Walking and Food Tour In Italy
Puglia is a destination that should be on the radar for all Italy lovers and this holiday combines the discovery of its superb cuisine and wines with easy rambles among gently rolling landscapes. Explore the ancient Sassi quarter and gorge of Matera, visit the conical Trulli houses of the Itria Valley and see how local cheeses, bread, olive oil and wines are produced. Try your hand at making the local orecchiette - 'little ear' pasta!
Holidays dreamt by you, designed by us. Share your dream with us today!
Day 1 – Flight to BARI International Airport then transfer 50 mins to Altamura
The trip starts today in Altamura, a pretty town with a walled old quarter of flagstone streets and white-washed buildings, located on Puglia's sparsely populated limestone Murge Plateau.
In the evening meet your leader and fellow travellers at a welcome meeting. Afterwards, our journey of culinary discovery commences with an included dinner of regional dishes at the popular Tre Archi restaurant. Our husband and wife hosts, Nina and Peppino, serve us up a feast of their home-grown vegetables and other locally sourced produce in an amazing array of traditional Puglian antipasti appetisers.
Accommodation
Meals Included
Day 2 - Bakery visit; option to visit Gravina's hidden underground city
Altamura is famous for being the only town in Italy with a DOP (standing for 'protected designation of origin') recognised bread. The bread has a hard crust and creamy coloured dough and usually comes in very large round loaves. We start the morning with a 20-minute walk to visit a well known Altamura DOP bakery where we watch the art of making and baking the bread in huge wood-fired ovens. Naturally, our visit includes the chance to taste the freshly made bread!
The afternoon is left free to spend your own time exploring more of the narrow alleyways and closed courtyards of unspoilt Altamura. Alternatively, you may like to take the local train to the nearby town of Gravina which has a fascinating underground city of rock-cut caverns, churches and passages.
Accommodation
Meals Included
Day 3 - Pasta making lesson; walk from the Pulo di Altamura giant sinkhole
This morning we take a short drive to Nina and Peppino's vegetable garden to see how they cultivate the vegetables served at their table, learn about the local varieties and help harvest them. We then go to their restaurant, the Tre Archi, for a hands-on cooking lesson where we learn to prepare the distinct Puglian pasta known as orecchiette - meaning little ears - as well as learning the tricks of how to prepare oven-baked vegetables, one of the specialities of the house. For lunch, we will eat what we have prepared during the cooking class. In the afternoon we drive out of the town to the Alta Murgia National Park where we start our walk from the Pulo di Altamura, a giant sinkhole, some 500 metres wide and 80 metres deep and one of the park's most impressive geological features. The steep rock face is embedded with caves that have been inhabited since prehistoric times and are an important nesting ground for rare birds and habitat for native flowers and other plants. We walk through a landscape of cultivated fields and wild grasslands along footpaths and cart tracks, passing old abandoned farms. The walk ends at the Lamalunga archaeological museum where we learn about the life and fate of 'Altamura man', a Neanderthal who fell down a sinkhole around 150000 years ago and whose bones became fused with the stalactites in the cave walls.
Today's eight-kilometre walk, an ascent of 30 metres and descent of 90 metres, is expected to take around two hours.
Accommodation
Meals Included
Day 4 - Walk from Castel del Monte; lunch on an organic farm
This morning's walk is in the environs of the Castel del Monte, about an hour drive from Altamura, standing on a hill on the edge of the Alta Murgia National Park. The 13th-century citadel is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and was the source of inspiration for the novel 'The name of the Rose'. Around the castle, fine wines are produced of the 'uva di Troia' (Troy) grape variety. We start with a climb towards the castle through a shady forest, descend the other side and continue through fields lined with dry stone walls and dotted with small ancient Trulli (the white, conical-roofed, beehive-shaped structures that are typical of this part of Puglia). In this sparsely populated region, the vast open views are spectacular. Our walk ends at a local organic farm, Masseria Sei Carri where we enjoy an included lunch of local produce.
After lunch, we drive back to Castel del Monte for a guided visit before continuing on to our next destination, the town of Matera, over the provincial border in Basilicata. The town is impressively located on the side of a gorge eroded by the Gravina River and is famous for its ancient 'Sassi', a UNESCO-listed troglodyte quarter whose origins date back to the prehistoric era. In the 1950s the government of Italy forcibly relocated most of the population of the Sassi which it considered a slum. Today the quarter is regenerating with hotels and other businesses moving in.
Today's eight-kilometre walk, an ascent and descent of 250 metres is expected to take around two-and-a-half to three hours.
Accommodation
Meals Included
Day 5 - Explore Matera's troglodyte quarter; walk in the gorge
This morning is left free to explore the neighbourhood of the Sassi where the stone dwellings are partially cut deep into the rock. This part of Matera has been continuously inhabited for 5000 years. Your Leader can arrange a guided tour with a licensed guide for those interested. Roaming through the maze of narrow alleys, up and down the stone stairs you will find yourself transported to a distant past. Sit down on a terrace of one of the bars for a cappuccino and soak up this magical atmosphere. In the afternoon we plan to set off directly from the town, on a walk through the deep gorge that cuts through the plain just outside the town. The walk also takes us to see some ancient rock churches.
Today's three-and-a-half kilometre walk is expected to take around two hours, with an ascent of 200 metres and descent of 170 metres.
NOTE: In 2019 the path down into the gorge from Matera has been closed and it's not clear if it will be open again in 2020. If it's not possible to do this walk we will drive round to the other side of the gorge for a circular walk around the Belvedere di Timeo for some spectacular views back towards Matera. This one-and-a-half kilometre walk is expected to take approximately an hour (as we admire the views!) with a total ascent and descent both of 100 metres.
Accommodation
Meals Included
Day 6 - Visit cheese maker; walking tour in Cisternino, olive oil mill visit
This morning we leave Matera and drive to visit an organic cheesemaker who has won several national and international prizes. We will see how mozzarella, trecce and nodini are made and try the freshly made cheeses. We then continue on to Cisternino, a charming town of whitewashed houses, shady streets, historic churches and elegant piazzas. It is famous for its butcher shops which serve a local barbecued delicacy known as bombette, little meat parcels filled with mince, ham and cheese, as well as other grills. We enjoy a walking tour here and buying lunch from one of the butchers is highly recommended.
After lunch, we visit an olive oil mill that produces oil using both a traditional and a modern press. We tour the mill and walk in the surrounding fields to see the ancient olive trees, followed by a tasting of the oils produced here.
We then drive on to our final destination of the holiday, the coastal fishing town of Monopoli. With its bustling harbour, splendid white-washed houses and narrow alleyways with a number of excellent fish restaurants, we experience another authentic slice of Puglian life. Our charming accommodation is a concept known as Albergo diffuso, individual rooms and apartments in a variety of locations in the heart of the old town with a central breakfast location.
Accommodation
Hotel
Meals Included
Breakfast
Day 7 - Explore Monopoli; visit the Trulli houses of Alberobello, optional wine tasting
We start the day with a walk through Monopoli. Later we head inland to visit Alberobello in the Itria Valley - famous for its iconic Trulli buildings. A trullo (plural - trulli) is a traditional dry stone hut with a conical roof and often white-washed walls, which were generally constructed in the 19th century as both dwellings and storehouses. Trullo is built singly or in groups of up to 5 trulli, and a group would be occupied by a single-family. Inside an individual trullo dome is just one room, although additional separate spaces were created by curtains hung across arched alcoves. As well as wandering in the town, there's the option to visit the Cantina Albea and the wine museum for a tasting of local Puglian wines, both still and sparkling - an excellent aperativo before our last night dinner! We'll round off our culinary explorations with a last night group meal either in Alberobello or back in Monopoli.
Accommodation
Meals Included
Day 8 - Trip ends this morning in Monopoli
The trip ends after breakfast at our hotel in Monopoli.
There are no activities planned today, so you are free to depart from Monopoli at any time and transfer to Bari International Airport - Karol Wojtyla (BRI), which is around 50 minutes' drive from the hotel for a return light to the UK.
Meals Included
Speak with our expert Holiday Designers today, get started by placing an enquiry now!