Trieste is a hard place to find things:
- We arrived on Saturday afternoon and most shops shut.
- Sunday – Almost everything shut
- Monday – 50% of shops do not open
It is hard to find somewhere to eat, in our area we travelled around a lot of streets and found mainly bars and not restaurants. The restaurants you do find are generally pizzeria’s who may do some pasta dishes.
We ate at a pizzeria on Saturday night and that was good, but on Sunday night we wanted something different. We went down to the area where the Canal was and found about 3 places open. We choose one called “al Barattolo”
We choose one (pictured above) and Chris had a great seafood chowder (9 Euro) , and Pam ordered a Goulash with dumplings (Gnocchi) (8 Euro)
Pam’s looked a bit dry to me, but she said it was “OK”
Monday night we went looking again and a lot more bars were open but we ended up going back to the same place as last night since it was good and we knew the food was fresh. We popped into another place which looked good but had no customers and no cooking smells so we left it in place of something busier – especially with travelling to Greece tomorrow – we wanted to be well.
Chris had Grilled Squid (9.20 euro), and Pam a lasagne (6.60 euro) – Although the squid looks minimal it was lovely and with a bit of bread and wine it is all I needed.
Sometimes you do wonder about prices:
Tonight
- 1 Spritz Aperol (Campari and Soda?) 4.50 Euro
- 1 Vino Rosso (Red House Wine) 1/4 Litre – 2.50 Euro
- 1 can coke – 333ml – 3.50 Euro
So drink wine – it is cheap