True & memorable taste made with love and tradition
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White tartufata and Black truffles.
On red or on white
Bufala di Campana, seasonal greens, red onion, cherry tomatoes, carrot, fresh basil, homemade Marciana sauce
Black risotto with fried shrimps and grilled scampi.
Bufala di Campana™,cherry tomatoes, fresh basil.
Bufala di Campana, spicy salami Napoli™, ground roast beef, red onion, fresh basil.
Bufala di Campana, Karst dry prosciutto, cherry tomatoes, fresh rocket.
An ancient port, fishing and saltworks town of Piran, surrounded by a town wall, has preserved its medieval design with narrow streets and tightly packed houses. The oldest part of the town is Punta, and on the slope behind it there`s a fort dating back to the 10th century where townspeople would retreat in times of war and danger.
From the former fortified castrum, the town underwent urban development and in 1274 already had its own statute. Nine years later, in 1285, Piran was taken over by the Venetian Republic, also called the Serenissima Republica Veneta, which ruled until 1797.
...which are mentioned as early as the 7th century, embraced the entire peninsula in the oldest part of Piran, and with the arrival of the Venetians it began to expand and enlarge. The city walls counted several city gates, as the entrance to Piran under Venetian rule was extremely secure. The ramparts played an important role in the sea and land protection of the medieval core and were completed with the erection of the Marciana Gate in 1534. The city gates of Marciana were opened in the morning and closed in the evening, so that they could check anyone who entered or left the city.
The winged Venetian lion, carved into white Istrian stone still poses on the top of Porta Marciana as a symbol of St. Mark, the patron saint of Venice and the Venetian Republic. The relief sculpture of a Venetian lion holding an open book in his paws - Mark's Gospel, illustrates its affiliation to the Venetian Republic.