milan ristoranti


ristoranti - milan

milan travel guide
Traditional Milanese cooking is made up of simple, meager dishes and perhaps for this reason it was banished during the ambitious 1980s. It has only recently returned to popularity. Milan is a city that lives off fashion and trends.



» Tuscany ristoranti -Tuscany, with its towns with museums, cathedrals, historical buildings, streets, towns like Florence, Siena, Pisa and more.
» florence ristoranti -One of Italy's most beautiful and walkable city centres, Florence contains some incredible buildings and a real medieval feel.
» Rome ristoranti -The eternal city of Rome is steeped in such history and culture that it requires several visits for even the hardiest of visitors to take it all in. From the Roman Empire to the Renaissance and on to modern times, Rome has been at the forefront of cultural developments and offers a trip through history which will leave you gasping for more.
» Roma ristoranti -Roma travel guide, tourism and information, holiday guide to Roma offering a wealth of information including Roma accommodation.
» Venice ristoranti -Venice hotels Italy accommodation guide, a selected guide to Venice Italy hotels, apartments and restaurants.
» Venezia ristoranti -Venice Travel provide a guide of Venice, giving you news and information about the city and suggesting lodging and accommodation in agreeable hotels.
» Liguria ristoranti -One of Italy's smallest regions, Liguria stretches west in a narrow ribbon along the coast from France. Mountains separate it from Piedmont to the north, Emilia Romagna to the east and Tuscany to the south. Even if you've never been there, you've probably seen its northeastern border in all those movies where glamorous jet setters hop into their sports cars and motor from Monte Carlo to Rome: the quaint customs booths any foreign film lover knows well are outside Ventimiglia.
» Riviera ristoranti -Five miles of rocky coast in eastern Liguria, two promontories lie at each extremity, thousands of kilometres of dry walling, cultivated into vineyards, five southerly villages castled up on spurs of stone or disposed in clusters of very small inlets. These are the coordinates of the Cinque Terre (Five Lands).
» Portofino ristoranti -Portofino Travel Guide - Find the best insider tips, reviews, and pictures from locals and travelers for Portofino hotels, restaurants, must see activities, etc.
» Bologna ristoranti -Bologna Travel Guide, find the best insider tips, reviews, and pictures from locals and travelers for Bologna hotels, restaurants, activities, etc.
» Milan ristoranti -Milano is Italy's cultural, industrial and financial center. The capital of Lombardia is also one of the main fashion centers in the world, and the second biggest city in Italy. But probably what has made this city famous is its Design industry.
» Turin ristoranti -Turin has not only been the capital of the Savoy Kingdom; it is also the capital of the motor car industry, of the Alpine peaks and of the cinema: precious collections, testimony to these facts, are housed in some of the most important museums in the city...
» Sicily ristoranti -Sicily Travel guide provides information about touring, accommodations and many helpful information for Your vacations in Sicily.
» Calabria ristoranti - Calabria lies at the extreme south-west tip of Italy, reaching over to prod Sicily from across the Messina Strait. The region is bordered by the Tyrrhenian and Ionian seas, and boasts more than 800 kilometres of coastline.
» Puglia ristoranti -Puglia constitutes the heel of the boot represented by peninsular Italy. The "trulli" of Alberobello, the Gargano peninsula and the Eastern atmosphere of the mercantile cities define the portrait of an ancient territory, marked both by the architecture of its churches and of its castles, which are scattered throughout the western region.
» Amalfi Coast ristoranti -Amalfi is the principal jewel of the famous Amalfi Coast in Campania, Italy. The largest and most popular resort on this mountainous stretch of coastline, Amalfi is a popular holiday base for tourists wanting to explore the area. The Republic of Amalfi was once a major seafaring power, and the town's traditions and historical buildings bear witness to Amalfi's glorious past.
» Capri ristoranti -Capri is an island which some people love and some people hate. Those against the island are generally those who arrive for a daytrip, and find an expensive commercialised destination crammed to bursting with other daytrippers. Others, however, love the combination of island simplicity, natural beauty and busy glitz. And if you stay overnight, you'll find a different Capri. After the last daytrippers leave, a kind of exclusive peace settles over the island as those who are privileged to be staying overnight emerge for their evening passeggiata, or to sip drinks on the famous little square, the Piazzetta.
» Ischia ristoranti -Covering an area of 46.33 square kilometers Ischia is the eighth largest Italian island and the largest in the Bay of Naples. Neighbouring islands are Capri, Procida and Vivara.
» Naples ristoranti -In Naples, all the pride and resentment of the Italian south, all the historical differences between the two wildly disparate halves of Italy, are sharply brought into focus. This is the true heart of the mezzogiorno, a lawless, petulant city that has its own way of doing things. It's a city of extremes, fiercely Catholic, its streets punctuated by bright neon Madonnas cut into niches, its miraculous cults regulating the lives of the people much as they have always done.
» Positano ristoranti -Positano was once part of the powerful Republic of Amalfi, and played its part in international trading despite the lack of a harbour. Surviving Saracen raids, the town thrived and in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries was famous for its trading with the East. Impressive palazzi were built; several are now romantically crumbling, others have been converted into luxury hotels. With the onset of the industrial revolution, harbourless Positano could not compete with rival ports, and had to wait until the birth of the tourist industry to regain its wealthy status.
» Sorrento ristoranti -A splendid and famous holiday resort, Sorrento stands on a terrace rising steeply above the sea on one of the most spectacular points of the Campanian coast. Because of its enchanting position and mild climate, sheltered by the surrounding hills, Sorrento has been a favorite resort since Romans times, and it became an elite tourist resort from the eighteenth century, its hotels welcoming such luminaries as Ibsen, Wagner and Nietzche.
» Arezzo ristoranti -Arezzo and Cortona are both found to the far east of Tuscany, Arezzo forming the third point of a triangle with Florence and Siena, with Cortona, barely in Tuscany, lying to the south of Arezzo.
» Chianti ristoranti -Your Holiday in Chianti area, cottages, villas, castles, traditional charm and modern comfort.
» Siena ristoranti -Most famous for the annual Palio, it is a city of quiet beauty, and the cityscape is easily appreciated by strolling up and down the largely pedestrianised streets.
» Umbria ristoranti -Often referred to as "the green heart of Italy", Umbria is a predominantly beautiful region of rolling hills, woods, streams and valleys, and despite the growing number of visitors has largely retained an unspoilt air.
» toscana ristoranti -Nothing can surpass the exquisite beauty of the countryside of Tuscany-it is breathtaking.
» firenze ristoranti -Located in the heart of Tuscany, a stunning province of hills and mountains, the Renaissance capital of the world, with famous sons like Leonardo, Dante, Machiavelli and Michelangelo, is a sight not to be missed.

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Teatro alla Scala
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Hotels in Milano
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Comune di Milano
www.comune.milano.it