Eating Italy Food Tours
Katie Parla's food tours are the real deal - this isn't about touristy spots serving mediocre carbonara, but actual neighborhood joints where Romans eat.
About Eating Italy Food Tours
Katie Parla's food tours are the real deal - this isn't about touristy spots serving mediocre carbonara, but actual neighborhood joints where Romans eat. You'll walk through Testaccio or Trastevere hitting 4-5 family-run places, sampling everything from proper cacio e pepe to maritozzi pastries, while learning why Romans are so particular about their food rules. The guides are local food obsessives who'll explain why you never put cheese on seafood pasta and which bakery makes the best cornetti.
The tours feel like eating your way through Rome with a well-connected friend who knows every shopkeeper by name. You'll duck into tiny alimentari to taste aged pecorino, stop at hole-in-the-wall trattorias for off-menu specials, and visit century-old bakeries where the recipes haven't changed. The Testaccio route includes the neighborhood market, while Trastevere focuses more on traditional osterie. Groups stay small (maximum 12 people) so you can actually talk to the vendors and chefs.
At around €95 per person, it's pricey but justified - you're getting access to places you'd never find alone, plus enough food for lunch. Skip the weekend tours when restaurants are packed and vendors are rushed. The Testaccio option is better if you want to see how Romans actually shop for food, while Trastevere works better for evening tours when the trattorias come alive.
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