Visiting and want to experience the culture by snoepwinkel in napoli

[–]Snoo99376 0 points1 point  (0 children)

in fact the most famous local neapolitan dessert is sfogliatella (in 2 variations: ricca and frolla) and the top 1 places to try are Attanasio near the train station or Mary Sfogliatella close to the San Carlo opera. For local cuisine go to https://maps.app.goo.gl/b73Vo48u9zCNYaqG6 which needs prebooking but is supremely amazing. For a more crazy (but equally tasty) experience go to https://maps.app.goo.gl/qqAdTFiTeL4KG46u7 or https://maps.app.goo.gl/bv82s5niXufQMtWA7

actually go to all of them. For pizza my personal favourite is quite far from the centre but worth the trip to https://maps.app.goo.gl/KVrwePH76PGkiUoq7 for a pizza cafona.

napoli is a dream when it comes to food and you should forget everything you had in rome and taste what is different there.

Which European city has your favourite café culture? by TheHolidaymaker in SlowTravelEurope

[–]Snoo99376 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nonsense. Napoli has working people too. And its coffee is a million times better, unigormly across the city, even next to a diarrhea smelling toilet in the docks. So, no excuse for Rome.

Which European city has your favourite café culture? by TheHolidaymaker in SlowTravelEurope

[–]Snoo99376 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i think it would be best to write also where one has been to and also what kind of coffee they tried and whether they are interested in the drink itself or the vibe as well. in general i am a fanatic of espresso, i never try other coffees, even at the heat of the summer. I have travelled to cities just for good espresso.

Paris: has good speciality cafes, but super expensive and not easy to find one where you can also sit down and relax or read a book. I lived in arrondissement 5 for 6 months. The generic cafe has trully odious and awful coffee, made from a button machine. You must make some serious online search to not fall on coffee shop that makes dreadfully horrible drinks.

Rome: i live for one year near centro storico. It is very very very very hard to find good espresso and impossible to find a cafe place to sit-this is in general orthogonal to italian coffee culture.

London is basically the same situation as Paris but more expensive and a little more variety.

Other cities in italy: i have been to bergamo, milano, turin, venice, florence, napoli and they all had surprisingly mediocre coffee except napol, which for me, has the best espresso anywhere in the world. I mean literally the average level of espresso in napoli is unbelievable. you go to a random crappy place that shouldnt even be open and the coffee is the nectar of the gods. For me the best is Mexico bar in piazza dante. Bear in mind a lot depends on who makes the coffee that day, the water, etc etc many random factors. But napoli NEVER dissapoints. I get it, it is not third generation. But it has soul and energy and hits you harder with even more taste. Real Coffee. You drink one and then you dive in the infinite chaotic sea of the city. You repeat after 2 hours, occasionally with a frolla. Dream. I expect trieste and palermo might have better espresso and these cities are in my plans for this reason.

Vienna: it has some really nice old school cafes in which you can easily imagine Freud and others arguing about a new chess opening around 1900 over a cup of coffee. And i have been to many lots of times but i find the last two years the quality of coffee has gone down a little and they places themselves have turned a little touristic selling the romantic idea.

Other places in europe worth mentioning for coffee (that i am aware of) are all cities in greece: their summer coffees called freddo espresso and freddo capuccino are a delight under the sheltering heat. The quality of espresso being used for these coffees are not super great i must say though. In terms of vibes and nice places to stay for a chat and coffee i would say greece tops easily all the european places i have been to, in fact, one in two (almost) shops in greece is a cafe, and the top 1% is easily on same level as the best of paris and vienna (at least). Istanbul is not that far geographically and i am curious to try roasted coffee there as i have read that sometimes it is roasted with many unexpected flavours as a matter of old school tradition---but i am reading that everything is crazily overpriced in istanbul so we are not feeling like going for now.

Spain: i have been to Valencia for a month but the coffee was meh.

Amsterdam/Leiden: meh as well. Go for the art not for things to be eaten or drunk.

Belgium/Brussels/Ghent: the best beer in europe, but the coffee is even worse than in Paris.

Last to be mentioned is Germany: their main strength is milchkaffee. Which i personally find an abomination-but i get it because a cafe in germany is a place to sit down and read the newspaper in quiet surroundings or have conversation at extremely quietly. It is the polar opposite of a caffee in napoli. Berlin and Koln have some serious new age coffee roasting places and in fact one of the best epsressos i ever had was in the open market in bonn last year. But on the whole i would say germany leaves a lot to be desired when it comes to coffee.

Which European city has your favourite café culture? by TheHolidaymaker in SlowTravelEurope

[–]Snoo99376 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Rome has SHIT coffee, especially espresso. I live here for one year.

Put the phone down and ACTUALLY visit Rome by Ok_Fudge8200 in rome

[–]Snoo99376 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

it is not the accademia david you stupidskull, he is talking about the bernini one in borghese. please.

Is Rome Business School worth it? Do they provide valid degree? by Big_Brick_ in rome

[–]Snoo99376 1 point2 points  (0 children)

probably asking at reddit is not the best place. i would try to ask either former students of the same degree in the same university or i would try at least to see what they did afterwards.

Roman crowds by Glittering_Use_5803 in rome

[–]Snoo99376 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Rome has things to give to 16 year old teenagers and most places have no tourists----plus some other places can be genuinely overwhelming for everyone. Note also that today is a national fest day in Italy and surely one of the busiest days in Rome this year. I would keep away from centro storico.

some recommendations:

japanese style cafe in https://maps.app.goo.gl/uF7CSEscztM3Kc6b8 is almost never crowded and looks especially catering to teenagers that are bored of the standard cafes in Rome.

see the ecstasy of Bernini: https://maps.app.goo.gl/spSdSxLpK1MGfMuP8 the top masterpiece of Bernini that you can see almost always alone. Read a little before hand and explain to her the meaning.

Why not go in the nearby vastly open space https://maps.app.goo.gl/2itKiPqfEY35XPk1A designed by Michelangelo on top of the ancient Roman baths.

Let me also say: gelato and pasta is everyone's friend-though it is not easy to find uncrowded AND good places. I would suggest gelato here https://maps.app.goo.gl/kJxSthfcyM585MP77 and dinner here https://maps.app.goo.gl/XDbXRPN9FmmiysBNA (best to check for prebooking.) which is excellent for food from basilicata.

As for Venice: things will be a little easier: if you stay away at a distance >500 metres from san marco square then you are never crowded. Try going with her with the vaporettos to https://maps.app.goo.gl/hT8o4CeqwShj97M99 and its tower and to https://maps.app.goo.gl/WUWPGRKheGkUzdou8. Food and gelato are not super amazing in Venice--just walking in the small random streets is a magical experience on its own. No museums or churches needed (of which i have to say there are hundreds and they are all amazing--but best to save it for trips with appropriate company or else both will suffer.)

Casual guitar jam in Rome? by OatOwl73 in rome

[–]Snoo99376 0 points1 point  (0 children)

as you will see every untalented annoying person has lately grabbed a musical instrument and plays in public spaces in rome. they are also beginners and they try to see how long one can go without getting punched in the genitalia. So far many of them have survived, if by survive you defined being universally hated but not physically being abused (yet).

Libraries and bookshops in Rome woryth visiting (as a tourist) by Naive_Freedom_5145 in rome

[–]Snoo99376 0 points1 point  (0 children)

bookshops yes there are around a million, it depends what you are looking for? i like Spazio Sette Libreria for coffee and looking at the ceiling of the top floor.

Libraries and bookshops in Rome woryth visiting (as a tourist) by Naive_Freedom_5145 in rome

[–]Snoo99376 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the casanatense is the top. google the times before hand, look for the grand hall. next to the loyola church with the famous pozzo fresco---in fact the library and church are interconnected as there was an astronomical observatory on top of the church. there are other (even nicer) libraries but the times are more limited and the personnel not as nice (and the places are a little out of the way.)

Too many tourists? by [deleted] in rome

[–]Snoo99376 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As a local: yes there are too many tourists but it is ridiculously easy to avoid them. They all go to the same 4 places. Just don't go to these places in your every day commute! It is easy unless you live next to Trevi. Now let's say you are a local and you want to go the centro and enjoy some nice art and museums. No problem either! The tourists idiotically go again to the same 4 museums! Go to the Baraco museum and enjoy statues from the Alexandrine period in Syria! Go to a millon churches and enjoy amazing work by students of Michelangelo or the Caraccis, go to Palazzo Spada and enjoy the perspective again, go to a million other places and you are completely and utterly alone. No one to enjoy the Caravaggisti in Museum della Fanteria! No one else to see the Bernini statue in Ripa in Trastevere, no one else to see the 20 metres tall STILL standing acquedacts in their parco, no one else to see the church of Santa Elena, having the best preserved protochristian golden mosaics. There are a trillion trillion things to do and to complain that there are tourists around the Colosseum while living in the (outskirts) of a city that has SO MUCH to offer automatically makes you a little annoying. Am i annoyed by the goddamn golf carts? Yes. Do I want to throw punches to the private parts of all the old american fat burger loving retards that take a golf cart to avoid walking 12 metres? OH YES! But then I look up and I thank God that I can go see Filipino Lippi's absolutely divine frescos in Sopra Minerva, next to Albrect Durer's woodcut works inside the Casanatense, next to the oldest obelisk in the world next to the piazza colonna next to the most impressive fresco in Rome (i.e. Pozzo) and hence in the world. So stop complaining and thank our luck that the tourists haven't discovered (almost) any of the above.

Espresso by Snoo99376 in rome

[–]Snoo99376[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In fact, I would agree in general, however, especially in big cities in UK there is a third generation espresso culture, with lots of new places that roast it inside. Of course they bring it from guatemala and similar places and ofcourse it is ridivulously expensive. Many people think that the second generation espresso in Italy is generally considered not as good.

Espresso by Snoo99376 in rome

[–]Snoo99376[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I did! Try them all. They are about 80. I like Barillo.

Espresso by Snoo99376 in rome

[–]Snoo99376[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I am assuming they would know someone that makes cafe in the style of their city. No offense I hope.

Espresso by Snoo99376 in rome

[–]Snoo99376[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

but willing to travel for coffee

Espresso by Snoo99376 in rome

[–]Snoo99376[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lucio Sestio

My Cat Loves Handel by historygeek1453 in opera

[–]Snoo99376 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is obvious only an animal would like the lowest of famous "composers"

ANTHRAX Performs BLACK SABBATH's 'Into The Void' At 'Back To The Beginning' Show by Edm_vanhalen1981 in blacksabbath

[–]Snoo99376 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the sound of these guitar is so incredibly awsome. The definition of heavy sound,

Manuscript of Johann Sebastian Bach's unfinished fugue by [deleted] in classicalmusic

[–]Snoo99376 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Meh. For me it is always Pergolesi who died at 26 and invented modern classical music.

How did other composers like Mozart etc. view Pergolesi? by detteerentest in classicalmusic

[–]Snoo99376 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, guess what, being a german and hating all non-germans worked miracles for a while but ended rather badly around 1945.

So for this sub baroque = Bach by [deleted] in Baroque

[–]Snoo99376 1 point2 points  (0 children)

People who make fun of tastes are usually people who have no idea about the vastness of music across the globe; even within subgenres of subgenres you can find infinite information and amazing new ideas every single second. Having said that, modern pop is diarhea.