Lucca, continued.

Trees!

We’re having dinner at a little trattoria in Lucca.Most of the guests are sitting on the outdoor patio, but since I forgot my sweater and I’m afraid I’ll be cold, we’ve asked to sit inside. We’ve been guided to a back room and told proudly that we’ll have it all to ourselves (which isn’t exactly what we want, since we love to people watch.)

Our server, oddly enough, is a middle-aged Scottish woman who speaks English with a heavy brogue. When we ask, she explains that she visited Lucca “on holiday” in 1986, met an Italian man, fell in love, and never went home. She tells us she loves waiting on tables at the restaurant, because she gets to speak English to the customers. At home, apparently, she lives with her dour monolingual Italian mother-in-law. The husband doesn’t seem to be in the picture any longer. Hmm. Sounds like something out of a Hitchcock film. I wonder if small amounts of poison are being added to anyone’s tea.

At that moment, as if on cue, a very vocal, happy British family consisting of three adorable children, their parents, and a grandmother, is ushered in and welcomed as old friends by the Scottish waitress. The grandmother’s very tastefully dressed and reminds me of Lynn Redgrave. The whole family’s remarkably good-looking, in fact. They settle in at the large table right next to us, which means, of course, that we can’t talk about them, especially since we speak the same language. So we have to be content with eavesdropping.

Beautiful Lucca

It turns out to be quite entertaining. I get a kick out of hearing small children speak in British accents—they sound so precocious! These three obviously don’t just sound precocious, they are precocious. The oldest girl, who looks about nine, is explaining to her parents in painstaking detail about how men and women go to a certain kind of doctor to improve their “sexual relationship.” They listen with a straight face, but I can’t help laughing when I hear these words, pronounced so precisely (sek-syu-al), issuing from her nine-year-old mouth. Meanwhile, the smallest boy, who’s about three and named Noah, is roaming around the room, sitting at the empty tables, dropping the silverware onto the floor and crumbling his bread into the wine glasses, as the Scottish waitress looks on with a benevolent eye.

In fact, she’s so enamored with the family (or perhaps I should say enamoured) that it’s difficult to get her attention. When we finally do, we decide to be adventurous and order the crostini with tomatoes and lard. Lard, you say? Yes, lard. Lard is big on a lot of the menus here. You can get lard with wild herbs and olive oil (just in case you didn’t get enough fat with the lard) or lard with tomatoes. I figure it’s a reasonably safe bet to order the lard with tomatoes. It’s got to be the rendered kind, right? That could actually be tasty, like bacon grease on toast with tomatoes. Artery-congealing, but tasty. No such luck. She brings us a piece of toast with several slabs of white fat on it. They’re not like chunks of lard scooped from a can, it’s more like bacon fat, except with no bacon attached. Just the fat. We sit there and look at it until she comes back and asks why we haven’t eaten it. When we demur, she starts in about how delicious it really is. She tells us all about how it’s marinated in local caves on the coast.

No pics of the lard caves, so you'll just have to be content with tourist shots of Lucca. . .

Come again??? Apparently they put the lard into these caves and leave it there for an unspecified amount of time, and somehow it gets seasoned. So now I’m imagining the lard caves of northern Italy. You’d better be careful when you’re spelunking or you’ll find yourself waist deep in marinating lard. I try a teensy bit and it basically tastes like uncooked bacon fat. Well, at least I tried it!

Next week: On to Cinque Terre.

Venice, Day Two

Venice, Day two. We are so jetlagged! I actually drifted off to sleep last night at 10 o’clock. It’s been years since that’s happened, since I have the worst insomnia in the world, so I was thrilled. But by two AM, I was wide awake. I realized the reason I drifted off was because my body thought it was having a nap after lunch, something it is wont to do. I was awake from two to seven AM (Rick too), then fell back to sleep. Seven in the morning, I guess, is a more reasonable time for me to go to sleep.

This isn't the trattoria we ate at- that one is called Maurizio's, and should be avoided like the plague!

We had dinner last night in a grungy little trattoria which looked romantic and Italian at first. Little candles on the table, red-and-white checked tablecloths, etc. Unfortunately, as soon as we were seated at a table for four—with another American couple so close we were forced, eventually, to take part in their conversation—it quickly began to go downhill. The bread in the basket the waiter plunked down on our table was stale, so, after picking around in it for a fresh piece and even taking a bite of one, I asked him, “Don’t you have any fresher bread?” He responded, “No, it’s all the same.” Then he put our basket, with the piece that had the bite out of it (!), back on the cart where all the others were stacked, ready to be given to a new table. Suffice it to say I wasn’t in a hurry to sample the bread from the next basket he gave us.

Now we’re in a café having breakfast, even though it’s lunchtime. I just ordered a hot chocolate, which is my normal daily allotment of calories in one cup. It’s thick, dark, bittersweet chocolate with salt and chopped up almonds, lavishly topped with whipped cream. It’s to die for (or from). And I’m waiting for my pizza to go with it!

The offending hot chocolate

This is while I was still recognizable. Now I have no neck.

We spend the rest of the day wandering, with no itinerary and no map, through the tiny lanes and piazzas. Except for the shop windows, which are works of art in themselves, everything’s ancient, and beautiful, in harmonious tones of dark red, umber and burnt sienna.

 

We cross the small canals and wander out to the Grand Canal and go over the Rialto bridge, where the North African immigrants hawk exploding plastic tomatoes and other toys.

The Rialto Bridge

Among the tourists you can occasionally pick out the native Venetians. They charge purposefully through the narrow lanes, heels clicking briskly on the worn stones, gesticulating and talking urgently on their cell phones. The middle-aged Italian women are very good-looking, thin, fit and stylishly dressed. I don’t think they work out, how do they do it? An irrational hope begins to take form in my mind: is it possible that I, too, could eat gelato and pasta and pizza and drink wine every single day and still be thin and fit? After all, they do it. Why can’t I?