Sunday Star-Times

Fall in love with Puglia

Southern Italy is beautiful, sunny, friendly and a foodie’s delight. Sharing some of the area’s delights here, it is no wonder that Nicky Pellegrino’s latest novel is set in Puglia, which is becoming more popular with visitors.

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The south of Italy is poorer and grittier than the north. The ugly and beautiful sit side by side, historic buildings quietly crumble, and life moves more slowly, governed by tradition.

For a long time much of the south was undiscover­ed by tourists. But that is changing and Puglia – with its red earth and cute conical trulli houses – is Italy’s newest hot spot. Helen Mirren has a place there.

Puglia lies in the southeast, forming the heel of this boot-shaped country.

Centuries-old olive groves stretch across land criss-crossed with dry stone walls, and dotted with gleaming white hill towns.

Word has spread about Puglia – its affordabil­ity, its wine and food, its history and its culture. But like so much of the south, it remains relatively unspoiled and is still resolutely Italian.

The iconic image of Puglia is the town of Alberobell­o in the Valle D’Itria, which is filled with whitewashe­d limestone trulli houses with their conical-shaped roofs. These date to the 14th century, and the story is that the quirky design came about at a time when there were high taxes on buildings.

Its dry stone constructi­on meant that a trullo could be dismantled in a hurry if the tax inspectors were in the area.

A lot of these houses have now been restored, and the photogenic Rione Monti quarter of Alberobell­o has more than 1000 cones.

Many of these trulli are now souvenir shops to serve the tourists who flock in. It is still charming and scenic, but other parts of Puglia are less crowded.

On a hill rising from the sun-scorched plains is Ostuni, known as the White City, one of the region’s most beautiful cities. Cool bars and interestin­g shops are hidden in the labyrinth of steep and narrow streets that make up its old town.

In Ostuni, a morning starts with coffee in the Piazza della Liberta` , watched over by the statue of Sant’Oronzo high on his ornate column, perhaps accompanie­d by some tette delle monache (it means nuns’ breasts), sweet domes of light sponge filled with a custard cream that is sometimes flavoured with pistachio.

Ostuni is a place to stroll around, whether it is over the slippery flagstones towards the gothic cathedral with its elegant rose window, or around the ramparts for views that stretch over the plains towards the sea and give a real sense of the city’s dazzling whiteness.

Originally, the lime whitewashi­ng of buildings was done for practical reasons – it reflects the sun so keeps things cool, and in the Middle Ages it was also believed to have disinfecta­nt properties, slowing the spread of disease.

The government now subsidises the repainting every two years to keep everything perfectly white and picturesqu­e.

In Ostuni’s narrow lanes, there are shady places to stop for an Aperol spritz – one of my favourites is Pausa Cafe, just below the main piazza.

In Puglia, no drink is served without accompanyi­ng stuzzichin­i (snacks). Most often what you will be served is a dish of taralli. Crunchy little bagel-shaped breadstick­s that are often flavoured with fennel or chilli, you will find taralli throughout southern Italy.

Another local rustic snack food is frise. These twice-baked rings of hard bread are softened briefly in water then topped with anything from olive oil, herbs and tomatoes to local cheeses, cured meats and white anchovies.

Further south, in the city of Lecce, fast food means puccia, something between a sandwich and a pizza. Wood-fired sourdough flatbreads are split open and filled with smoky cured meats and creamy mozzarella, or perhaps some meatballs and olives. Every puccia place has its own specialty.

The far south of Puglia, where Lecce can be found, is known as the Salento. It is an area of rocky coastlines, white sand beaches and harsh landscapes.

Lecce itself is known for glorious baroque buildings carved from golden sandstone. But there are layers of history, from the remains of Roman theatres to a 16th-century castle and the triumphal arches that once formed the gates of this walled city.

Round every corner you seem to find yet another extraordin­ary baroque church, with a facade covered in stone gargoyles, cherubs and gremlins.

Lecce is known as ‘‘the Florence of the south’’, and its main square, Piazza del Duomo, is considered one of the most beautiful in all of Italy. But I was entranced by the extraordin­arily elaborate Basilica

di Santa Croce, which took more than 100 years to complete.

A lot of restoratio­n work has been done, but it still feels like a living breathing city, rather than a museum. There is great shopping, including an outpost of Amalfi fashion boutique Antica Sartoria, and the city even has its own signature iced coffee, the addictivel­y refreshing caffe leccese, which is spiked with an almond milk syrup.

In the summer months, Italians like to head to the beach for a day spent at a lido, where you pay for sun loungers and a parasol, and can have drinks and snacks delivered as you laze in the sunshine. During the summer, the beaches become crowded, particular­ly the stretches of sand in crevasses between the limestone cliffs of Polignano a Mare.

One of the most famous is Lama Monachile – also called Cala Porto – which is right beside the town centre and popular with young people who like to put on show diving from the cliffs into the crystalcle­ar water of the Adriatic.

Polignano a Mare also offers boat trips through the sea caves beneath the old town perched on the rocky cliffs, as well as famously good artisan gelato.

The other unmissable coastal places are Gallipoli, beside the Ionian Sea, where the historic centre sits on a small island connected to the mainland by a bridge.

And my favourite spot, the seafront town of Otranto on Italy’s easternmos­t point, with its white sand beaches, shallow bays and rocky shores, alongside a hilly old town with a Romanesque cathedral floored with 12th-century mosaics and an imposing castle.

But if you are in Puglia, then you must go to the white hilltop town of Martina Franca, where over summer they hold a music festival and the place glitters with lights.

You must also visit the seaside town of Monopoli and to bustling, vibrant Bari.

Be sure to see the dramatic Castellana Caves, and stay in a masseria, in a farmhouse on an olive estate.

Eat a meal of Puglian antipasti (don’t make the mistake of ordering a main course because once you have had the fava bean puree with wild chicory, and the seafood and vegetables, cured meats and cheese, oh and the bread, you won’t have space for any more).

Puglia is a land of friendly people, boldlyflav­oured food, ancient history and masterpiec­es of architectu­re. No wonder it isn’t Italy’s best kept secret any more.

Nicky Pellegrino’s latest novel, P.S. Come To Italy, is set in Puglia and New Zealand, and comes out on March 14.

 ?? PHOTOS: NICKY PELLEGRINO ?? The town of Alberobell­o is well known for its limestone trulli houses.
PHOTOS: NICKY PELLEGRINO The town of Alberobell­o is well known for its limestone trulli houses.
 ?? ?? The limestone cliffs of Polignano a Mare on the Adriatic coast.
The limestone cliffs of Polignano a Mare on the Adriatic coast.
 ?? ?? The seaside town of Monopoli is well worth a visit.
The seaside town of Monopoli is well worth a visit.
 ?? ?? The Sunday Star-Times
Ostuni is known as the White City for obvious reasons, above left, while the city’s old town, above, is crisscross­ed with narrow lanes.
The Sunday Star-Times Ostuni is known as the White City for obvious reasons, above left, while the city’s old town, above, is crisscross­ed with narrow lanes.

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