Small Group Cooking And Trekking… (trip)

Small Group Cooking And Trekking In Umbria

  • Italy, Umbria
  • Active & Adventure
Italy

from €650* per person4 DaysYear-round
Comfort accommodations Exertion level: 3
Operator: Let's cook in Umbria 6 people max
Welcome to Umbria!This package is especially offered to fans of walks and trekking who want to discover the most fascinating hidden places of our region. These walks through the gentle landscape of Umbria take us through a countryside that is timeless. Umbria is a region well suited to a walking pace and there is much to absorb. Walk through a varied countryside of rolling hillsides, vineyards, olive groves and forests alive with colour.
Trekking paths in Umbria is a great experience to fully enjoy panoramic valleys.
One can learn much by travelling along ancient pathways which once had a different use than today routes used for commerce and communication; a part of history we must not forget and which you can keep alive.
In this package there will be time for a culinary experience with wonderful cooking lessons in the farm!

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Locations visited/nearby

Italy

0 testimonials about this trip.

2 testimonials about the provider, Let's cook in Umbria :

  • Reviewer: Ryan located in California USA
    “Great part of our honeymoon!”

    My wife and I did the Christmas Vacation program on our honeymoon and had a fantastic time with Raffaella and Stefania. We had our private apartment that included a kitchen/living room with cookware, plates, television, etc.; a separate bedroom; and a bathroom with toilet, sink, and shower stall. Heating provided by radiators in each room. The kitchen included a basket with bread, jam, salami, sweets, milk, etc. for our breakfasts. We had a fantastic view out our window.

    Cooking classes were conducted in the mornings in Raffaella's home which is next to the apartments. The house was warm and inviting with a nice fire on the cold December mornings and her dog and cats lying around. Both Raffaella and Stefania are fluent in English, so the classes were easy to understand. Each day we cooked traditional Italian food that Umbrians enjoy around Christmas, working hand-in-hand with Stefania to make each meal from scratch. This included everything from hand-making pastas to making sauces and cooking meats on the stove. Each meal consisted of an appetizer, a first course, a second course, and a dessert, and each day after cooking we got to sit and enjoy the fruits of our labors in a private dining room.

    In the afternoons we went on private guided tours of surrounding cities, including Corciano, Assisi, and Gubio. We were taken by private bus with the driver Fabio and tours were conducted by a professional guide named Jana. We learned about the history and culture of each city and generally spent about 3-3.5 hours on each tour. Afterward Fabio gave us the option of being dropped off in Perugia (taxi back to the farm) or being taken back to the farm, with an optional stop at a grocery store if we wanted to cook dinner in the apartment.

    All in all we had a fantastic time and would love to go back for a different program if we had the opportunity. We have already made several of the recipes we learned here at home and the instructions were good enough that our versions were just as good. Thanks Raffaella and Stefania for helping make such a memorable visit as part of our honeymoon! :D


  • Reviewer: Kris located in Boston, USA
    Make a delicious meal in Raffa's home!”
     
    teach a singing workshop at the lovely farm of Raffa and Roberto and I have had the pleasure of tasting many of the results of the cooking classes taught by Stefania. This trip I was fortunate to be able to be a student in the class making a winter menu of Tagliatelle all' Amatriciana, Pork with Grapes, Crostata and Torta al Testo filled with stracchino and proscuitto. Stefania is a great teacher. She demonstrates the different kneading techniques for the pasta, the torta and the crostata and everyone gets involved and learns. The food is delicious and the recipes and apron are included. We all sat down to eat and had the wine that is made by Alberta, her mother-in-law, on the farm. It's a down home experience in a wonderfully hospitable home. Apartments are available and many interesting tourist destinations are close by that Raffa will happily book for guests.

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Special information

  • You need to form your own private group for this trip. It will be scheduled for a date you arrange with the provider. The itinerary here is just a sample.
  • Family oriented trip.
  • Offers some solo-only/singles departures.
  • Offers some women-only departures.

Itinerary

Day 1 - Arrive in Perugia
Arrival at the country farm "La volpe e l'uva" (Perugia, Central Italy, Umbria, near Tuscany). Check-in your apartment at 4:00pm.

Day 2 - Walk to the Etruscan Tomb of Faggeto
Hands-on cooking class starts around 10:00am. You will prepare a four course lunch that you will eat at the end of the class, accompanied by our wines.
The tour take place from 15.00, A guide By the Association Monti del Tezio will bring you by car in the departure place of the path and will accompany you on the paths.
Difficult: medium
Average excursion time: 2 hours
Length of the path: km 8,00 km
The departure place is in the park of Monti del Tezio (580m). During the path you will walk along the old Etruscan road that, in the past, linked Perugia to Camucia ( Tuscany). You will see the old church of S. Gratignano (475m) and the little village of San Giovanni del Pantano (385m). Here there is a medieval church with frescoes by Gerardo Dottori, Italian Futurist painter and pioneer of 'Aeropittura'. The path will end at the Etruscan Tomb of Faggeto. The Faggeto tomb was discovered by chance in 1919-20 by a woodcutter, in a beech wood (faggeto), from which the name of the tomb derives. Situated on the slopes of Mt. Tezio, at Cresta della Fornace near the hamlet of San Giovanni in Pantano, in the Commune of Perugia, it is dug into the banks of sandstone and is preceded by an access tunnel. The burial chamber is small and rectangular, and is built with blocks of sandstone laid in three rows, covered by a vault made from five large stones. The bench for the deceased is at the rear and takes up half of the floor. The front is crowned with a triangular pediment, and the slab of rock for sealing the tomb has conical knobs that act as hinges, set in the threshold and in the pediment, allowing it to be opened and closed. When the tomb was discovered it contained a travertine cinerary urn and a few burial objects. It dates to the second half of the 2nd cent. BC.


Day 3- Walk to the "Neviere" of Monte Tezio
Hands-on cooking class starts around 10:00am. You will prepare a four course lunch that you will eat at the end of the class, accompanied by our wines.
The tour take place from 15.00, A guide By the Association Monti del Tezio will bring you by car in the starting point of the path and will accompany you on the paths .
Difficult: medium
Average excursion time: 2,30 hours
Length of the path: km 5,700 km
This walk begins at the base of Monte Tezio (580 m). Start by ascending the tarmac road on the right until you reach the gate; this is the entrance to the national park. Takes the natural path through the woodland: it’s a steep accent and after 800 m you come to an opening (675 metres) where many various walks begin. We shall take the one upon your left that goes up diagonally with a regular inclination on the west side of the mountain. Once out of the woodland you arrive at rocky point from which you can admire the beautiful scenery of the valley, below you including Lake Trasimeno, Monte Amiata and Cetona.
A few moments later you will come to a green field, one that is characteristic to the peaks of this area such are the ones on the northwest areas of Monte Acuto. Both mountains display the characteristic limestone formations of the region which parallels the chain of the Apennines.
Continue to the right, towards the south, and you reach a small mound, where you will find the ruins of the ancient "Neviere" (917 metres). The discovery, cleaning and documentation of this ruin has been done by the Monte Tezio Cultural Association. Till the beginning of the 1900s these structures were used to accumulate snow during the winter season, so that one was able to use the formed ice through the summer months to make sorbets, cool down drinks and preserve food; this came about as a result of the compressing factor of the ice. There are notes dating back to the 1700s about the Neviere Monte Tezio. In local advertising papers such as the Gazzetta di Perugia dated 1864 you can read that the count Oddi Baglioni of Monte Tezio owner of Neviere, has some holes in the ground for the snow, that will create ice, and therefore he takes bookings from the coffee houses. By looking at the ruins you can see a circular section partially underground, 12m in diameter, and the base for the arches that once held the roof made from terracotta tiles. At the base of the Neviere you would have found bundles of hay to drain away the melted snow, also some 20m long bundles to isolate the snow from the walls, finally upon the top was placed a lid made of hay some 40 cm thick. From this site you can reach the summit (961m) and once there you can see a trench which was used as a lookout point for the valley, just as do Monte Pacciano, Monte Malbe and other sites of the same era discovered at Monte Acuto, and Monte Murlo where archaeologists are still working.


Day 4 - Walk to the Aqueduct of Monte Pacciano and Conservoni
Hands-on cooking class starts around 10:00am. You will prepare a four course lunch that you will eat at the end of the class, accompanied by our wines.
The tour take place from 15.00, A guide By the Association Monti del Tezio will bring you by car in the starting point of the path and will accompany you on the paths.
Difficult: medium
Average excursion time: 3,00 hours
Length of the path: km 6.800 km
Passing by a farmhouse just outside the built-up area of San Marco, you get to the remains
of the ancient medieval aqueduct of Mount Pacciano, now inactive for more than two
hundred years, but whose water once reached the Fontana Maggiore in Perugia.
After a short walk across fields and orchards, the arches of the aqueduct, covered with
climbing plants, almost surprise us, suddenly showing themselves in the depths of the vegetation.
Though it is just outside the built-up area, the place is incredibly quiet and silent. In the
background, the gurgling of a stream makes the landscape perfect.
Climbing up the built-up area of San Marco, you go along the Strada dei Conservoni, to
get then to the “Conservoni” (“reservoirs” where water is collected), set in a place from
which you can see a wonderful parorama, surrounded by a wooded area where a net of
paths easily practicable and stop areas with facilities have been made.
One of the conservoni is very old and dates back to the thirteenth century (Old Conservone).
Another one, more recent, was made in 1883. In the biggest conservone the water
of many little springs is piped. This water is still a precious supply in case of emergency or
drought.
Water, precious and vital element, has always had a watchman here to protect it from
poisoning or sabotage. The first one was a hermit who lived in a plain hut which was then
turned into a solidly built house where, always as watchmen, some friars and then some
peasants, who cultivated the surrounding land, followed one another.
Inside the house, now restored, there is the entrance to the Old Conservone.


Day 5 - Departure

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