I doubt that agriturismo would be useful in Rome. The rest of them are Just Italian words for house. The name should reflect the house, the owners or something about the property. The neighbourhood, the architecture, the decor.I have noticed that these words are rather popular in B&B names from Italy:
Agriturismo
Casa
House
Residence
Villa
And as Arkansawyer mentioned, it is a very good idea to have your city/region name in the title. Make the name work for you passively and actively, so that the location name itself will bring you up in search engine result pages..
We stayed in a B&B near the Rome Metro station and, pardon my Italian, it was crap!
It was run by Croatians and they served pre-packaged food at breakfast. The place was a dump.
Please, whatever you name it, maintain high standards. Italian breakfast are very different and much lighter than American breakfasts. The key is to use fresh ingredients: bread, fruit, cheeses and don't skimp on the coffee.
First-time American tourists will be the most demanding. You will have to use your imagination to placate the "bacon and eggs" crowd. European tourist will know what to expect.
I'm curious as to what neighborhood you'll be in as well. Proximity to public transportation will help your situation greatly. Driving and parking in Rome is insane..
From what I've read, this is apparently a limitation of Italian law. It seems that that may be all that B&B's there are allowed to serve...Proud Texan said:they served pre-packaged food at breakfast.
When I was in Venice, in search for traditional Tiramisu, I was shocked to discover that they are not allowed to use eggs and/or cream to prepare it in-house, so most of the places around Italy serve pre-packaged deserts. That was such a disappointment.We stayed in a B&B near the Rome Metro station and, pardon my Italian, it was crap!
It was run by Croatians and they served pre-packaged food at breakfast. The place was a dump.
Please, whatever you name it, maintain high standards. Italian breakfast are very different and much lighter than American breakfasts. The key is to use fresh ingredients: bread, fruit, cheeses and don't skimp on the coffee.
First-time American tourists will be the most demanding. You will have to use your imagination to placate the "bacon and eggs" crowd. European tourist will know what to expect.
I'm curious as to what neighborhood you'll be in as well. Proximity to public transportation will help your situation greatly. Driving and parking in Rome is insane..From what I've read, this is apparently a limitation of Italian law. It seems that that may be all that B&B's there are allowed to serve...Proud Texan said:they served pre-packaged food at breakfast.
.
I stayed at a B&B that sent you over to a nice restaurant for breakfast, since they were limited on what they could serve.We stayed in a B&B near the Rome Metro station and, pardon my Italian, it was crap!
It was run by Croatians and they served pre-packaged food at breakfast. The place was a dump.
Please, whatever you name it, maintain high standards. Italian breakfast are very different and much lighter than American breakfasts. The key is to use fresh ingredients: bread, fruit, cheeses and don't skimp on the coffee.
First-time American tourists will be the most demanding. You will have to use your imagination to placate the "bacon and eggs" crowd. European tourist will know what to expect.
I'm curious as to what neighborhood you'll be in as well. Proximity to public transportation will help your situation greatly. Driving and parking in Rome is insane..From what I've read, this is apparently a limitation of Italian law. It seems that that may be all that B&B's there are allowed to serve...Proud Texan said:they served pre-packaged food at breakfast.
.
Ahhh, not the agriturismos I have stayed in. In fact, I have taken cooking lessons in one that made Tiramisu with fresh eggs from the property. Perhaps the hotels have different regulations, or perhaps the Tuscan B+B's are different.When I was in Venice, in search for traditional Tiramisu, I was shocked to discover that they are not allowed to use eggs and/or cream to prepare it in-house, so most of the places around Italy serve pre-packaged deserts. That was such a disappointment.We stayed in a B&B near the Rome Metro station and, pardon my Italian, it was crap!
It was run by Croatians and they served pre-packaged food at breakfast. The place was a dump.
Please, whatever you name it, maintain high standards. Italian breakfast are very different and much lighter than American breakfasts. The key is to use fresh ingredients: bread, fruit, cheeses and don't skimp on the coffee.
First-time American tourists will be the most demanding. You will have to use your imagination to placate the "bacon and eggs" crowd. European tourist will know what to expect.
I'm curious as to what neighborhood you'll be in as well. Proximity to public transportation will help your situation greatly. Driving and parking in Rome is insane..From what I've read, this is apparently a limitation of Italian law. It seems that that may be all that B&B's there are allowed to serve...Proud Texan said:they served pre-packaged food at breakfast.
.
.
think a lot of it depends on how inventive the owner decides to be - a lot of things are a cop outWe stayed at B&Bs in Florence and in Greve in Tuscany and Panzano and all had lovely buffet breakfasts - self serve all you can eat - which we adored - lots of dried meats, bacon, fruit, cereal, pastries, and we loved the self-serve cappuchino machines.
Riki.
We stayed in a B&B near the Rome Metro station and, pardon my Italian, it was crap!
It was run by Croatians and they served pre-packaged food at breakfast. The place was a dump.
Please, whatever you name it, maintain high standards. Italian breakfast are very different and much lighter than American breakfasts. The key is to use fresh ingredients: bread, fruit, cheeses and don't skimp on the coffee.
First-time American tourists will be the most demanding. You will have to use your imagination to placate the "bacon and eggs" crowd. European tourist will know what to expect.
I'm curious as to what neighborhood you'll be in as well. Proximity to public transportation will help your situation greatly. Driving and parking in Rome is insane..
We stayed at a HOTEL in one Italian town (the only place to say in this tiny town), and breakfast was pre-packaged food. Everything else was nice, though. Run by native Italians, but breakfast was obviously not important to them. A croissant sealed at the factory and a container of yogurt. But the coffee...even pre-packaged places in Italy serve GREAT coffee!!!Proud Texan said:We stayed in a B&B near the Rome Metro station and, pardon my Italian, it was crap!
It was run by Croatians and they served pre-packaged food at breakfast.
We stayed in a B&B near the Rome Metro station and, pardon my Italian, it was crap!
It was run by Croatians and they served pre-packaged food at breakfast. The place was a dump.
Please, whatever you name it, maintain high standards. Italian breakfast are very different and much lighter than American breakfasts. The key is to use fresh ingredients: bread, fruit, cheeses and don't skimp on the coffee.
First-time American tourists will be the most demanding. You will have to use your imagination to placate the "bacon and eggs" crowd. European tourist will know what to expect.
I'm curious as to what neighborhood you'll be in as well. Proximity to public transportation will help your situation greatly. Driving and parking in Rome is insane..From what I've read, this is apparently a limitation of Italian law. It seems that that may be all that B&B's there are allowed to serve...Proud Texan said:they served pre-packaged food at breakfast.
.
Not true. We stayed for several weeks at B&Bs all over Italy and the food and service were impeccable. We had freshly baked breads, and an assortment of cheeses, meats and fresh fruit and the best coffee on the planet. The difference was the locale and the attitude of the innkeepers.Harborfields said:From what I've read, this is apparently a limitation of Italian law. It seems that that may be all that B&B's there are allowed to serve...Proud Texan said:they served pre-packaged food at breakfast.
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