Plastic garden chairs; this season’s must-have dining room accessory

Whilst polished concrete, artfully distressed interiors and industrial chic are all the rage in London and New York, there is only really one de rigueur fixture that I’ve noticed in many of the best eateries in Southern Italy; white plastic garden chairs and tables.  In fact, I’d go so far as to say that there appears to be a direct correlation between the restaurants that have these in their dining area and the tastiness of their food.

Pizzeria dei Platani, Laureto

In mid-September I was staying at the Masseria Fragnale in the hamlet of Laureto, just outside Fasano.  The masseria is over 100 years old, was extensively renovated and extended in 2006, and is now run by a local family who have filled the place with tasteful antique furniture, including unusual four-poster beds, carved in India.  

It was a few days of rest and relaxation ahead of the start of the school term; daily morning swims in the outdoor pool, taking my time absorbing Big Joanie frontwoman Stephanie Phillips’ book Why Solange Matters and then spending the afternoon driving through the more remote parts of the Pugliese countryside, stopping off at whichever cove happened to look particularly alluring. 

After spending my first night exploring the delights of Fasano (the nearest reasonably-sized town to Masseria Fragnale), on the second evening I chose to stay local and see what Laureto had to offer.  There was a rough and ready-looking braceria (barbeque joint) that I decided to swerve, before taking a punt on the unassuming Pizzeria dei Platani.  

Pizzeria dei Platani’s non-nonsense dining area and a typical evening there.

You had to place your order through a service hatch leading directly into the kitchen and the menu immediately piqued my interest.  Alongside the usual MargheritaDiavolaCapricciosa offerings was the ‘Leeds United’.  For context; Laureto is 60 km south of Bari, 500 km from Rome and over 2,000 km from Leeds, West Yorkshire.  I asked the chap serving me about the origins of this strangely-named pizza and he explained that his father spent some time living and working in Leeds (I’m guessing perhaps during Don Revie’s ‘Golden Years’) and that this pizza had been created to honour him.  For some reason, I was wearing my Taranto FC 1927 / Birra Raffo shirt (a risky move in Barese / Leccese territory) and this led to us having a decent chat about football.  Strangely, it turned out that FC Taranto’s current manager Davide Pedone is actually from Laureto.

I paid the princely sum of €6 for the pizza and a cold Peroni and when it arrived it did not disappoint.  The pizza came topped with burrata, crushed pistachios and red onions and was incredibly moist and succulent.  The guy who served me even came over to make sure it was ok; this was a place that clearly took pride in their food.  Not the healthiest of dinner choices but then again, the kilometre I was swimming every morning in the masseria’s piscina probably just about worked off the calories. 

Masseria Fragnale. Laureto, Puglia.

Pizzeria dei Platani’s dining area was covered but with open sides and the ubiquitous TVs dotted around showing the Netherlands vs Turkey World Cup Qualifier game (even the higher end restaurants in Italy have TVs mounted on the walls).  There was a large Italian family next to me with everyone from grandma right through the toddlers sat together enjoying their pizza.  The seats?  You’ve guessed it, white plastic chairs and tables throughout the restaurant. 

The menu at Pizzeria dei Platani (clearly this photo was taken before the addition of the ‘Leeds United’ pizza).

When your pizza was ready, it was placed on a plastic tray on top of a piece of paper and then you collected it from the service hatch yourself.  Disposable napkins were retrieved from a dispenser in the middle of your table.  Once you were finished, you simply threw the paper into the recycling bin and placed the tray on the pile to be cleaned.  A highly efficient, no-fuss system that reminded me of another legendary and wallet-friendly (£3.95 a pizza anyone?) pizzeria; Icco on Goodge Street in Fitzrovia, London.  Icco was the site of many post-work pizzas back in the early 2010s. 

Via Plebiscito (aka ‘Meat Street’), Catania

In September 2020, I spent 10 days on an impromptu roadtrip travelling around Sicily.  My final stop was Catania, Sicily’s second biggest city that sits in the ominous shadow of Mount Etna, Europe’s largest active volcano. Most of the city’s buildings are characteristically dark as they have been built with volcanic rock.  I very nearly moved to Catania instead of Bari earlier that year and thoroughly enjoyed my time in the city, finding it a little less hectic and more manageable than Palermo, its counterpart on the other side of the island. 

One afternoon, I decided to get out of the city centre and find a braceria that specialised in hearty, no-frills, Sicilian street food such as grilled meat and bacon (or intestines if you prefer) wrapped around spring onions, cooked over charcoal.  I was recommended a number of places on Via Plebiscito, a thoroughfare leading away from the city centre to the north-west.  The street was a little rough around the edges but lined with a number of cafes, restaurants and street food stalls, all specialising in barbequed meat.  Macelleria d’AntoneDal TenerissimoTrattoria Achille, Trattoria Il Principe – take your pick.  The locals apparently describe the area as “arrusti e mangia“ – “roast and eat”.  They’re not wrong. 

The various meaty delights of Via Plebiscito, Catania.

I had lunch at Dal Tenerissimo and then returned on another evening to check out what Macelleria d’Antone had to offer in the way of street food.  Via Plebiscito was pretty relaxed around lunchtime and I had a piece of breaded pork, served in a bun and curiously, a mousse of soft cheese and crushed pistachios.  However, at night the street was an entirely different proposition.  It was dimly-lit, heaving with local Catanians and the smoke from the various barbeques and grills placed on the street gave it an almost-medieval air.  The smell of meat being cooked was pungent and the neon red sign of Trattoria Achille made it look like a place that would be at home on Hamburg’s Reeperbahn.  The atmosphere was ever so slightly anarchic and felt very authentically Sicilian.

At Macelleria d’Antone, the service was brusque but efficient and I sampled a paper plate of the bacon wrapped around spring onions, a coarse sausage and a cutlet of what I imagine was horse meat (it’s very popular in Sicily).  It’s not something I would want to eat every day but the bacon and spring onions in particular, were great.  Both restaurants had white plastic chairs and tables throughout; as we now know, a firm barometer of quality in Southern Italy…

Bacon (or intestines) wrapped around whole spring onions. An acquired taste but actually a delicious snack alongside an ice-cold beer.

There are a number of other restaurants in the region that fit into this category; several of the more casual pizzerias and rosticcerias in Bari, Ricciolandia near Torre Canne (where the late Anthony Bourdain stopped for lunch in his series Parts Unknown) and most of the eateries in the bustling La Vucciria market in Palermo.  Dining in Italy can be a very regimented, formal affair if you want it to be and for many Italians eating is sacred.  Don’t even attempt to suggest having lunch at midday or dinner at 7pm, and alter an ingredient in a traditional recipe at your peril.  However, on other occasions, keeping it simple is king and what the plastic chairs and tables represent is that sometimes people just want to go somewhere they feel comfortable and relaxed, and to eat some honest comfort food.  

Where possible, I’ve included hyperlinks to all of the eateries I’ve talked about in the article above.  

Anthony Bourdain dining at Ricciolandia, Torre Cane (Parts Unknown, Season 10, Episode 9) and the lively La Vucciria night market, Palermo.

Back to Bari

When I first arrived in Bari early in January 2020, it didn’t feel conceivable that I’d still be here almost two years later and in a relatively settled state.  However, a series of events, namely Covid and a re-evaluation of certain life priorities, has meant that Bari has begun to feel strangely like home. 

Some of the most familiar sights from around Bari; September 2021.

I finished teaching in the final week of July and immediately embarked on a five day-long road trip back to Britain via Northern Puglia, Emilia-Romagna, Switzerland, the Rhine-Neckar region of Germany and the Hook of Holland (Covid restrictions at the time meant that driving through France was a no-go).  I spent nearly a month back in the UK in August and despite having weather that was mediocre at best, had a great time seeing old friends and family after 18 months of enforced estrangement.  

There were two festivals (Soul II Soul headlining South Facing Festival in Crystal Palace Park and Green Man in Crickhowell, South Wales), a boozy Mexico-inspired South London barbeque courtesy of my mate Mark, a Newbury reunion of ‘The Dream Team’ (a somewhat ironic moniker that my friends Anna, Jen, Matt and I created for ourselves, aged 17), a sojourn to Southend-on-Sea with Virginia to meet Rufus, Emily and Matt’s one year-old baby, an evening putting the world to rights at The Bowlers Arms with my old bassist and all-round-good-bloke Roger, a trip to a Thai restaurant in Surbiton with Chris, Jenny and Scott and lots of other catch-ups with old friends with whom it has been far too long.

It was also a chance to spend some quality time with my parents at the house I lived in from the age of 11 until 18 in Highclere on the Berkshire / Hampshire border and to see my sister, brother-in-law and nephews at their home in Buckinghamshire.  My sister Rachel and her family had a trip to Italy planned for Spring 2020 but this was obviously shelved due to the pandemic.  Never did I imagine upon leaving the UK that it would be nearly two years before we saw each other in-person again.  It was particularly fun to meet her new dog Sandy though; a very cute, lively and mischievous golden Labrador puppy with a penchant for stealing running shoes and food from plates on the table…

Fun times back in the UK, August 2021.

My return journey was a more leisurely trip through Northern France (restrictions had been lifted by this point), deliberately avoiding Switzerland (my unplanned overnight stop in Lucerne on the outbound trip set me back a small fortune) and travelling through Germany, Lichtenstein and Austria instead.  It was more eventful too; I went to an electro-pop night at the curiously-named Le Bistrot de St So in Lille (it is definitely not a bistro), had an incident with an incompetent hotel in Saarbrücken, Germany locking me out at 3am, left my favourite leather jacket behind in a wardrobe in Baden-Württemberg (it has thankfully now been posted back to me in Bari) and even made friends with the friendly owners of a newly-opened Celtic medieval re-enactment bar Taverna Le Madragola in Ferrara, Emilia-Romagna (highly recommended to anyone visiting Ferrara looking for something unusual).  It turns out that the region has Celtic roots and that there’s even a Welsh-speaking town nearby called Baldi. 

Parts of the drive were really stunning though and had an almost meditative-like quality; particularly the remote mountains of Lichtenstein, the area surrounding Innsbruck in Austria and the Alpine countryside near Salem and Friedrichshafen in South Germany.  After travelling through Trentino (I stopped overnight in the pretty town of Lagundo), Emilia-Romagna and final stops in Vasto, Abruzzo and Mattinata in the Gargano National Park, I arrived back in Bari in early September.

The highlights of the return journey back to Bari; Highclere > Lille > Saarbrücken > Salem > Lagundo > Ferrara > Vasto > Mattinata.

At first, it was a little strange to be back. The novelty has well and truly worn off and the city now feels very familiar. After the excitement and merry-go-round of constant socialising whilst being back in Britain, it’s a somewhat grounding experience to be back in a country where you still have limited ability with the native language and where the network of people you know is far smaller.  However, I decided that the solution was to re-immerse myself in Italian culture…

Within a few days of being back in Puglia, I had been to open-air concerts by Niccolò Fabi in Molfetta and Max Gazzè in Mola di Bari; both established and much-loved names from the canon of Italian popular music over the past 25 years.  Along with Daniele Silvestri, they also perform as the Fabi-Silvestri-Gazzè group and whilst virtually unknown in the UK, are national treasures in Italy.  Fabi’s music is more delicate and sincere, whilst Gazzè’s live show was more muscular and leant a lot on the earnestness of Springsteen, as well as some more electronic influences.  

Niccolò Fabi live in Molfetta and Max Gazzè live in Mola di Bari. September 3rd and 5th 2021.

I’ve made it a mission this year to discover more Italian music, in particular those from the underground and alternative spectrum such as Napoli’s Nu Guinea, Bari hardcore band Strebla, local funk / soul artist Walter Celi and electronic producer Indian Wells from San Donato di Ninea in remote Calabria.  I managed to squeeze my trusty cream Fender Strat and a small solid-state modelling amp into my car on the return journey so am hoping to find some likeminded Pugliese musicians to collaborate with this time around.  Bari has some great venues – of all sizes – and a lot of potential for touring. 

I’ve also already managed to get down to the Stadio San Nicola to see SSC Bari play – crazily, nearly two years after my first visit.  In the first game I saw, the team convincingly beat Monterosi Tuscia 4-0 and at the time of writing, are currently sitting top of the table, with a gradual buzz starting to build in the city about the team’s chances.  Perhaps this is the season for that re-promotion to Serie B after all?  Is a return to the David Platt, Paul Rideout and Gordon Cowans-era glory days just around the corner?

SSC Bari 4 – Monterosi Tuscia 0. 5th September 2021.

There have also been a few mini-road trips prior to the start of term; namely to Laureto near Fasano in Puglia, the small town of Ceccano in Lazio (luckily, the town’s annual music festival was taking place the same weekend we visited) and a week-long tour around Calabria, the “toe” of Italy’s boot.  Beginning with a fleeting overnight visit to the Medimex music conference in one of my favourite Italian cities Taranto, I then visited Crotone, Le Castella, Santa Severina, Le Cannella, Pizzo, Tropea, Belvedere Marittimo (the last place I visited just days before the start of the first lockdown in March 2020) and San Donato di Ninea.  With the balmy weather now starting to turn colder, it made sense to enjoy the south whilst it was still hot and to reserve the city breaks for autumn and winter instead (Firenze, Perugia, Roma and Siena, I’ll be coming for you).  

A snapshot of my travels, post-arrival in Bari. In no particular order; Laureto, Lazio, Taranto, the Calabria road trip.

With some new colleagues arriving at my school, there have already been some lively (and late) nights out in Bari, often ending up at the downtown drinking institution Piccolo Bar.  Piccolo’s has been a staple of Bari nightlife for many decades and it seems to close when it wants; 6am or 7am?  No problem.  However, whilst nights out with other teachers are good fun, as with last year, I remain determined to mix with more locals and continue making Italian friends, acquaintances and connections.  My Italian has definitely improved but I think that this year demands for a day per week set aside to learning the language.  The Duolingo app has been very engaging and great for vocabulary but it’s time to up my game…

It was whilst sat on a beach in Tropea a couple of weeks ago that I decided to write down some aims, intentions, goals and themes for the year ahead (you can tell I spent 11 years working in PR).  The ‘to-do list’ section is below:

  • 1.)  Write book number one (whilst I enjoy writing this blog, it technically is never-ending.  A book feels like something more complete – I have some ideas)
  • 2.)  Increase Italian competence (one day a week dedicated to practising?)
  • 3.)  Continue with blog (what you are reading right now)
  • 4.)  Begin business plan (I could be onto something here or I could be dreaming in Cloud Cuckoo Land, let’s see…)
  • 5.)  Explore musical opportunities in Bari and practise guitar 3-4 times a week (for the first time since the age of 16, I’m not playing regularly with other musicians in a band.  However, I do now have two guitars in my flat; an early 1960s Harmony Sovereign acoustic and a Fender Relic Strat, if you happen to be of the guitar geek persuasion).

As you can see, I’m hoping to do rather a lot over the next coming months.  As a result, the Set Your Own Scene blog will become more of an occasional creative outlet for me than something to be updated every week.  Some months might see me posting several articles but then others might be quieter, depending on what else I’m up to.  

Please keep reading though and as always you can keep in touch with me on Instagram @clivedrew and Twitter @CliveD.