Don't travel to Italy without the best Italy vacation guide around! The award-winning travel newsletter, Dream of Italy, offers savvy, insider Italy travel advice on Italian destinations from Cinque Terre to the Amalfi Coast, Tuscany to Sicily. We cover Italy villa rentals, new Italy hotels and restaurants, Italy vacation packages, shopping in Italy, private guides in Rome and Venice, etc. We'll give you the Italy travel information you need to make your Italy vacation a once-in-a-lifetime travel event! Don't visit Italy without Dream of Italy.Don't travel to Italy without the best Italy vacation guide around! The award-winning travel newsletter, Dream of Italy, offers savvy, insider Italy travel advice on Italian destinations from Cinque Terre to the Amalfi Coast, Tuscany to Sicily. We cover Italy villa rentals, new Italy hotels and restaurants, Italy vacation packages, shopping in Italy, private guides in Rome and Venice, etc. We'll give you the Italy travel information you need to make your Italy vacation a once-in-a-lifetime travel event! Don't visit Italy without Dream of Italy.
Featured on ABC NEWS and in USA TODAY, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC TRAVELER and U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT
HomeBLOGBook Your Italy TripDestinationsSample IssueSUBSCRIBESearchSubscribers Center
Get your free guide to Italy villa rentals...

 Search
 About this Site
About
BLOG (updated daily!)
Book Your Italy Trip
Contact
E-mail This Page
FREE Italy Articles
List of Back Issues
Online Press Kit
SUBSCRIBE
Italy Travel Discounts
 Destinations & Topics
Abruzzo
Amalfi Coast + Naples
Basilicata
Bologna + Emilia-Romagna
Books About Italy
Calabria
Campania
Christmas in Italy
Cinque Terre + Liguria
Cooking Schools
Dolomites
Florence
Friuli-Venezia Giulia
Getting Around Italy
Italian Life + History
Italian Recipes
Italy in America
Italy Travel Tips
italychat
Lazio
Le Marche
Lombardy
Milan
Puglia
Real Estate + Expat Life
Rome
Sardinia
Sicily
The Italian Lakes
Turin + Piedmont
Tuscany
Umbria
Valle d'Aosta
Veneto
Venice
Villa Rentals in Italy
Wine
 Italy Travel Products
All Products
Travel Gift Baskets
Framed Italy Photos
Gift Subscriptions
Italian Home Decor
Italy DVDs SALE!
Italy Travel Books SALE!
Note Cards of Italy
Travel Planning Services
Venetian Glass Jewelry
 Other
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use

Join us on:





Merchant Services
Google


Home | FREE Italy Articles | **Florence Italy Restaurant - Giovan . . .
 

**Florence Italy Restaurant - Giovanni: Not Just a Chip Off the Old Block (Free Italy Travel Advice)**


This article originally appeared in a previous issue of Dream of Italy.



It was a cold weeknight in February. Walking past the restaurant Il Latini, we saw a crowd, mostly made up of tourists, forming at the door of this perennial Florentine favorite. We were looking for something new and undiscovered and heard that Giovanni Latini, who had split from his brother Torello, current proprietor of Il Latini, had just opened a new eatery just blocks from the long-held family seat.

Family patriarch Narciso Latini began the dynasty in 1951 when he took over his uncle's wine store on Via della Vigna Nuova. In 1965, he moved Il Latini to its current location, the former stables of Palazzo Rucellai. Narciso ran the restaurant with his sons until a few years ago. The brothers' wives were rumored to have had a falling out.

It's always a thrill to walk into a place, especially in a tourist city, and notice that the place is filled with Italians, with not one foreigner in the bunch. That was the scene at L'Osteria di Giovanni and luckily one table was still available -- the one we had reserved.

In the Latini family tradition, this operation of this restaurant is truly a family affair. At 93, Narciso is still going strong (his granddaughter noted that his first ever trip to the hospital took place this year for something minor and he immediately asked, "When can I go back to work?") and is the host most days during lunch.

Get your free guide to Italy villa rentals...

Although proprietor Giovanni is always buzzing around the place, overseeing the dining room, it is a new generation of Latinis -- Giovanni's daughters -- who are the driving force behind this place. Caterina, trained at New York's French Culinary Institute, is the head chef. Her sister Chiara serves as the restaurant's sommelier. They both speak English like natives (thanks to their Chinese-American mother) and make American guests feel additionally welcome. The girls also have a brother, Marco, but he lives in the U.S. Their mother, Carol, makes the desserts (for example, panna cotta or torta al cioccolato; 7 euros each)and is behind the selection of the waiters' funky leopard print aprons.

A great family story is one thing, but obviously, the true test of a restaurant is the food. Our meal started with complimentary starters of fried vegetables (artichoke, squash blossoms, depending on the season) and a plate of coccoli (fried bread, name means "hugs" in English). For anyone whose beloved Italian grandmother made similar dishes, the surprisingly light, yet familiar taste of these traditional foods will bring tears to your eyes!

Next, we devoured a selection of appetizers including prosciutto, salame, finocchina, mouth-watering sheep's ricotta and chicken livers on crostini. The Latini family has excellent Tuscan producers and you can taste the high quality of the meats and cheeses. We decided against ordering both a first and second course and each member of our group moved on to veal ossobuco, potato ravioli with black truffles and tortelli stuffed with pears and Pecorino, respectively. Absolutely rave reviews all around the table.

Chiara says that the most popular dishes are Ribollita (a traditional Tuscan soup), pici (a type of pasta with sausage and kale sauce 12 euros), Smokey Gnocci (gnocci with smoked tuna, swordfish and salmon, 12 euros) and Bistecca alla Fiorentina (the famous Florentine steak, 45 euros per kilogram).


The next day, we paid an impromptu late lunchtime visit to Il Latini to compare the two restaurants. The experience -- average food, inattentive service -- proved lacking. To be fair, Latini is known for its frenetic, communal dining (there are two dinner seatings) and large portions. Perhaps we didn't try it at the best time or success has brought some complacency.

In contrast, there's a palpable hunger in the air at Giovanni -- the sisters and their father are open to trying new versions of Tuscan favorites, while maintaining a relaxing and welcome atmosphere. While they themselves may be hungry, the Latinis will make sure, you leave their osteria full and satisfied.

L'Osteria di Giovanni
Via del Moro, 22
(39) 055 284897
www.osteriadigiovanni.com
Closed Tuesday
Reservations recommended!


Printer-Friendly Format
·  ** NEW: Italy Travel Experts Martha Bakerjian and James Martin on Living, Working and Traveling in Italy (Free Italy Travel Advice) **
·  ** NEW: Pasticceria Penso -- The Best Bakery in Trieste Italy (Free Italy Travel Advice) **
·  ** NEW: Eat Pray Love as You Travel Through Italy (Free Italy Travel Advice) **
·  FREE Guide for Renting a Villa in Italy Dream of Italy
·  **NEW: Uncovering the Mysteries of Tuscany Tour Guide Dario Castagno (Free Italy Travel Advice)**
·  **NEW: Tips and Tricks for Saving Money in Italy (Free Italy Travel Advice)**
·  **Tips for Choosing Child-Friendly Lodging in Italy (Free Italy Travel Advice)**
·  **What Makes Italy Such a Romantic Destination (Free Italy Travel Advice)**
·  Osteria La Francescana: Avant-Garde Fare in Emilia-Romagna (July/August 2005)
·  **Learn and Eat at Florence's Olio & Convivium (Free Italy Travel Advice)**
·  **The Dream Interview: Author Frances Mayes of Under the Tuscan Sun (Free Italy Travel Advice)**
·  Travel to Italy BLOG: Daily Italy Travel News and Italy Travel Deals
·  SUBSCRIBE NOW to Dream of Italy - The Award-Winning Travel Newsletter