Best Pizza in Naples, Italy
Join us as we seek out the best pizza in Naples, Italy eating 10 pizzas at 5 different pizzerias in Napoli. We try numerous different types of pizza such as street food pizza while focusing heavily on eating the original pizza Napoletana (Neapolitan pizza) known locally as pizza margherita featuring San Marzano tomatoes, Mozzarella di Bufala Campana cheese, fresh basil, salt and extra-virgin olive oil as well as pizza marinara made with plain marinara sauce without cheese and seasoned with garlic and oregano as part of Neapolitan cuisine.
The follow is a list of the pizzerias we visited in Naples, Italy in order of appearance in the pizza video:
1) L'Antica Pizzeria da Michele
Pizza Restaurant
Address: Via Cesare Sersale, 1, 80139 Napoli NA, Italy
Hours: 11AM–11PM (Monday to Saturday)
Phone: +39 081 553 9204
2) Antica Pizzeria Port'Alba
Pizza Restaurant
Address: Via Port'Alba, 18, 80134 Napoli NA, Italy
Hours: 11:30AM–1:30AM (Daily)
Phone: +39 081 459713
3) Pizzeria Di Matteo
Pizza Restaurant
Address: Via dei Tribunali, 94, 80138 Napoli NA, Italy
Hours: 11AM–3:30PM; 7:30–11:30PM (Monday to Saturday)
Phone: +39 081 455262
4) Pizzeria Dal Presidente
Pizza Restaurant
Address: Via dei Tribunali, 120, 80138 Napoli NA, Italy
Hours: 12–3:30PM, 7–11:30PM (Daily)
Phone: +39 081 296710
5) La Cantina Dei Mille
Pizza Restaurant
Address: Piazza Giuseppe Garibaldi, 126, 80142 Napoli NA, Italy
Hours: 9AM–12AM (Daily)
Phone: +39 081 283448
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Best Pizza in Naples, Italy Travel Food Video Transcript:
We have just arrived here in Naples and we are in town on a mission. Our mission is simple. To eat as much pizza as possible. Pizza was my favorite food growing up and we are visiting Naples the birthplace of pizza (Neapolitan pizza). We've got two days here. Our goal is to try and hit up five different pizzerias. We've searched the best of the best. We're going to visit them all and then we're going to rank them and let you know what our favorite one is. Let's eat pizza.
We are now approaching our first pizzeria of the day. It is just down the street. We're going to be eating at L'Antica Pizzeria da Michele. It is one of the most famous pizzerias in the whole city because they filmed a scene of Eat, Pray, Love here with Julia Roberts when she comes to Naples to devour pizza.
We're going to be ordering two kinds of pizza. We are planning to go for the margherita and marinara.
Wow! Is one way to describe that pizza experience. So it was delicious. It was amazing. It was huge. It was crowded.
It is time for our second pizza of the day. We have come to Port'Alba which has the distinction of being one of the oldest pizzerias in all of Naples. This one dates back to 1738.
Third pizzeria here in Naples and right now yes we're at Di Matteo. There is a huge crowd. At Di Matteo they are really popular for their street food. Like street pizza. We got a fried pizza and I got al forno which is in the oven - basically a folded margherita. Calling it portafoglio because it has been folded in four.
Pizza number 2 at Di Matteo was the fried variety. Pizza frita. It cost 1.50 Euros.
This is our forth pizzeria here in Naples called El Pizzeria Dal Presidente. We ordered the pizza margherita and a fried one with salami, pomodoro and two kinds of cheese.
We are at pizza place five of five at a place called La Cantina Dei Mille right by the train station.
We are feeling pretty stuffed. 10 pizzas in 2 days. That is a lot of pizza.
That was an insane pizza taste test in Naples. We got to try the best pizzas in the whole city (pizza Napoletana) and that makes me happy because I love pizza. We hope you guys enjoyed following along on this pizza adventure in Naples (pizza Napoletana). Ciao.
This is part of our Travel in Italy video series showcasing Italian food, Italian culture and Italian cuisine.
Music:
Bushwick Tarantella by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Artist:
Non Piu Andrai by Ron Meixsell from YouTube Audio
10, Matera, i sassi e la pizza
A Matera abbiamo trovato un'ospitalità fuori dal comune, con Liliana che ci ha fatto dormire nel suo mini-appartamento e Antonio che ci ha offerto la cena nella sua pizzeria.
Ogni giorno un breve video che fa conoscere meglio Davide Urso e Maria Angelica Uscategui.
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Full blog post:
The first in the series is this trattoria near Grant and Green. Known for its thin-crust pizza, the restaurant might be small, but the family who own it are larger than life. Walter and Stefania Gambaccini, and sons Elia and Filippo, are recent immigrants to North Beach, moving here from the village of Altopascio near Lucca, after buying the old Danilo Bakery.
Ancient Exploring: Part 1 Medieval Castle of Vairano Patenora, Italy
This is part 1 of 2 on the Medieval Castle of Vairano Patenora. Here I feature the medieval village that is at the foot of the castle.
See part 2 here:
The territory was initially occupied by the Samnites. After the Roman conquest (290 B.C. at the end of the third Samnite War) depended from the town hall of Sidicinum Teanum and in epoch tall medieval-passed to the Lombards. In the XI century Normans erected a castle, involved in the struggles between the emperor Henry IV and king of Sicily Tancredi. The Conte Ruggero of Chieti, which favored the king Tancredi, rejected the siege of the castle conducted by the imperial troops and the abbot Roffredo in 1193. Hereinafter briefly were guests of the Castle Frederick II of Swabia, Charles II of Anjou and Pope Gregory X.
In 1437 the city was sacked by the Patriarch Vitellesco. In 1460 it resisted again to a second siege by the Angevins, during the war between the king of Naples, Ferrante of Aragon and his rival Giovanni of Anjou, but the following year the castle was almost totally destroyed by Marino Marzano, an opponent of the Aragonese and the city remained depopulata et dehabitata. The present castle was rebuilt between 1491 and 1503 by Baron Innico II d'Avalos, who rebuilt the city walls. In 1500 was built the village of Marzanello as an outpost.
In 1590 Vairano was purchased by Baron Antonio Mormile of Frignano Cacciapuoti. The Cacciapuoti obtained the title of Duke of Vairano in 1628 and in 1660 they restored again the castle, which remained in the possession of the family until the abolition of feudalism in 1806.
During the fascist period, in the tavern of the chain was locked up the thinker and communist philosopher Antonio Gramsci.
The fortified walls of the medieval village were interspersed with 14 cylindrical towers on the basis of the escarpment and opened with three gates (Porta Oliva, carries means, or of the Mezzogiorno, and Porta Castello, or Sant'Andrea).
The Tavern of the chain
in 1700 along the consular roads Vairano, Via Latina and Venafrana, sprouted several tavernas, for the stop and the change of the horses of the postmen and wayfarer; the best known is the tavern of the chain whose name derives from the fact that when the king went hunting in the nearby nature reserve of Torcino, The crossing was crossed by a chain. It was built by the Duke Domenico Mariconda around 1720. The aforesaid Taverna is passed into history as the place where took place the historic meeting of 26 October 1860, which sanctioned the unification of Italy, between the King Vittorio Emanuele II and the General Giuseppe Garibaldi.
Marzanello
Il Borgo di Marzanello, locality of Vairano Patenora, was created in the sixteenth century as an outpost. It is formed by a few houses and the church of San Nicola, recently restructured. Toward the half of the XVIII century the population began to move toward the current urban agglomerate. Nearby is the church of Santa Maria del Monte, with two aisles, with frescoes and a painting depicting the Virgin and the Palazzone, roman villa of the I century B.C., subsequently fortified in the Middle Ages. We must not forget the Fontana del Vallo, discreet historical interest.
Certainly deserve a visit the Aragonese Castle and the Abbey of Ferrara.
Vairano Patenora also proposes an excellent gastronomic tradition. Once tasted is impossible to forget the taste of typical pork sausage, Sauciccia Vairano, or della Pezza, a pecorino cheese already known in medieval times and then, inalienable, are the tasty peschiole, fruitlets pesco collected still green, cooked in water and vinegar and flavored with spices. Finally, the king of Vairan, the giant Lupin, also called Lupinone, today a Slow Food Presidium.
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Help Support this channel and buy an Open Roader T-Shirt here:
Music:
Ancient Exploring: Part 2 Medieval Castle of Vairano Patenora, Italy
This is part 2 of 2 on the Medieval Castle of Vairano Patenora. Here I feature the interior of the castle.
See part 1 here:
The territory was initially occupied by the Samnites. After the Roman conquest (290 B.C. at the end of the third Samnite War) depended from the town hall of Sidicinum Teanum and in epoch tall medieval-passed to the Lombards. In the XI century Normans erected a castle, involved in the struggles between the emperor Henry IV and king of Sicily Tancredi. The Conte Ruggero of Chieti, which favored the king Tancredi, rejected the siege of the castle conducted by the imperial troops and the abbot Roffredo in 1193. Hereinafter briefly were guests of the Castle Frederick II of Swabia, Charles II of Anjou and Pope Gregory X.
In 1437 the city was sacked by the Patriarch Vitellesco. In 1460 it resisted again to a second siege by the Angevins, during the war between the king of Naples, Ferrante of Aragon and his rival Giovanni of Anjou, but the following year the castle was almost totally destroyed by Marino Marzano, an opponent of the Aragonese and the city remained depopulata et dehabitata. The present castle was rebuilt between 1491 and 1503 by Baron Innico II d'Avalos, who rebuilt the city walls. In 1500 was built the village of Marzanello as an outpost.
In 1590 Vairano was purchased by Baron Antonio Mormile of Frignano Cacciapuoti. The Cacciapuoti obtained the title of Duke of Vairano in 1628 and in 1660 they restored again the castle, which remained in the possession of the family until the abolition of feudalism in 1806.
During the fascist period, in the tavern of the chain was locked up the thinker and communist philosopher Antonio Gramsci.
The fortified walls of the medieval village were interspersed with 14 cylindrical towers on the basis of the escarpment and opened with three gates (Porta Oliva, carries means, or of the Mezzogiorno, and Porta Castello, or Sant'Andrea).
The Tavern of the chain
in 1700 along the consular roads Vairano, Via Latina and Venafrana, sprouted several tavernas, for the stop and the change of the horses of the postmen and wayfarer; the best known is the tavern of the chain whose name derives from the fact that when the king went hunting in the nearby nature reserve of Torcino, The crossing was crossed by a chain. It was built by the Duke Domenico Mariconda around 1720. The aforesaid Taverna is passed into history as the place where took place the historic meeting of 26 October 1860, which sanctioned the unification of Italy, between the King Vittorio Emanuele II and the General Giuseppe Garibaldi.
Marzanello
Il Borgo di Marzanello, locality of Vairano Patenora, was created in the sixteenth century as an outpost. It is formed by a few houses and the church of San Nicola, recently restructured. Toward the half of the XVIII century the population began to move toward the current urban agglomerate. Nearby is the church of Santa Maria del Monte, with two aisles, with frescoes and a painting depicting the Virgin and the Palazzone, roman villa of the I century B.C., subsequently fortified in the Middle Ages. We must not forget the Fontana del Vallo, discreet historical interest.
Certainly deserve a visit the Aragonese Castle and the Abbey of Ferrara.
Vairano Patenora also proposes an excellent gastronomic tradition. Once tasted is impossible to forget the taste of typical pork sausage, Sauciccia Vairano, or della Pezza, a pecorino cheese already known in medieval times and then, inalienable, are the tasty peschiole, fruitlets pesco collected still green, cooked in water and vinegar and flavored with spices. Finally, the king of Vairan, the giant Lupin, also called Lupinone, today a Slow Food Presidium.
Like and Subscribe and join the ride!
Help Support this channel and buy an Open Roader T-Shirt here:
Music:
Chiesa dell'Annunziata 28 02 2017 - Belmonte Calabro [Calabria Italy] DJI Phantom 4
Chiesa dell'Annunziata 28 02 2017 - Belmonte Calabro [Calabria Italy] DJI Phantom 4
Official Tiffany Alvord piano cover of 7 Years by Lukas Graham.
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Performed by: Lukas Graham
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