Travel: Gaeta, Italy in October

This one’s for you, Nan. 

If you dream of Italy, possess an explorer’s spirit, and enjoy immersing yourself in a foreign culture, have I got the vacation for you. Take a sledgehammer to your itineraries cast in stone, burn your vacation to-do list, and never again wake at an ungodly hour to catch a stuffy tour bus en route to crowded attractions. In Gaeta, you can’t help but fall into the rhythm of the natives, a rhythm steady enough to keep you on course but with breaks in the beat for some solo improvisation. Perfection.

Gaeta? Never heard of it.

This past October I fell in love with Gaeta, Italy during a two-week stay with a group of writers I met online. (For more on that story, click here.) Like many people, I wasn’t familiar with Gaeta, despite traveling north to south in Italy twice in the past. But I was familiar with two of the products Gaeta is known for…Gaeta olives and buffalo mozzarella. That was a good enough start for me.

It turns out this present-day fishing community was a renowned tourist resort to the wealthy, ancient Romans and its seaport had trade and military significance. In fact, its fortifications date back to Roman times. Who knew?

Look at that sweet mozzarella face on the supermarket shopping bag.

Driving with the Italians…and Michael Jackson

We flew in to Fiumicino Airport in Rome and found our driver Lucio, who would transport us the two hours to Gaeta. This was a less expensive and infinitely more comfortable option than lugging suitcases through stations to catch two different trains.

There’s no roller coaster that tops the exhilaration of driving with a real Italian in Italy. It’s a religious experience. And where else could we have enjoyed the endless Michael Jackson music that Lucio played for the length of the trip. I’m not sure if he was a fan or if he thought his American passengers were. Every once in a while his left hand would come off the steering wheel and do a little circular motion in the air, and the rest of us would erupt in a high-pitched “ooooo.” We joked we were singing along in the spirit of the great Mr. Jackson, but if I’m being honest, it was more a high-pitched squeal of terror—high speed, sharp curves, oncoming traffic, and a one-handed driver. Wait, I feel another “ooooooo” coming on…and maybe a wee, butt clench.

Two hours later, the music track was still playing, and Michael was instructing us to “Don’t Stop Till You Get Enough.” Clearly, Lucio hadn’t. And I’d realized much earlier in the journey that screaming “Zio, zio” (the Italian word for uncle) at the top of my lungs did not translate as a cry of surrender. 😉

All jesting aside, Lucio was a wonderful driver and a charming man and I’d hire him again. Case in point, after a long train journey back to Gaeta after an exhausting day in Rome, we exited the station, not looking forward to the bus ride ahead of us.  Standing outside, as if sent by an angel, was Lucio with his cab parked at the curb. We let out a cry of joy and rushed toward him. He looked a bit frightened and probably has his own blog where he tells of the crazy Americans and one English guy he once drove around.

Villa Accetta: A jewel on the Gulf of Gaeta

We finally arrived at Villa Accetta, which has been owned by the Accetta family for several generations and in existence even longer than that. In fact, it appears on an ancient map of Gaeta in the museum of Formia, a neighboring city. As I passed through the gates, I couldn’t miss the view of the blue-green Gulf of Gaeta, framed by fuchsia bougainvillea and swaying palm trees. According to Villa Accetta’s website:

“Built on Roman foundations, the property sits above the fresh-water spring called Artacia Fons that flows into the sea. Homer, Dante, Virgil and Ovid all wrote about this spring, where Ulysses and his crew found drinkable water after months at sea.”

The Gardens at Villa Accetta

The circular staircase leading to the various apartments has at its core a passage to this grotto, which supplies the property not only with water but also cool, fresh air. All of the apartments have views of the sea, from terraces, balconies, or oversized windows. The soothing ripples of the water lapping against the shore of the private, pebbly beach lulled me to sleep many a night. Once or twice, the sea turned angry and blasted the exterior walls of the villa with a violent spray. In the early morning, I’d look out at the calm water and think I’d been dreaming the night before.

We explored the property with rumbling tummies until a member of our party, who had arrived a few days early, led us to the old, handmaid table on the terrace, where she had set out a Gaetan feast so beautiful it could have been a spread for a photo shoot: fresh, and I mean fresh, balls of buffalo mozzarella waiting to be scooped from a pot of liquid; gorgonzola; olives; tomatoes; pancetta bread; cured meats like salami, capicolla, and prosciutto; finnochio (fennel); and wine. We were half starved from our journey and ate with relish, which is just a nice way of saying we inhaled our food like cafoni. With bellies bursting with joy, we returned to our individual apartments to take the customary afternoon nap. Boy, did we need it.

The Rhythm of Gaeta

The rhythm of Gaeta is a soothing ebb and flow. After a while, you suspect that the sea, and not blood, flows through the veins of its inhabitants. Before sunrise, the fishermen set out in their boats; before sunset they return to lay out their catch at the daily fish market. Day after day, I was drawn to that market to see what treasures had been pulled from the sea and what I might be eating at a local restaurant later that evening.

View from “port hole” window beneath Villa Accetta

In the mornings, we’d have sfogliatella and cappuccino for breakfast at Triestina, our favorite café. You may be familiar with the flaky, clam shell-shaped version of sfogliatella. But there is another variety I have never seen in New York called sfogliatella frolla, which has a smoother dough but the same filling. You’ll never find a cappuccino in the States like in Gaeta. Perfect every time. And even if you do, you’ll pay at least $4.50 for it rather than 90 cents or a Euro. For all you “bacon and eggs” people, fuhgeddaboudit. Not gonna happen. I suppose you can improvise with groceries bought at the PAM supermarket in Gaeta and cooked up in the villa’s kitchen, but isn’t it more fun to have a reason to eat pastry for breakfast? And there’s no need to worry about your figure. The terrain is so rugged with its ancient stone pathways, steep hills, and long stretches of beach that I didn’t gain a single pound and came home with a few new muscles.

After breakfast, we’d take in the sights. There are castles, churches, beaches, shops, outdoor markets, ancient paths to walk, mountains to climb, legendary sites to visit, and neighboring towns to explore. But don’t lose that rhythm or you’ll find yourself hungry and locked out of shops when the entire town closes for its big meal of the day and siesta. After all, this isn’t Rome with its tourist restaurants and menus written in 37 different languages. The first day, we walked through the streets a bit stunned, realizing what had happened, and stared longingly through screenless windows at families sitting down to their pranzo. You don’t make that mistake twice. And so, just before 1 PM, we’d stop at the salumeria or caseificio to pick up some fixings and head back to the villa for a leisurely lunch and siesta.

Sometimes, before that afternoon nap beckoned, we’d stroll on the villa’s beach, collecting shells, beach glass, unusual stones, and what I like to think is some kind of ancient Roman building material. That’s my story, and I’m sticking to it. 😉

After naps, we’d freshen up and add a layer to our outfit since the October nights can be a bit cool. Then it was on to the passegiata, the pre-dinner stroll that is an Italian tradition. We’d pass the fish market to marvel at tender octopus and tiny clams, and then walk on to the piazza along the waterfront path. No one was in a hurry. Dinner doesn’t happen before 7 PM.

Memorable Meals

On that unforgettable afternoon when we realized we hadn’t planned for lunch, we wandered through the deserted streets until I spotted a statue of Padre Pio, a much loved saint in Italy. Padre Pio has a list of credits to his name, but he is now officially my patron saint of finding food in Italy when everyone has closed up shop and returned home for their big meal of the day. That’s because he sat at the entrance of La Saliera da Mario, the only restaurant open for business, it seemed. We ordered platters of bruschetta, fried calamari, gnocchi, seafood salad, and cheese and cured meats and passed them around the table. After lunch, the proprietor brought bottles of amaro, an herbal liquer, and grappa to the table to finish off the meal. Nice touch.

When the scent of the wood-burning brick ovens called to us, we headed to Da Emilio for pizza.  I enjoyed the quattro stagione, which featured salami, mushrooms, olives, artichokes, and Parma ham over a crisp, evenly cooked crust. For appetizers, we sampled the mixed seafood appetizer, fried calamari, and fried alici (whole, pan-fried anchovies). Let me tell you, Gaetans know how to catch a fish and fry it up in a pan.

Down a vicolo off the Via Indipendenza we happened upon L’enoteca di Luigiraschi. A lucky find since that was their last night serving dinner before closing up for vacation. The steamed mussels and clams were tender and sweet and the garlicky broth was quickly sopped up with bread. The seafood salad was fresh, as all seafood is in Gaeta. As delicious as it all was, one dish really stood out—the seafood risotto. We all had a taste of it and then kept eyeing it as our friend ate his meal. Some of us were bolder than others and I have the fork marks in my wrist to prove it. (Located in Gaeta, Via Indipendenza, Vico 1, 15)

There’s a traditional pizza in Gaeta called tiella, and Nari is the place to go for it. I only wish that these restaurants had websites so I could link to them. Tiella is a stuffed, pan pizza. I adored the zucchini/calamari tiella. I also sampled the one stuffed with onion. (Located in Gaeta, Via Duomo 11/17)

In the best gelato category, Il Molo wins. We ordered multi-flavor cones and sampled each other’s flavors so we’d know what to order next time. There were many “next times.” Nutella and bacio were good. Pistacchio, coffee, and coconut—excellent. (Located in Gaeta, Piazza del Pesce, 1)

Finally, if you happen to take the bus into Formia, the city next to Gaeta, you must have lunch at La Cucina della Nonna where Italian homecooking like your grandma used to do it is what you’ll get. Here, you grab a tray and point to the things you want if you can’t speak the language. We had stuffed peppers, pasta with eggplant, and potato stuffed with prosciutto. And then I saw the little chunks of golden, roasted potatoes and had to have them, too. The couple who run this restaurant are entertaining to say the least. I knew enough Italian and the man knew enough English to share some conversation while we ate our meal. The woman, recognizing that I was American, automatically threw packets of ketchup and mayonnaise on my tray, which I returned to her unopened at the end of my meal. She practically hugged me as she beat her chest and complained in Italian about the Americans who come and put mayonnaise on her food. I assured her that this American, raised by Italians, would never do such a sinful thing. She complimented me on being one of the few sane Americans that she had met. Like I said, entertaining. (Located in Formia at Via Nerva, 14)

Before you leave Formia to head back to Gaeta, be sure to stop at Pastacceria Troiano pastry shop, where we ordered one sfogliatella and one sfogliatella frolla and they wrapped them as if they were a gift for a king. The pastries happened to be delicious, as well. Truth be told, we never made it back to Gaeta. We parked ourselves at a park bench overlooking the sea and ripped into that beautiful packaging for a taste. (Located in Formia at Via Vitruvio, 76)

Places to See

You’ll discover many delightful sights as you wander the streets of Gaeta and travel to neighboring towns. Here are a few of my favorites:

Via Indipendenza – This narrow, stone street will have you believing you stepped back in time. Shops, stores, and restaurants line the way. Be sure to stop and stare into the kitchen of the man who bakes the sfogliatelle and cornettos for the local cafés and shops. If you’re a local kid, he has a just-from-the-oven pastry for you. If you’re not, no cornettos for you.

The Wednesday outdoor market – If you can’t get it here, it doesn’t exist. Fruits, veggies, meats, pastries, housewares, clothes, shoes…even pets. (Located in Corso Cavour, near the old Station.)

Old Gaeta – How I loved strolling along the sea and winding in and out of the old, narrow streets. Check out the Angevin-Aragonese castle and the old Sant’Erasmo bell tower.

Serapo Beach – When you leave the villa early in the morning and think it’s a bit chilly, turn yourself around, go back inside, and put your bathing suit on under your clothes. I’m glad I did. By the time we’d made our way into town and had our breakfast cappuccino, it was beach weather. We stopped and bought some panini and a bag of taralli (lightly sweet, anise flavored cookies) for a picnic lunch and ended up lying on the pristine sand of Serapo. The water was a bit chilly for me, but then my pool has to be 85 degrees before I venture in. So, stick a toe or two in and see for yourself.

Serapo Beach

Sperlonga – Ah, how I wish I could be back in Sperlonga for more than just one afternoon. Next time, I’ll rent a place there for a few days. When you get off the bus at sea level, you are in the center of a small town on a beautiful beach. If you stand on the beach and look up at the mountain, you’ll think there are a few houses up there. But when you start hiking the uphill roads, you’ll find a complex maze of alleys that lead to a hidden “city” of restaurants, shops, a piazza, sea views, serene shrines, and an ancient church. Oy, I could weep. Apparently, there’s a lot more to see. So plan to spend more than just a few hours. And have an alternate plan to get back to Gaeta since the buses don’t run between the two towns in the evening.

Beach at Sperlonga

View of Sperlonga from within the hill town

Annunziata Church – I happen to love churches and this one didn’t disappoint. Be sure to check out the paintings inside. It is said that Pope Pius IX, while living in exile in Gaeta, formulated his ideas on papal infallibility here.

Montagna Spaccata  – Legend has it that this mountain split upon Christ’s death. Visit the church, see the tiled Stations of the Cross, and be sure to take the 200+ steps down to the grotto (Grotta del Turco). Also check out the handprint seared into the mountain wall, said to belong to a Turk who did not believe in the legend.

Montagna Spaccata – The “Split Mountain”

Rome, Naples, and Pompeii  – If you want to visit “big city” sights, take the train from Formia station. Gaeta is about halfway between Rome and Naples, and depending on which train you take, it’s about an hour and a half to a two hour trip.

The Last Night and Day

For our last night, we stayed at the Hotel Malù in Rome, a more relaxing option than racing against time to get to the airport from Gaeta. I’m not even convinced it can be done. Disregard the warnings about staying near Termini Station. It’s a bustling area of shops, restaurants, cafés, churches, and fountains. Hotel Malù is owned by a lovely family and operated in a building with other apartments and hotels. Security was tight, prices were reasonable, the room was immaculately clean, well-decorated, and comfortable, and there was free wi-fi in the common areas, helpful for last minute travel inquiries. The delightful Ivan suggested Le 2 Colonne restaurant and I ate my final meal listening to the bells of the Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore. Heavenly.

il Bugso Bunny

Some Additional Links

Slow Travel Italy

The “Riviera di Ulisse”

Welcome to Gaeta and Welcome to Sperlonga by the Shapcott Family

61 comments on “Travel: Gaeta, Italy in October

  1. Cynthia on

    What a great story, well told! As it happens, friends were living there and I spent a long weekend in Gaeta about twelve years ago, it was charming and relaxing. I must send her the link…

    Reply
  2. lulu on

    Italy, if I could have another house in another place, it would be Italy where I’ve never found anything not to like. Your writing skills have served you well on this wonderful tour. I close my eyes and taste the flavors, smell the air. Sigh!

    Reply
  3. Lisa Creech Bledsoe on

    And here I was pining for another trip to the NC mountains. (Don’t chortle so, we DO have mountains.)

    Now I want to know how I can swing the Italy thing. Never been, but that would be my first choice. Great post.

    Reply
  4. rebecca @ altared spaces on

    Love the vicarious cab ride. These are the cross-cultural experiences that really translate. When we traveled in Spain we marveled at the stone buildings all colored at the corners with automobile paint. The curves are TIGHT!

    I also loved your photos of looking through stone views. I took a walk in a villa in Spain and got lost. (I can get lost anywhere) I have a photo up of that view between buildings. A marvelous memory for me of being lost and finding myself again.

    Reply
  5. Millie on

    Wow! Sounds like a trip waiting to happen. My mouth is watering and my bod is longing for that beach. Thanks margaret for the details.
    Millie (Mom’s friend)

    Reply
  6. Richard on

    That was wonderful, Maggie! Brought it all back to me. What a fantastic two weeks that was. Good food, magnificent scenery, inspiring company and lots of ‘old sticks’ for me to hug and photograph! 😉

    And hands off! Get your own damn seafood risotto! 😛

    The ‘One English Guy’

    Reply
  7. NonnaLou on

    Hi Margaret, Thank you for your kind comments about my Websites about Gaeta and Sperlonga. I Love your Blog which is beautifully written.

    We are so lucky to now live in this beautiful area, just a little inland near the historic town of ITRI, which is well worth a visit.

    http://itri.shapcott-family.com

    I am so passionate about this region that I have created a Website (all in English) about many of the towns of SOUTH LAZIO:

    http://southlazio.shapcott-family.com

    You can read about our new life and adventures in Italy at our TRE CANCELLE BLOG: http://trecancelle.wordpress.com

    …………………
    18 August, 2011
    I found your website today and enjoyed reading the Gaeta and Sperlonga sections. I vacationed there this past October and can’t wait to return. Margaret Reyes Dempsey.

    Reply
  8. huffygirl on

    You’re amazing Margaret – you leave us high and dry for weeks, maybe even months, and then this – a travelogue so sumputous that I almost felt like I was there. You’ve been holding out. I will just have to become a writer so I can take amazing vacations like this.

    Reply
  9. Girlboxing on

    OMG…. I need to live better! What an amazing trip!!! AND what a great idea as a retreat of sorts for writing! I want to go! Maybe I’ll give it to myself as a post-MA gift — that’s if I can ever get off the ground with my thesis 😉

    Reply
  10. Ray Colon on

    Hi Margaret,

    Thanks for the wonderful tour. My appetite for food is strictly no frills, but my wife has an appreciation for good eats, so she would be in heaven if she were to go on a trip like this.

    I enjoyed your descriptions of the points of interest — which were many. I like churches too, even if I prefer to visit them when few people are around. The split rock photo was beautiful. My eyes may be playing tricks on me, but it looked like there was a rope slung between the risers. There wasn’t one, right?

    I love Bugs, but how did he get mixed in with all of that antiquity? 🙂

    Ray

    Reply
    • Margaret Reyes Dempsey on

      You know, Ray, I don’t remember seeing the rope when I was there, but it certainly appears to be there in the photo.

      Bugs Bunny was part of a kiddie amusement park that was set up in Sperlonga. It was surreal…first we rested at an outdoor shrine with a giant statue of Padre Pio and then we hung out with Bugs Bunny. Only in Italy!

      Reply
  11. LLH Designs on

    Oh, wow! Double wow! I love the simple, fresh food you find in places like Italy and France (my personal favorite!).

    Left you a reply on my blog. The technical writing comment made me giggle!

    xo,
    Linsey

    Reply
  12. Jess Witkins on

    Oh Madge, this was heavenly. You could’ve rocked me to sweet sleep had you been reading this post aloud. The food, the sounds of the city, the crash of the waves. You made me miss Italy. The buzzing traffic I well remember, with cars the size of shoeboxes zipping by. The breakfast pastries and coffee and nutella. The city ruins mixed with the modern city squares. The duomos. And the water, that amazing blue. I visited Il Grotto Azul, the blue grotto on the isle of Capri, a holy shrine to the virgin mother. You have to take a boat, then get in a smaller boat and lay down in it to make it through the cave entrance and when you sit up again you are inside the most beautiful sparkly blue water cave. That’s what your split mountain reminded me of.

    Thank you for sharing this, it was the best daydream I’ll have all day. Bella! Grazie!

    Reply
  13. Mark Petruska on

    Why. WHY did I read this on an empty stomach?! I was just preparing to fix myself a PB&J sandwich that will now never satisfy me. Sigh.

    I have dreamed of going to Italy pretty much my entire adult life. Never considered (or heard of) Gaeta before, but now it’s a top contender for my destination of choice!

    Reply
  14. bronxboy55 on

    You could organize your own Italy tours, Margaret. A post like this would be perfect marketing material, because it doesn’t just describe the trip; it transports the reader. I was there with you. Or rather, I was asking furiously, “Why wasn’t I there with you?”

    Your descriptions are magnificent, especially of the food. But really: mayonnaise? Talk about cafoni.

    Reply
    • Margaret Reyes Dempsey on

      Your mayonnaise comment made me laugh. I knew you’d appreciate that.

      I’m glad I finally got around to writing this post and recording a bit of my trip. I would have been so mad at myself if I had let it go. Now I have to try to remember the trip to Scotland the year before Italy. Lucky I’m not a travel writer. I’d never get paid.

      Hope all is well.

      Reply
  15. deborahatherton on

    This made me hungry, and so, so sad I wasn’t there. From everyone’s descriptions, it was idyllic! Beautiful travel writing, Margaret, you really captured the spirit of the place.

    Reply
  16. Judi on

    Hi Margaret! I stumbled upon your story about Gaeta…………which is where I live as an expat. It’s been a little over a year now. I had been vacationing in Gaeta twice a year for two years before I moved there………at the encouragement of my Italian friends. It’s truly tranquil, beautiful and a real gem. I’m originally from L.A., had moved to Maui for about 7 years, then to Aix en Provence, France for 4 years, and then discovered Gaeta. I usually traveled from the central to the northern part of Italy, but now I’m discovering the southern portion…………..entirely different….food, culture, language, etc. Other than Gaeta, Como-Bellagio is one of my favorite spots in Italy. I’m glad you enjoyed your visit to Gaeta.

    Reply
  17. Dave Zimmer on

    Margaret,

    Just a short note to let you know we are going to stay at Villa Accetta in April 2012.
    There will be six of us, and we will be there for two weeks.
    Two of us have been there before, we lived in Naples for four years and visited that town several times.
    Thanks for all the good information on places to eat and see.

    Reply
    • Margaret Reyes Dempsey on

      Dave, you brought on my first smile of the morning. Have a wonderful trip. And please return here and let me know about any new discoveries because I will definitely return to Gaeta someday.

      Say hi to Kiki and her family for me.

      Reply
  18. Dave Zimmer on

    Margaret,

    We just returned from two weeks in Bella Italia. We spent the first week at Villa Accetta and the second with friends near Naples.

    I passed on your hello to Kiki and she said she remembered you from your stay.

    We were able to eat at one of your restaurants you mentioned in your article: La Cucina della Nonna.

    I would recommend the Villa Accetta to anyone that wnats to visit Gaeta and Italy.

    Reply
    • Margaret Reyes Dempsey on

      Hi Dave,

      I just returned from a writing retreat and saw your comment. If not for the fact that I spent a glorious week writing on the beach, I’d be weeping that I missed out on Gaeta.

      Glad you were able to find La Cucina della Nonna.

      I’ve got to get back to Gaeta. It was such a special trip. Thanks for coming back to share your experience. I really appreciate it.

      Reply
  19. Jan Roderick on

    Gaeta sounds wonderful. My daughter and I are planning on a trip to Italy for 11 days – the first 1-1/2 of November. What about the weather at that time?

    Reply
    • Margaret Reyes Dempsey on

      I was there at the end of October. The days were warm to hot and the evenings a bit cool, requiring a light sweater. I even went to the beach. Though the water was too cold for me, I was comfortable in a bathing suit on the sand. It’s a good idea to consult a weather site and see what the average temperatures are for the time of year you’ll be traveling. Then, pack layers. Hope you enjoy your trip.

      Reply

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