the best . . .
PIAZZA FOR
PICKING UP A ROMAN
Piazza delle Coppelle
Two blocks behind the Pantheon, the tiny Piazza Delle Coppelle
has three great bars and narrow streets with ivy overhangs—and, at any given moment between
9 p.m. and 3 a.m., an inordinate amount of Italian hotties checking each other out. It’s what Campo de’ Fiori was years ago, before guidebook overexposure ruined it.
SUBSTITUTE FOR
AN H&H BAGEL
Checco er Charttiere
Via Benedetta, 10–13;
(39-06-581-7018)
Order a freshly baked cornetto (Italian croissant) with a caffé (which is really espresso); eat your meal standing at the counter alongside grumpy commuters and feel right at home.
REASON TO LEAVE
CITY CENTER
Restaurant Sud
Via Antonio Bosio, 20a;
(39-06-442-02701)
After a few days of cacio this
and pepe that, you may well crave some non-Roman fare. At Sud,
in the well-appointed Trieste neighborhood, the menu stems from Sicily and Calabria, the room is small and modern, and the clientele is entirely local.
PLACE TO BECOME
A CATHOLIC
St. Peter in Chains
Piazza San Pietro in Vincoli
Built in 431 to honor the
chains that bound Peter the Apostle, this is a house of worship we can get with. The main attraction—the chains under glass—impresses
even ardent nonbelievers. It’s also home to Michelangelo’s Moses, which is, by any standard, divine.
Next: A Guide to Rome's Restaurant Scene
Email
Print




Are You Suffering From Quality Show Fatigue?
The Guide to the Very Best in Indie Culture
Edelstein on Frost/Nixon and Cadillac Records
The Southern Family Drama Revisited
Look Book: The T’ai Chi Teacher and Son 
Better Freebies From the Dicey Rental Market
Three Micro-Shopping Districts Besides Soho
A Bourbon-and-Barbeque Mecca in Carroll Gardens
Why Dick Fuld Is Public Enemy No. 1
Undocumented Families Hide in Plain Sight
Showbiz’s Ultimate Survivor, Liza Minnelli
Where to Put Your Money in 2009
