Milan: where fashion is EVERYWHERE
Been over 20 years since I was last in Milan, and back then I had ZERO money, so I can't really remember much of anything I did other than walk the streets and loiter in cafes smoking with my mate. This time a wee bit different. I descended from my first class Swiss chariot at Milan Centrale. Judging from my map, the Starshotel I booked was maybe 12 blocks away on Lazzaro Spallanzani, parallel to Buenos Aires Avenue close Lima metro stop, so I rolled myself over there through the neighborhood towards Buenos Aires Avenue.
Hotel: Starshotel (booked on Booking.com 3 nights $306EUro, all in) Wi-fi spendy for the room, but in the lobby its free if you get a slip of paper from the front desk to get a 30 minute block. They stack the passwords and keep them in a tray , so no issue just grabbing one and hanging out browsing. Very 70s looking lobby, bu they tried harder in the ultra modern red and black restaurant where the included btreakfast buffeet was laid out. Very generous and varied stuff. its a hotel a lot of tour groups use. Rooms, small but modern, clean and everything you need.I had room 331, overlooking back of building onto building next door and partial garden. Quiet.
Near hotel across Ave BA, on via Tadino, Pandenus. average wine bar with a spread of nibbles such as broschettas, cheese, you can help your self to. Nice space, not too shabby to hang out solo and enjoy a glass of wine and bites for 8EU.
Porta Nuova and Moscova area
Rambled ALL over the city. First night tried to go to Bebel's on San Marco, in between Porta Nuova and Moscova, but they didn't open until 7:30 and it was 5:30 pm and I had not eaten since the disappointing prosciuto sandwich on the train.
I killed time at a cafe nearby on Via Marsala 2, cunningly named Marsala Due. I saw the entire neighborhood of Italian couples and families walk or stop by, all with a, "Ciao, como va?" from the staff. Great place to sit outside and wath it all go by. Glass of wine and a 'snack' of chips and salsa (whoah! I'm in Italy not the Mission!) that came automatically 4EU. Across the street is a fab wine, oil, sundries store, Cotti. Shelves ladened with wine, pasta, beautifully packaged pates, biscuits, tins of what nots, and in a crammed corner unit of the building.
Brera
Windy cobbled streets, chocka with restaurants,cafes, fortune teller table stands, carnation pushers and fake Prada bags sold by Africans on blankets. Warning: Small old cobbled stones make it tough on anything but flat rubber soles!
Convivium (Topkapi...both name son the door, so not sure what they call themselves. I just call them superb.), Via Ponte Vetero, 21. Spied this on day one, and flagged it for later to enjoy with co-worker also in town. SUPERB!! Eclectic Italian menu that verifies food in Italy is not all pasta, pizza and rissoto. Wine, apps, mains and dessert for two EU136.
Obika Mozzarella Bar, Via Mercato, 28 in the Brera neighborhood. I know them from their Manhattan location, so figured it was quality. And it was. Pizza, salad, wine 26EU.
Gelato. Have to try it once and they are everywhere. I lost resolve at La Sorbetteria, Via Saragozza, 83
Coffee with the local worker bees: boy do they like their coffee breaks. Dunno where they get the work day smooshed in between all those espressos. Close to 'downtown" towards Duomo are lots of banks and offices, so I popped into a few on Via Guiseppi Verdi to mix with the office workers (and not pay tourist coffee prices closer to the sites). Antica Brera, Via Joey Verdi 13, EU1.3!!! perched at a high top by the door and watched the workers "Ciao" their way with work mates and cafe owner. Not a glam place at all, which is why I liked it and stuck around reading the paper.
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Naviglio: old canals of Milan. Quiet on Sundays, but you can see loads of boutiques, cafes and restaurants peppered throughout the reviving area.
Coffee: MAG, Ripa di Porta Ticinese, 43. Coffee during the day, lite bites and cocktails later on. Overlooks the canal. Dark wood interior, very warm and ncie place to hang.
Lunch: restaurante bellariva, alzaia naviglio grande 36. Pasta, wine ($EU18 with tip?) overlooking canal. good service, large airy space. Tables outside too, must be nice when it is warmer and not raining.
Goodly walk from Duomo, sucks in the rain, but worth the trek to lunch at neighborhood restaurant Dongio, via Bernardino Corio 3. A Calabrian owner, I went traditional and had Veal Milanesa, salad,half a carafe of house wine, coffee & apple crastata. EU 25. I was stuffed and very happy to have lunched along side patrons who all seemed to know each other and the owner.
Spied not tried: looked great aroudn the corner from Dongio on Via Ludovico Muratori, 10. Hopping with office workers for lunch. Giulio Pan e Ojo.