Gourmet Guide - a la carte
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1.
Treasure Chamber
The Punta della Dogana in Venice – a spacious setting for modern art ...read more
2.
Cutlery – not so very old
Eating with a knife, fork and a spoon is a relatively recent achievement that finally became established ...read more
3.
Ship ahoy …at the Hamburg Maritime Museum
It all began with a small, 50-pence toy ship given to Professor Peter Tamm ...read more
4.
The Kitchen Brigade
Individual cooks in the restaurant kitchen still retain their French job titles to this day ...read more
5.
Simply Timeless
Finland’s famous design studio Iittala is celebrating its 130th anniversary, while the legendary Aalto collection ...read more
6.
Bringing Hope
Architectural genius Oscar Niemeyer is bringing new life to the small Spanish town of Avilés ...read more
7.
Bringing Peoples Together
Thanks to virtuoso architect Jean Nouvel, the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris is not just a museum of anthropology ...read more
8.
A Briton from France
The 10th temporary pavilion at London’s Serpentine Gallery is the work of architect Jean Nouvel ...read more
9.
Crystal Dreams
The world has a bishop and a king to thank for the founding of French luxury brand Baccarat ...read more
10.
Shining Lights of Antiquity
Countless archaeological treasures of Greek culture have found an impressive new home ...read more
11.
Lighting up Munich – in the museum
A new pilgrimage site for art lovers worldwide ...read more
12.
Honoré de Balzac – Novelist and Gourmet
“La Comédie humaine” is the title Honoré de Balzac gave to his magnum opus comprising more than 40 volumes ...read more
13.
The charm of white gold
300 years ago, in Dresden, white porcelain was produced for the first time in Europe ...read more
14.
Joseph Roth and Tafelspitz
He became a part of German-language literary history as the “holy drinker” ...read more
15.
Art Glass Demands Complete Dedication
The Morettis understand how to transfer the tradition of the glass-blowing island of Murano ...read more
16.
Giacomo Casanova
The man who loved women also mastered the art of fine food ...read more
17.
The Cabinet of Curiosity on the Banks of the Lake
In addition to masterpieces of Expressionism the Buchheim Museum displays a lot of curiosities ...read more
18.
A Feast for the Eyes
Fondation Maeght brings together its icons of the classic modern ...read more
19.
Discover the World
Over an area of 9000 m2 Phæno in Wolfsburg offers a one-of-a-kind experimental landscape in Germany ...read more
20.
Wilhelm Busch’s Pancakes
The seventh child of a poor family, he was born in a small town near Hanover in 1832 ...read more
21.
Where art meets hospitality
With a horse in wellington boots, a mysterious tower and ...read more
22.
The Count’s Treasure Chamber
If you are travelling to Italy in the summer you should treat yourself to an excursion to Villa Panza ...read more
23.
The master of knives
Modern cooking without hand-made Japanese knives is simply unimaginable ...read more
24.
Pablo Picasso
The company at the artist’s table was merry and loud ...read more
25.
The Anna Amalia Library in Weimar
Built approx. 250 years ago, gutted by fire a while ago and extensively restored ...read more
26.
World-class valuables
Since September 2006 the Historic Green Vault in the west wing of the Royal Palace in Dresden ...read more
27.
Greetings from Louisiana
Set in a picturesque location on the sea’s edge and just 35 kilometres from Copenhagen ...read more
28.
Europe’s new wunderkammer
Berlin’s historic centre shines with new radiance ...read more
29.
Where the camellias blossom
On three weekends in March numerous private gardens in Lucchesia ...read more
30.
Porcelain for a queen
In Staffordshire, England, plates, cups and vases ...read more
31.
La Fenice – like a phoenix from the ashes…
Some people and animals are said to be immortal. The Venice theatre ...read more
32.
Hot drink with three letters
For centuries the virtues of tea have been praised the world over ...read more
33.
Bamboo – a grass with a long past and a big future
For 4000 years bamboo has been one of the most versatilely ...read more

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CULTURAL FEATURE
camellia
Where the camellias blossom
On three weekends in March numerous private gardens in Lucchesia, a hilly region skirting the Tuscan town of Lucca, are opened to the public. Then there is just one thing that matters: camellia japonica.


They can be vermillion, cerise or coral crimson, salmon or flamingo pink, pure white or even mottled in multicoloured hues. One much sought-after rarity is delicate peach pink. The shapes of their blossom range from single to filled forms, from anemone to rose and peony clusters, with smooth, wavy or fringed petals. But whoever is tempted by such magnificence to lean over and sniff the flower of one of these countless, fabulously beautiful camellia varieties in the hope of inhaling a bewitching fragrance will be disappointed. Camellias don’t smell! Not yet, at any rate, but since the discovery of several fragrant wild varieties over forty years ago people have been tirelessly endeavouring to magic scent into camellia blossom. In isolated cases growers in the US have already reported success…


This is also a highlight each year in March, when in the sumptuous garden of the Villa Nardi, just a few kilometres south of Lucca, the visitors gather round the vast camellia tree of eight metres in diameter. It belongs to the “diamantina” variety and is reportedly the largest and oldest camellia in Lucchesia, allegedly planted in 1771. Just imagine the effect if all these cascades of pink blossom were also scented!

But even without the olfactory intoxication of camellias the gentle hills surrounding the medieval town of Lucca are a joy. Especially when, as everything comes into blossom, the gardens of numerous country estates in the area are opened to the public. On these three pleasantly mild weekends in March visitors get a superb chance to study not only opulent camellia collections but also the Italian way of life. After all, between the 15th and 19th centuries the merchants from Lucchesia channelled their profits not only into the construction of town palaces but also into their grand estates in the surrounding countryside, where they then spent the hot summer months.

It was the same merchants who in the 18th century brought the first camellias to Europe from their indigenous habitat in the Far East. It is said they smuggled them believing they were tea plants, in the vain hope that this would at last allow them to break the Chinese monopoly on tea. Whether it was due to translation problems or Chinese cunning that the shipment they brought back was not the tea plant (C. sinensis) but the rather similar C. japonica, will always be a mystery. But whatever the reason, it’s a nice story. And the fact that tea is simply one particular variety of camellia is still largely unknown.

Quite how the camellia found its way to Lucchesia of all places is also the subject of numerous stories. Fact is, this area offers perfect ground conditions and the right climate for the plant to thrive, and in Italy, particularly in the 19th century, it was deemed quite chic to indulge in the preservation and cultivation of new forms and colours. Some collections comprised hundreds of varieties. Fact is also, however, that later on people even tried to grow tea.

In recent decades this fervour has undergone a renaissance. The camellia festival in Lucchesia is an expression of this enthusiasm. Here new strains are presented, stalls sell merchandise and discussions are held, accompanied by concerts and garden tours, as well as tea tastings – including an authentic Japanese tea ceremony.

Further information in Italian and English: www.camelielucchesia.it