We had 2 attractions to tick off today. The Mercato Centrale was earmarked for the morning and the Palazzo Madama would be our afternoon activity.
The Mercato Centrale was a building with artisan restaurants and cafes inside along with seating areas. Surrounding it on the outside was the more traditional market stalls selling fresh produce of all sorts. It was fun browsing through the stalls but probably not worth the visit if you were short on time. We bought some morning to enjoy and the coffee was good! However it just a touch too early for lunch even by our standards. The kids voted to go back to RaviolHouse because they loved it so much...and upsized their order this time around to XL servings. It was good that they got their ravioli fix because now suddenly they didn't want to eat any more ravioli ever.
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Porta Palatina. 1st century BC gate to Turin. Right next to Mercato Centrale. |
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Fruits & veges outside |
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Meats and deli inside |
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Ultra popular fish monger! |
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Mercato Centrale of Turin |
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Our favourite type of purchases |
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We could have bought more but didn't want to spoil our lunch. Everything was demolished in seconds |
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Different ravioli fillings and different sauces to try |
Palazzo Madama is a former palace and takes its traditional name from the embellishments it received under two queens (madama) of the House of Savoy (Savoia). A very simplified history of the Savoia in a few sentences...akin to Piedmont what the Medicis were to Florence. They were the house that contributed to Italian unification and became the Royal ruling house of Italy until the republic was formed in 1946. The Palazzo Madama is now a museum of ancient art. The building and the site itself has an interesting and complicated history starting from 1st century BC as a roman wall, and evolving to become a palace and the centre of Turin. Definitely worth visiting when in Turin.
When we arrived, a lovely security guide told us make sure we say we want to see"tutto". "Everything!" she said. So we dutifully repeated it. We later realised that there was a special exhibition on Queen Margherita of Savoy, the Queen who gave her name to the pizza!
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Like many old European structures, the building had been built upon and remodelled several times over the centuries. Parts of the Roman structure can still be seen |
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Church art from the 1200s |
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Margherita of Savoy |
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Some of the opulent rooms in the Palace |
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Her collection of clothes were on display |
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As were her furniture |
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And the crib for her children! |
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Monumental staircase |
Last but not least, there was Mik. The best sushi in Turin a local said. The children just wanted to eat in the hexagon. It was an interesting system of all you can eat sushi. You can order 7 dishes every 10 minutes. Being the FOMO people that we were, we dutifully ordered 7 dishes every 10 minutes on the dot. The initial small dishes fooled us into ordering bigger trays and sushi rolls and by dish 14, we dreaded the arrival of the waiter with more food. This was a lesson of beware what you order!! Between a generous breakfast, doughnut morning tea, heavy carb loaded ravioli lunch and all you can eat sushi for dinner, we struggled to walk home...until we saw Grom, the gelato shop! The diet can start tomorrow!
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Let's sit in a hexagon and have all you can eat sushi |
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Ordering was through an ipad |
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The first dish. So small, we need more |
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Um...ok this will take us a little longer |
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Elliot what did you order?!?! Sushi with cheese...um not so yum |
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Yes we were struggling by the end! |
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But apparently not struggling that much as we had space to try Grom, a Turin based gelato chain |
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