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Art and typical food in one taste

what do we propose?

Explore Verona in the company of a friendly local guide

You can take a walk By night always accompanied with a guide

Discover the romance and theatrical character of the city

Visit Juliet's house and her famous balcony

We can arrange a dinner, even a romantic one

We can book for you a stay in Hotel/Apartment/B&B

We can arrange for you romantic and/or relaxing moments in a spa with treatments for couples



Some of our routes

🙜 Finger food tasting trail with typical Veronese products

🙜 Have lunch with a licensed guide in a quaint Trattoria who will explain what you are tasting

🙜 End the guided tour in one of the most characteristic and historic taverns with a tasting of wines and typical products

🙜 End the guided tour at a Local Trattoria

🙜 During the guided tour have an Aperitivo with local products on the LISTON of Verona while admiring the Arena

🙜 Route in Historic Taverns in the Veronetta neighborhood (quaint neighborhood)

🙜 End the Guided Tour with a ride on the funicular railway, and admire the sunset with an aperitif

DISCOVERING THE CITY THROUGH FLAVORS

Verona is a city famous not only for Art and the most hard-fought Love story of Juliet & Romeo, but it is also famous for Gastronomy. Rich in Wineries that produce Wine on a World level and thanks to this Home of one of the largest FAIRS IN EUROPE such as VINITALY.

Did you know that?

Verona's "bacanal del gnoco" boasts more than 400 years of experience in making traditional gnocchi, but one has to wait until the 1800s to be able to talk about "potato gnocchi." The introduction of the latter as an ingredient in the kitchen, after the discovery of America on October 12, 1492, was in fact slow and gradual.

The bacchanal of the gnocco, or Carnival of Verona, traces its origins right back to the late Middle Ages and identifies Tommaso da Vico as its founding father. He was a doctor who in 1530 managed to quell an assault on the ovens by the rioting population in the San Zeno district and, in his will, left written the obligation to distribute food and provisions to them annually.

Verona's main carnival mask is precisely the "Papa del Gnoco," it moves around riding a mule clutching a large golden fork on which a dumpling is skewered, not surprisingly.