offers based on their produce - and I regret not visiting the Northern Part of Italy where the Dolomites are, as I was in Germany for an exchange program. For sure would do coastal towns first, those Gino D’acampo travelled to in his show because something about the high cliffs and the sea appeals to me. Thank you very much for your input, have a good day :)
And now I want to go to Verona! Mark, I discovered your vlog a few months ago after booking a trip to Rome (first time ever!) and because of your vlog, I said “I am dining at Da Felice” and had the cacio e pepe that you raved about! It was fantastic!! God willing, one day I will dine at this restaurant too 🙏
Marcela, what a great comment, thank you so much for sharing this. I am so happy you are enjoying the videos and that you enjoyed Felice as much as I do...stay safe my friend!
Mark this is one of your better videos. It was very smart to limit the subject matter to just this one fine dining experience. A truly unique approach to a food vlog. Keep up the good work!
Always feel good watching your food and wine moments.....they truly are conducive to learning yet the story becomes unforgettably palatable. Great production!!
Hello Mark, Vittorio Emanuele is on the Michelin guide but it doesn't have a Michelin star. Also the prosecco you choose is a very commercial brand here in Italy and it cost 10 euros at the market, it does not require a specific glass ;)
correct, i never mentioned it had a star, rather, it is michelin rated, with a plate...which means it's judged with the same 5 criteria as the star system and it is an overall excellent dining experience...and i am TOTALLY sure the prosecco is cheaper in the market lol...but the type of glass does influence how the bubbles stream....anyway, LOVE the convo! thanks for watching my friend
@@EuroTrotter that's not true, the type of glass doesn't influence how the bubbles stream, he more they are persistent and continuous better is the wine, but the "ferrari" it's just for markets, they have a premium version that's called "Giulio Ferrari" you should try it and see the difference of the bubbles (perlage) Nice video anyway "alla prossima!" from Italy :)
Mark, I love your energy and enthusiasm about Verona and about your dining experience in here. But eating a crab & avocado salad, crab ragu and chateaubriand steak? these are not local dishes at all. Next time you are in town hit me up and I’ll take you to an local restaurant to eat authentic local dishes. By the way, “Valpolicella grape” does not exist (let alone finding it into a Soave wine). Cheers from Verona!
Hello guys! Dinner was fabulous and delicious !!😊 Beautiful restaurant and very elegant. In Buenos Aíres the restaurant open very late in the evening and you can stay in for many hours. Wonderful video. Stay. Healthy and blessings to y’all 🤗🤗❤️❤️
Hi Mark, thanks for a lovely video in a nice pace. The Amarone is not a grape though, its a way of producing a wine with grapes that are dried. The grapes are Molinara, Rondinella and Corvina. I love Amarone wines.
Sir Mark...how did you ever managed to leave that absolutely breathtaking restaurant? OMG😋OMG😋 I was having a late dinner while watching this video. Forgot my dinner and was totally immersed in the feast you were sharing...I was drooling as well! Thank you for the tidbit about the proseco. Stunning proseco glass. Reminded me of the champagne glasses my grandparents received as wedding presents in the early 1930s. Beautiful! They did not drink alcohol, so they used them to serve ice cream!!!👍 Sending peace and love. Until your next video, grateful to you for sharing your awesome experiences😊
Hello and thank you so much for watching and for the great comment. I LOVED that restaurant and the glass for the Prosecco was so gorgeous! What a great wedding present and memory, thank you for sharing!
Mark I am so impressed I did not know about the proper glass for presseco and am deffinatley getting the right ones for champane I've been to alot of upscale restraunts and never new that
Thank you Debbie, yes either flute or coupe but having a proper glass where the bubbles stream in a line from the bottom through the center to the top!
And then there are people in the world who think that in Italy we only eat pizza and spaghetti (OMG !🙏🏻). People should travel around Italy a bit, from north to south, to see what great Italian cuisine really is, the various regional Italian cuisines.
Pay attention....there's Prosecco and Spumante (similar to champagne)....and Ferrari is a spumante 😉.....Prosecco is for pre-dinner and Spumante at the end in general
Bellissimo video nella mia splendida Verona. È una città che offre molto dal punto di vista culinario, unico appunto, "l'aperitivo" si usa fare verso il pomeriggio al calar del sole e non prima di cena 😊
Thanks to your brilliant videos of Verona we will include this historical beauty on our next trip. We will definitely visit to amazing restaurant. Thank you for sharing. We love your videos on Italian restaurants the best.
I had lunch at a Michelin-starred restaurant in Imola called Ristorante San Domenico. It, as well as the city, was mentioned as unmissable in a book by the art historian Vittorio Sgarbi, and when I dropped his name the owner gave me the royal treatment and I got out of there for about €60, way less than expected.
At 4:00 you didn't drink a prosecco but a spumante or the Italian name for champagne (Ferrari Brut). Just we don't like the french name so we call all white sparkling wines made with champenoise method "spumante" or "foaming". Out of curiosity how much did they charge you for the Ferrari bottle? Here in Italy it's a basic supermarket shelf spumante and you find it for 10-11 euros in any market. Oh and paccheri are not a typical pasta in Veneto/Verona because they are from Napoli. Moreover Valpolicella is a geographic region not a grape (and Sartori is really a low end bottle my friend, again supermarket stuff of the lower shelves). Ciao :-)
your videos are always beautiful, refined and sometimes I see them again. I wish you to visit all the Italian cities and you will discover many small treasures. I live in Bergamo and the upper city is a small jewel of the Venetian republic ti aspettiamo ciao
Your video is very elegant... Chic and beauty! I am italian, i am veronese... Verona è la città dell'amore, insieme a Venezia... a Verona puoi trovare il vino più buono d'Italia, come ad esempio il Bardolino, il Custoza, il recioto, la cucina tipica è tra le migliori del paese e l'atmosfera serale regala sogni ad occhi aperti... A 20 km dal lago di Garda e dalle montagne, è una città meravigliosa,
Dear Mark I'm sorry to inform you, that paccheri pasta are not Veronese but derive from Campania (Naples), the name paccheri comes from the Greek "πᾶν" means "everything" and "χειρ" means "Hand" all made by hand, then changed to the Neapolitan language in the past, it became the word "Pacca" which means "slap", since in the processing of fresh pasta it was used to slap the pasta to deprive it of air and to make the sheet thinner, the word "Paccheri" derives from the Neapolitan dialect in English "slap"!
Amarone della Valpolicella is my favorite red, with Barolo and Barbaresco as a close second and third. That meal looked heavenly as well, and you certainly have talent at the time of describing the dishes. In the future,I would love to see you visiting Osteria Francescana in Modena, by the great Massimo B. Stay safe & healthy!
This is one of the boujiest restaurant in Verona! I don't know personally a single person who's been there to dine. Also Maffei in piazza erbe and Perbellini in the countryside are way up there. If you want to try some BOMB traditional food from Verona you should try osteria Giulietta e Romeo. The Horse meat is awesome. Also in restaurants like il Torcolo you can try the traditional carrello di bolliti: an array of boiled meats served with pearà and other sauces
I have been able to survive this c-vid nightmare by watching all of your Beautiful videos! And I live in Hawaii!!!!! We are in our second, going on 3rd lockdown! No restaurant dining, no picnics on the beach, and all of Waikiki is a ghost town...since March!@$$%^*
At the beginning of the dinner you drank Ferrari perle, not prosecco. Ferrari is from Trentino and it is better than prosecco. Mark, tank you for your videos, they are wonderful.
I’d have to say that dinner was obscene! It all looked soo good. Except the flan, but I’m probably wrong. Except that after that dinner, you’d have to fast for 3 days. You just ate and drank 9,000 calories.
That truffle flan looks exquisite, and your description and presentation of it are tantalizing. If you’re ever offered truffle-flavored anything, and it costs less than $100 (possible exaggeration), give it a pass. Artificial truffle flavoring, if I remember right, involves petroleum 🤮
ted.angell instagram Hahaha...yeah in 1998 in the Politecnico di Milano (scientific university) they successfully synthesized artificial truffle flavor/odor and from then on hundreds of inexpensive "truffle" foods have appeared all over the place starting from "truffle olive oil". In reality real truffle costs anywhere from 600 euros x Kg (ordinary balck) to 3000 euros x Kg (black from Norcia) up to even 25.000 x Kg (white from Alba, very rare).
Mark; How in the world you cut the pasta with your knife !!! That’s the biggest sin you can make in Italy ! Keep up the great show and don’t cut pasta ever again ! 🙏. Ciao.
Mangiare bene in Italia è fantastico sia se spendi 2 o 20 o 200 euro. Mark vieni a farti un giro in Molise. Ma portati qualcuno che ti faccia da interprete.
@@EuroTrotter yes it's really nice, you know that you will always be Happy in Italy 😊 I wish you happiness everywhere. thank you too for your nice videos
Nice video! However it is packed with misinformation. 1. The bay leaf is a sage leaf 2. No, Europeans don't eat late (9pm onwards). This only pertains to Southern Europeans. 3. Valpolicella is not a grape. It's a region near Verona where Amarone wine comes from. The grapes used for Amarone are mainly Corvina and Rondinella. 4. There are no cheaper meat cuts wrapped around the fillet when Chateaubriand is prepared these days This is history and since many decades nobody is preparing it this way anymore, mainly in order to not waste any meat. It is simply the grilled center piece of a fillet, usually served for two people. But the music is very nice, but probably more appropriate for a Spanish episode. 😉
Appreciate the effort. Just wish you could do better with pronouncing the Italian words so that your English speaking audience could learn what the true pronunciation is. You're stressing the wrong syllables frequently (e.g. BER-ga-mo not Ber-GA-mo), and riding roughshod over vowels.
Thank you, I too wish I could pronounce better and that will come, for better or worse these are videos about travel and food and not pronunciation...I'm an American in Europe...can't change that lol
So many many many many mistakes!!!!!! Oh gosh…. Seems like someone that doesn’t know anything that tries to be classy and fail miserably… technically the video is great but dude almost every time you try to explain something is straightforward wrong!!! 😑. Please make sure to know what you’re talking about! Paccheri is not from Verona.. but what’s really completely wrong is the wine… Soave doesn’t have valpolicella grape at all (which doesn’t even exist….)… it comes from a different territory and doesn’t have anything in common with valpolicella region. Amarone doesn’t have “valpolicella” grape at all (it’s a region not a grape).. it’s instead made of corvina, corvinone and rondinella
So the stream of the bubbles should come up from the middle of the glass (4:38)? Oh, really?! Why is that? You failed to state why that should be and its significance. I have never heard such nonsense! Who the hell cares where the bubbles rise from. Also, like the Italian friends I made in Italy when I was there many times explained how gullible American tourists are - you just proved it. You gladly pay $40, $50 a plate for a less than a fistful of food on a 14 inch plate. How ridiculous is that! You should have just handed them your wallet as you walked in! The waiter looks like he's dying to laugh (at you). I've eaten in many fine, "fancy" restaurants in Italy and none of them impressed me. The food (always miniature on gigantic plates) was ordinary, and at time bad (like the Chevy Chase scene when he was in Paris). The best meals I had were in small mom and pop trattorias. I ate with the locals, and I couldn't give a damn where the bubbles rose from, as long as it tasted good. This is why Italians mock and laugh at Americans behind their backs, as many times to their faces.
Hello Mark, this is an excellent production, very nicely done, I have seen many food bloggers but this is exceptional, I thoroughly enjoyed the way you explain the food, location, the ambience, the presentation and everything in between. this is by far one of my favourites, thanks very much.
Hello there, thank you so much for the kind words and for watching. I truly appreciate the feedback!
International Foodie Guide
Errr...can I break the eggs in your basket?
He is pretty incompetent and got served a supermarket shelf spumante (Ferrari Brut) considering it a prosecco which it isn't.
The difference is substantial, Ferrari is a cheap bottle here in Italy (around 10-11 euros) while prosecco starts off from 30 euros at least.
The video is well done though you see there is someone who knows about lighting, filming and editing behind it.
Italy is a must from experience it doesnt disappoint it's a number one destination brilliant
Love it!
People need to take cues from you on how to interact respectfully and learn from their servers. Just love watching you enjoy and do food reviews. You are fabulous at what you do!!!!
I too love the wines of the Veneto region and again it brought back my memories of Italy through your travels. Bravissimo! Great vlog!
Thank you so much!
Through your videos I’ve grown more curious about Italy and I’ve been watching so many videos on their food that I can name them right away now 😂 I love the way you describe food. Many other travel bloggers only describe food as “delicious” or “it’s good” and that’s about it. Also love how much work you put into your videos every time. Bravo :)
Thank you so much for such great feedback. Italy is just gets a hold of you and doesn't let go, there is so much diversity between the regions in such a small landscape, which makes it fun and always a new experience! Thanks for watching my friend!
Thy Renaissance
The best part about Italy is that anywhere you go you'll find surprising and marvelous things and great food.
Everybody thinks Italy is "Roma, Venezia, Firenze" because they are the most advertised (and truly incredible although they have become too "turisty") but actually there are DOZENS of incredible cities and town all with fabulous architecture and shockingly good restaurants.
To name a few (I'm Italian and live in Italy) from north to south: Verona, Milano, Bergamo Alta, Treviso, Parma, Siena, Orvieto, Napoli (and the Reggia of Caserta, probably the most beautiful palace in Europe with among the rest a
fountain...that is 3Km/2miles long!), Bari, Otranto, Palermo, Siracusa.
Just for an idea...take a look at Otranto: images.app.goo.gl/hivbfSVLnfN1a4Ct5
ClaudeMagicbox I agree. I come from Singapore and whenever I see someone posting on Instagram that they went to Italy, I already know what to expect. It’s always the same few cities that they visit. Ever since covid, I’ve found out so much more to Italy and the cuisines that each region offers based on their produce - and I regret not visiting the Northern Part of Italy where the Dolomites are, as I was in Germany for an exchange program. For sure would do coastal towns first, those Gino D’acampo travelled to in his show because something about the high cliffs and the sea appeals to me. Thank you very much for your input, have a good day :)
@@ThyRenaissance
You too of course and welcome back to Italy when you'll have the chance to get here again :-)
And now I want to go to Verona! Mark, I discovered your vlog a few months ago after booking a trip to Rome (first time ever!) and because of your vlog, I said “I am dining at Da Felice” and had the cacio e pepe that you raved about! It was fantastic!! God willing, one day I will dine at this restaurant too 🙏
Marcela, what a great comment, thank you so much for sharing this. I am so happy you are enjoying the videos and that you enjoyed Felice as much as I do...stay safe my friend!
Mark this is one of your better videos. It was very smart to limit the subject matter to just this one fine dining experience. A truly unique approach to a food vlog. Keep up the good work!
if this is one of his better videos he sucks at this
Always feel good watching your food and wine moments.....they truly are conducive to learning yet the story becomes unforgettably palatable. Great production!!
Hi Henry, thank you so much. I truly loved dining at Vittorio Emanuele, what an incredible experience! Thank you so much for watching.
Nice video, well done. As a technical matter, the Ferrari you were drinking is not prosecco, its Trentodoc, made in the champagne method.
Love Ferrari trentino wine... 1 hour from.home 🤣
Hello Mark, Vittorio Emanuele is on the Michelin guide but it doesn't have a Michelin star.
Also the prosecco you choose is a very commercial brand here in Italy and it cost 10 euros at the market, it does not require a specific glass ;)
correct, i never mentioned it had a star, rather, it is michelin rated, with a plate...which means it's judged with the same 5 criteria as the star system and it is an overall excellent dining experience...and i am TOTALLY sure the prosecco is cheaper in the market lol...but the type of glass does influence how the bubbles stream....anyway, LOVE the convo! thanks for watching my friend
@@EuroTrotter that's not true, the type of glass doesn't influence how the bubbles stream, he more they are persistent and continuous better is the wine, but the "ferrari" it's just for markets, they have a premium version that's called "Giulio Ferrari" you should try it and see the difference of the bubbles (perlage)
Nice video anyway "alla prossima!" from Italy :)
What a beautiful video. We will have to put this on our list when we can once again travel to Italy!
Thank you so much!
Mark, I love your energy and enthusiasm about Verona and about your dining experience in here. But eating a crab & avocado salad, crab ragu and chateaubriand steak? these are not local dishes at all. Next time you are in town hit me up and I’ll take you to an local restaurant to eat authentic local dishes. By the way, “Valpolicella grape” does not exist (let alone finding it into a Soave wine). Cheers from Verona!
thank you for sharing and for watching Andrea!
I'm here for local recommendations please send them my way
Hello guys! Dinner was fabulous and delicious !!😊 Beautiful restaurant and very elegant. In Buenos Aíres the restaurant open very late in the evening and you can stay in for many hours. Wonderful video. Stay. Healthy and blessings to y’all 🤗🤗❤️❤️
Hi Carmen, thank you so much. Would love to get to Buenos Aires! Stay safe and hope you are doing well!
Enjoyed the video so much. Glad to see someone enjoy food and the whole atmosphere behind eating out like you.
Thank you!
Hi Mark, thanks for a lovely video in a nice pace. The Amarone is not a grape though, its a way of producing a wine with grapes that are dried. The grapes are Molinara, Rondinella and Corvina. I love Amarone wines.
thanks for watching and for sharing this info!
Learnt something new about bubbles coming out the Centre of a glass!! Grazing!
Thanks Eric!!!
Thank you Mark for your amazing videos !!!!
Definitely, you are an expert in choosing the right place!!!!! Love it !!!!!
Thank you Rocio De La Rocha, really appreciate that and thanks for watching!
Sir Mark...how did you ever managed to leave that absolutely breathtaking restaurant? OMG😋OMG😋 I was having a late dinner while watching this video. Forgot my dinner and was totally immersed in the feast you were sharing...I was drooling as well!
Thank you for the tidbit about the proseco. Stunning proseco glass. Reminded me of the champagne glasses my grandparents received as wedding presents in the early 1930s. Beautiful! They did not drink alcohol, so they used them to serve ice cream!!!👍 Sending peace and love. Until your next video, grateful to you for sharing your awesome experiences😊
Hello and thank you so much for watching and for the great comment. I LOVED that restaurant and the glass for the Prosecco was so gorgeous! What a great wedding present and memory, thank you for sharing!
Mark I am so impressed I did not know about the proper glass for presseco and am deffinatley getting the right ones for champane I've been to alot of upscale restraunts and never new that
Thank you Debbie, yes either flute or coupe but having a proper glass where the bubbles stream in a line from the bottom through the center to the top!
Debbie Brockman
He didn't drink prosecco but spumante (Ferrari Brut).
I hope see you in lisbon madrid and Istambul for show to us.
Your program is the best
And then there are people in the world who think that in Italy we only eat pizza and spaghetti (OMG !🙏🏻). People should travel around Italy a bit, from north to south, to see what great Italian cuisine really is, the various regional Italian cuisines.
Pay attention....there's Prosecco and Spumante (similar to champagne)....and Ferrari is a spumante 😉.....Prosecco is for pre-dinner and Spumante at the end in general
Bellissimo video nella mia splendida Verona. È una città che offre molto dal punto di vista culinario, unico appunto, "l'aperitivo" si usa fare verso il pomeriggio al calar del sole e non prima di cena 😊
Thanks to your brilliant videos of Verona we will include this historical beauty on our next trip. We will definitely visit to amazing restaurant. Thank you for sharing. We love your videos on Italian restaurants the best.
So glad to hear this Christine!
I had lunch at a Michelin-starred restaurant in Imola called Ristorante San Domenico. It, as well as the city, was mentioned as unmissable in a book by the art historian Vittorio Sgarbi, and when I dropped his name the owner gave me the royal treatment and I got out of there for about €60, way less than expected.
Wow that is fantastic!
Se non facevi il nome di Sgarbi ti faceva 30€
Sgarbi 😂😂😂😂😂
So happy to see such an interesting video about my city!
At 4:00 you didn't drink a prosecco but a spumante or the Italian name for champagne (Ferrari Brut).
Just we don't like the french name so we call all white sparkling wines made with champenoise method "spumante" or "foaming".
Out of curiosity how much did they charge you for the Ferrari bottle?
Here in Italy it's a basic supermarket shelf spumante and you find it for 10-11 euros in any market.
Oh and paccheri are not a typical pasta in Veneto/Verona because they are from Napoli.
Moreover Valpolicella is a geographic region not a grape (and Sartori is really a low end bottle my friend, again supermarket stuff of the lower shelves).
Ciao :-)
thank you for sharing and watching
Verona is high top destination !!
I love it there!
I can taste it from here great job in telling us what you are eating. Just went on vacation.
My guy gettin’ tipsy 😂, food looks great Bro!
looks like a great restaurant, without the tricks. So, how much was the dinner?
Nice presentation , simple vidoes but make me happy 😃 ( eat , eat & eat ) ❤️🙏🏾
Thanks for watching
your videos are always beautiful, refined and sometimes I see them again. I wish you to visit all the Italian cities and you will discover many small treasures.
I live in Bergamo and the upper city is a small jewel of the Venetian republic ti aspettiamo ciao
Thank you so much Claudio
another excellent video. the truffle flaun and the brownie hazelnut dessert looked fantastic. stay healthy. hello from phx az
Thank you so much my friend! Stay safe and so glad you enjoyed the video!
@@EuroTrotter thank you!
What a meal! Fantastic! After watching this beautiful video, I had to drink a little glass of grappa to help my digestion! Thank you so much, for all.
Thank you so much, thanks for watching!
Mark: Home run restaurant. Well done production with incredible ingredient backdrop.
Cheers Mark, always on the money!! Keep up the incredible work!
Your video is very elegant... Chic and beauty!
I am italian, i am veronese...
Verona è la città dell'amore, insieme a Venezia... a Verona puoi trovare il vino più buono d'Italia, come ad esempio il Bardolino, il Custoza, il recioto, la cucina tipica è tra le migliori del paese e l'atmosfera serale regala sogni ad occhi aperti...
A 20 km dal lago di Garda e dalle montagne, è una città meravigliosa,
My city ❤️
Dear Mark I'm sorry to inform you, that paccheri pasta are not Veronese but derive from Campania (Naples), the name paccheri comes from the Greek "πᾶν" means "everything" and "χειρ" means "Hand" all made by hand, then changed to the Neapolitan language in the past, it became the word "Pacca" which means "slap", since in the processing of fresh pasta it was used to slap the pasta to deprive it of air and to make the sheet thinner, the word "Paccheri" derives from the Neapolitan dialect in English "slap"!
I love the city & their cichetti bars, must try is Cafe Carducci. ❤👍👏🇮🇹
Amarone della Valpolicella is my favorite red, with Barolo and Barbaresco as a close second and third. That meal looked heavenly as well, and you certainly have talent at the time of describing the dishes. In the future,I would love to see you visiting Osteria Francescana in Modena, by the great Massimo B.
Stay safe & healthy!
Hi Gabriel, thank you so much, I really appreciate that, and I love the suggestion for Modena...I would love to try the Osteria!
Try even Ripasso del Valpolicella! 😉
Your server was extraordinary. How much gratuity did you leave him or what is an acceptable gratuity for establishments like this?
no tips in Italy
Peter was excellent, I can’t recall but it was at least 20%, service was impeccable
Great content thank you!
I feel so lucky to live in Verona every time I see videos like this! ❤️
thank you for watching
This is one of the boujiest restaurant in Verona! I don't know personally a single person who's been there to dine. Also Maffei in piazza erbe and Perbellini in the countryside are way up there.
If you want to try some BOMB traditional food from Verona you should try osteria Giulietta e Romeo. The Horse meat is awesome.
Also in restaurants like il Torcolo you can try the traditional carrello di bolliti: an array of boiled meats served with pearà and other sauces
My city 😍 beautiful at night in winter time with less tourists strolling around..
We would love to see more videos of fine dining in restaurants steeped in historical beauty..in Italy please.
note taken, thank you for watching!
thanks for the information about the champagne for glass 👍
You are welcome, thanks for watching.
I have been able to survive this c-vid nightmare by watching all of your Beautiful videos! And I live in Hawaii!!!!! We are in our second, going on 3rd lockdown! No restaurant dining, no picnics on the beach, and all of Waikiki is a ghost town...since March!@$$%^*
Great video, Thank you
Thank you so much!!!
@@EuroTrotter , Thank you!! your videos are terrific !! I decided to watch them every Sunday morning to lift my soul !! I miss Italia so much!!
cant wait to be here next year
I can't wait either, to start traveling again! Stay safe!
Love that jacket you had on at the start of the video - Vittorio Emanuale
Thank you, one of my favorite coats!
At the beginning of the dinner you drank Ferrari perle, not prosecco. Ferrari is from Trentino and it is better than prosecco. Mark, tank you for your videos, they are wonderful.
I’d have to say that dinner was obscene! It all looked soo good. Except the flan, but I’m probably wrong. Except that after that dinner, you’d have to fast for 3 days. You just ate and drank 9,000 calories.
That truffle flan looks exquisite, and your description and presentation of it are tantalizing.
If you’re ever offered truffle-flavored anything, and it costs less than $100 (possible exaggeration), give it a pass. Artificial truffle flavoring, if I remember right, involves petroleum 🤮
Ted Angell exactly right! Lol thanks for watching Ted and for the kind words my friend!!!
ted.angell instagram
Hahaha...yeah in 1998 in the Politecnico di Milano (scientific university) they successfully synthesized artificial truffle flavor/odor and from then on hundreds of inexpensive "truffle" foods have appeared all over the place starting from "truffle olive oil".
In reality real truffle costs anywhere from 600 euros x Kg (ordinary balck) to 3000 euros x Kg (black from Norcia) up to even 25.000 x Kg (white from Alba, very rare).
Hi Mark,,, are you ok? Have not seen anything for quite some time!
Fantastic content
I would never go for Chateaubriand in Verona. What is the. Point? . There is so many other dishes.
There is no Valpolicella grape , in amarone. Corvina , corvinone, rondinella and up to 3 more
I am from brazil my father is son of italians too.
Sempre a magna, te pozzino!
Love your videos baby! 😉
Hi Mary, thank you so much! Stay safe!
Have you another TH-cam Canal?
I'm sorry Mark, but paccheri are not a pasta from Verona, but from Napoli...
Thanks for watching and for the info!
Beautiful ! 😊
Thank you! 😊
Soave and Amarone use different grapes obviously. Valpolicella is not a grape. Valpolicella = Valley of Many Cellars.
6:50 That slice of orange looks like it was cut yesterday and left outside. :(
It's caramelized
Nice video but that Spanish guitar doesn't give me Italian vibes
How much was all.that?
Why is WITHOUT BREAKING THE BANK included in the title of this video? I see no reference at all regarding cost in this video???
If you check out the comments on the video, you'll see conversation around price. Thanks for watching!
It's my beautiful city!
Mark;
How in the world you cut the pasta with your knife !!! That’s the biggest sin you can make in Italy !
Keep up the great show and don’t cut pasta ever again ! 🙏. Ciao.
That’s awesome lol I’m always learning more Italian do’s and dont’s!!! Thanks for watching my friend!
Cool. Thanks for making those cool yummy videos ! Abraccio !
La bella Verona
Why the Spanish guitar music?
a wine pairing menu, that must be pricey
250 euro range from what I remember, not bad for two of us and all that food and wine, i thought it was reasonable
Pretty sure I could not afford the glass of ice water.
Albert well it was about 200-250 euros, I thought pretty reasonable for the experience, but certainly understand budget.
Videos I Want to Favorite!!
Thank you!
Been there once, 2011, 2 days
loveeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
Valpolicella is not a red or white grape.
È giusto spendere circa 200 euro per mangiare?
Si!
@@EuroTrotter 😆😆😆
Mangiare bene in Italia è fantastico sia se spendi 2 o 20 o 200 euro.
Mark vieni a farti un giro in Molise. Ma portati qualcuno che ti faccia da interprete.
Paghi anche il posto eh
Wonder what not breaking the bank means lol. We need a total.
it was somewhere in the 200 euro range
EURO TROTTER oh, not bad. Considering you had wine also. I’m jotting down all these places for my next Italy trip.
I'm sorry for the cameraman who can only look at these delicious dishes ! 😉
oh trust me, he ate them lol
paccheri are not from Verona, they're from the south
every Italian knows that your surname is happy 😊
i love that, thank you my friend
@@EuroTrotter yes it's really nice, you know that you will always be Happy in Italy 😊 I wish you happiness everywhere. thank you too for your nice videos
All great,but pls do not cut the rigatoni
Thanks for watching
To my philistine taste in wine, prosecco tastes just as good as champagne, for a third of the price.
I actually agree and prefer Prosecco! Champagne is too dry!
Nice video! However it is packed with misinformation.
1. The bay leaf is a sage leaf
2. No, Europeans don't eat late (9pm onwards). This only pertains to Southern Europeans.
3. Valpolicella is not a grape. It's a region near Verona where Amarone wine comes from. The grapes used for Amarone are mainly Corvina and Rondinella.
4. There are no cheaper meat cuts wrapped around the fillet when Chateaubriand is prepared these days This is history and since many decades nobody is preparing it this way anymore, mainly in order to not waste any meat. It is simply the grilled center piece of a fillet, usually served for two people.
But the music is very nice, but probably more appropriate for a Spanish episode. 😉
thanks for watching
TAPSILOG pa din! hahaha
Omg u cat the paccheri with knife. U shoudnt be seated in that dining room. No way u cut the past. U only can eat fish and chips
Appreciate the effort. Just wish you could do better with pronouncing the Italian words so that your English speaking audience could learn what the true pronunciation is. You're stressing the wrong syllables frequently (e.g. BER-ga-mo not Ber-GA-mo), and riding roughshod over vowels.
Thank you, I too wish I could pronounce better and that will come, for better or worse these are videos about travel and food and not pronunciation...I'm an American in Europe...can't change that lol
Tipical american One hand dining,I wonder is the knife a waste of time??
The waiter needs to be retrained. He opened the bottle with his hand without putting a napkin over the cork first. Knucklehead
So many many many many mistakes!!!!!! Oh gosh…. Seems like someone that doesn’t know anything that tries to be classy and fail miserably… technically the video is great but dude almost every time you try to explain something is straightforward wrong!!! 😑. Please make sure to know what you’re talking about! Paccheri is not from Verona.. but what’s really completely wrong is the wine… Soave doesn’t have valpolicella grape at all (which doesn’t even exist….)… it comes from a different territory and doesn’t have anything in common with valpolicella region. Amarone doesn’t have “valpolicella” grape at all (it’s a region not a grape).. it’s instead made of corvina, corvinone and rondinella
That’s not what chateau Briande is haha. It’s just the muscle at the head end of the filet. Do some research!!
I’d suggest you try the research…which might start with spelling it correctly. Cheers and thanks for watching!
@@EuroTrotter at least I know what it is, lol!
@@dougjones2065 theforgederby.co.uk/what-is-a-chateaubriand/
It’s Flan, not flarn , it’s Parmesan not parmejarn.
You make an effort to pronounce, Italian correctly, but bastardise English
thanks for watching and for the english lesson my friend!
So the stream of the bubbles should come up from the middle of the glass (4:38)? Oh, really?! Why is that? You failed to state why that should be and its significance. I have never heard such nonsense! Who the hell cares where the bubbles rise from. Also, like the Italian friends I made in Italy when I was there many times explained how gullible American tourists are - you just proved it. You gladly pay $40, $50 a plate for a less than a fistful of food on a 14 inch plate. How ridiculous is that! You should have just handed them your wallet as you walked in! The waiter looks like he's dying to laugh (at you). I've eaten in many fine, "fancy" restaurants in Italy and none of them impressed me. The food (always miniature on gigantic plates) was ordinary, and at time bad (like the Chevy Chase scene when he was in Paris). The best meals I had were in small mom and pop trattorias. I ate with the locals, and I couldn't give a damn where the bubbles rose from, as long as it tasted good. This is why Italians mock and laugh at Americans behind their backs, as many times to their faces.
Nice video ✌️
Thank you!
Great Video
thank you my friend!