This first picture is a delicious bread and tomato soup. I was expecting something more like an onion soup with a piece of bread in it, but what I got was quite different. The soup is mostly tomatoes and olive oil with what tasted like the inside of a french roll soaking up all of the yummy juices. The taste was wonderful, and I loved the consistency, but I have a feeling soggy bread is not a consistency that most people enjoy.
Like all other meals in Italy, this one too was filled with carbohydrates.
Check out all of those fresh lettuces. I don't think I would even know where to begin making a salad with all of those options!
This next picture depicts my favorite part of the market - watching them make pasta!
The machines they use look exactly like the ones I had as a child to 'make pasta' out of play dough. Too funny. Spaghetti anyone?
WARNING: these next pictures depict items I would NEVER consider to be food and you could not pay me all the money in the world to eat them. Again, due to my lack of Italian skills, I'm not totally sure what they are, but I did take human anatomy so I can take a guess...
Hooves, or brain?
Tongue and more minced meat?
Definitely some liver, and not sure what else... But it doesn't look very appetizing to me.
Ahhhhh. Much better, back to the carbohydrates! PASTA!!! How amazing does the fresh spaghetti and ravioli look? This was at the store front of the previous pictures where they were making it. Looks very different than the packaged crap we get in our grocery stores.
Since Italians have such great pasta and bread, it's no wonder they also have delicious pastries! All sorts of cookies with jelly, chocolate, and nuts. I could have eaten these all day!
And just in case you were enjoying the pasta and cookie pictures too much and getting hungry... back to the meat!
I guess you can tell that the chicken is fresh since it still has its head, feathers, and legs.
And for the LAST meat picture... hanging, drying meat. As much as I love salami, I'm not a fan of the thought of meat hanging to try out for ages... But hey, who does like aged, dried meats?
The produce in the market looked fabulous - so fresh and plump. There were also large stands of dried fruits and nuts. It's like the bin candy stores we have here, but will fiber filled naturally sweetened fruit rather than high-fructose corn syrup filled candy! I got a big bag to take with me for my long day of adventures around the city.
I think this is a jelly dried fruit salad.
And of course, Italian wine - so good and so cheap!
Like every market I've been to anywhere in the world, this one had beautiful flowers!
I loved the coffee in Florence. You literally walk up to a bar and order your coffee. The only thing I knew how to get was a cappuccino- and I had no idea how to order non fat milk - so I was drinking regular cappuccinos daily. They were small, wonderful, and only 1 Euro. People stand at the bar, drink their coffee / cappuccino quickly and then leave - very different than the Starbucks we have here. Come to think of it, I did not see one Starbucks in Italy - their coffee must not be good enough for Italians... Bags of nuts and grains looks so healthy and much more appetizing to me than the meats and 'other' parts of animals.
ahhhh the gelato. I discovered pink grapefruit gelato and I think I died and went to heaven. It has to be the most wonderful and refreshing sweet I have ever tasted. I mixed it with the yogurt flavor and I just could not get enough. It was too hot while I was in Italy to have any type of chocolate or nutty flavored gelato, so I just stuck to my yogurt & grapefruit. I did try tiramisu one time and it was equally wonderful, just not as refreshing as my concoction! I ate gelato at least once and sometimes twice every day I was there - It's amazing I didn't come back 15lbs heavier! More cookies! These butter cookies were dipped in chocolate, or filled with apricot jam (my favorite) and super crunchy - cheap too! I got all of these for less than $0.50 US.
Last but not least - my risotto. All other nights I enjoyed pizza or pasta, so on my last day in Florence I insisted on finding some risotto. This is risotto with mushrooms. I was surprised that Italians don't make risotto with tons of cheese like we do in America. I actually don't think it had any cheese - mother goose approved! I enjoyed every bite and it was a fabulous way to end my food adventures in Italy!
I loved all of the food in Italy and plan to visit again for more eating and wine drinking! Ciao!
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