Zurers in Italy 2024: Monday, May 27
Day 29: Ravenna-Milan Malpensa
Time to come home. We have our last breakfast in Ravenna sitting outside on the terrace of the hotel, pack up, and get in the car for the 3 hour drive to Milan. We will be staying overnight at the airport hotel before our mid-morning flight back to the US. We decide to make a short detour in order to have lunch at Nuovo Nando, just outside Brescia. We had eaten there early in the trip and we couldn't stop thinking about the local version of ravioli--casoncelli--that I had enjoyed.
We are not disappointed...the meal is as good as we remembered. We share the steak tartare to start and we both have the casoncelli. The pasta dough is so delicate that it melts in your mouth--the best we have ever had. We look forward to returning.
Arriving at Malpensa, we check in to the very large Sheraton Hotel that is in the main terminal. The space is huge and it is a very long walk from the front desk to the rooms. Though the room resembles an American hotel room, it is not very comfortable--very small, no desk, and only one chair. We hang out in the hotel for rest of the day...Diana quilts in the large sitting area and we have a mediocre meal in the cavernous hotel dining room.
Tomorrow we return to the US.
The trip has really worked out very well...the weather, the itinerary, the hotels, the meetings with friends. The month flew by and we are ambivalent about whether we are ready to go home. It occurs to me that our last three trips have had complicating factors. In 2019, both of us had medical issues that were somewhat challenging. Then we missed two years because of the pandemic. In 2022, we got COVID and last year, when we went in late June, it was very hot. In any case, I think we are ready to think about our next Italian adventure for 2025.
NOTE: I want to correct a typo and a possible lack of clarity about the Passover/Easter calendar issue from the previous report.
A note in the explanation of the calendar mentions that the Council of Nicea in 325 A.D. wanted to decouple the observance of Easter and Passover so they decreed that, in the future, they would never fall on the same day. Easter would always fall on a Sunday since the Rabbinical Jewish calendar had been adjusted to align with the solar calendar so that the 15th of Nisan always falls on a Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday, or Saturday--never on Sunday.
1. The last part should read: ....the first Seder (the 14th of Nisan) always falls on a
Saturday, Monday, Thursday, or Friday---never on Sunday.
2. The Jewish Rabbinical calendar establishing the days of the Seder was developed in the 6th century BCE during the Babylonian Captivity. The Council of Nicea (325 CE) was aware of the Jewish calendar when they decreed that Easter would always be celebrated on a Sunday and never on the same day of the week as the first Passover Seder.
P.S. Some random questions from Diana, at the end of a wonderful trip.
1. How is the experience of visiting churches different for a believer?
2. After seeing hundreds of graceful, beautiful deer-crossing signs, will we ever see a deer?
3. Will Rome still be Jim's favorite place in Italy as it becomes more inundated with tourists - and dirt?
4. Jim routinely walks 7-9 miles a day. At home, my walking mostly consists of walking to the elevator and walking in the garage to get into the car. In Italy I walked 1-3 miles a day. Yay! Will I now walk at home?
5. What ever happened to those trash containers on tables in Italian restaurants, where you disposed of your tea bag wrapper, etc. ?
6. What happened to the prostitutes you always saw standing on the road, on the outskirts of towns? We only saw 2 this trip.
7. Where is the anthropological study comparing Thai and Italian cultures? Two places where we feel so at home and so connected, must have some common values and attributes. I have speculated about this.
8. Will this be my first ever trip to Italy where I haven't gained any weight?
9. And a question whose answer I know. Is there a more beautiful, fascinating place on earth for us than Italy? Nope.
Btw, I only read 4 books this trip but can recommend all of them. All are novels that brilliantly grapple with difficult historical events.
James by Percival Everett: A reimagining of Huckleberry Finn from the point of view of the enslaved Jim
The Moon and the Bonfires by Cesare Pavese - Translated by Tim Parks: An Italian returns to his rural village in Piedmont after WWII and after spending 25 years in America.
More Than I Love My Life by David Grossman - Translated by Jessica Cohen: Four members of an Israeli family travel to the site of a former labor camp of Tito's where the grandmother had been interred - uncovering personal and political history. Based on a true story.
Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan: The main character discovers the horrors of the Magdalen Laundries in his local convent, where he delivers coal.