The week, day by day
Five days, told as five chapters.
Five days, told as five chapters.
What follows is not a schedule, although the schedule is at the end. It is what actually happens — to the place, to the people, to you — over five days at our farmhouse and in the village we live in.
The first day, you arrive a stranger. By the second, you know the hilltop view from the breakfast terrace and the way the afternoon light moves on the cypresses. By the third, you have flour on your hands and a winemaker at your table. By the fourth, you have a favorite producer, a favorite village, a favorite glass. By the fifth, when Arnaud lifts his camera at the train station, you are no longer the person who arrived.
This is the shape of the week.
Day One
You arrive in Castagneto Carducci by train, or we collect you from the airport if that is what you have arranged with us. The first face you see in this village is mine.
We bring you to Luca’s hotel — seven rooms on the hillside, ten minutes from our gate, with a view of the olive groves running down toward the Mediterranean. You unpack. You shower off the journey. You take ten minutes on the breakfast terrace and you watch the late afternoon happen.
Then we gather. Luca brings out a bottle of his own wine, the welcome glass, and the eight of you meet for the first time. By the second glass, the strangers are no longer strangers.
We walk to La Casa Toscana for the first dinner. The 18th-century farmhouse on the Bolgheri Wine Road, the Carrara marble kitchen, the herb garden three steps from the door. The dog will probably investigate your bags. We cook the first meal together — something simple, the kind of dish I make for my own family — and we eat at the long table. Eight people. One bottle, then a second. Stories. Where you come from. Why you are here. By the end of the night, the threshold has been crossed.
Day Two
We start with breakfast on the terrace, then drive to the coast. Populonia is a fortified hilltop town where the Etruscans mined iron three thousand years ago. We climb the castle tower for the 360-degree view — on a clear day, you can see Corsica and Elba.
Lunch is at our favorite seafood restaurant, the one set right on the beach. This is the meal where Arnaud and I quietly pay our own bill, because we want to be there with you, but we are not on duty — we are at our favorite table with friends.
In the afternoon, the first winery. Often it is Marina — an architect, like me, who fell in love with a small wooded valley and built the only certified biodynamic estate in Bolgheri from scratch. She walks us through her vineyards. She explains, in her own words, what biodynamic actually means and why she chose the harder path.
Then we drive to Bolgheri village — the medieval hamlet at the end of the cypress avenue. We walk it in the soft hour before dinner. Stone houses. Brick archways. Shopkeepers closing for the evening. Dinner is at the wine shop in Bolgheri where the locals eat. By the end of the night, you have tasted the coast and the hills in the same day.
Day Three
Arnaud’s day. He starts you with cappuccino at his favorite beach café — the one where the bartender knows how he takes it. (No cappuccino after eleven, Italian rule. He will explain.)
Then we come back to my kitchen for the first hands-on cooking class. Before we start, we walk into the vegetable and herb garden together and pick what we need. Rosemary, sage, a few tomatoes if it is summer, the soft inner leaves of a lettuce we planted in March. Whatever the season has given us. The basket is the recipe.
I teach the way Lina taught me. By feel. By tasting. By watching what the dough is doing and answering it. Pasta first — egg pasta, the way it is made in this house — then the sauce, then the dessert. Lunch lasts two hours.
In the afternoon, the second winery. Then the walking food tour of Castagneto Carducci, our village. The bakery. The butcher. The coffee roaster. The gelato Arnaud crosses the village for.
Dinner is the second cooking class, at our table. Often, on this night, a winemaker joins us. He pours his bottles alongside the dishes I have just taught you to make. By the end of the night, you have understood, with your hands and your mouth, that food and wine are not two things in this house. They are one.
Day Four
We drive into the hills to a cheese farm — Rita and her family, who have been making pecorino the slow way for years and whose children we have watched grow up. You see the milk before it is cheese. You taste the cheese at every age. Lunch is at the farm. The view is the countryside.
In the afternoon, Volterra. A local guide meets us at the gate. Three thousand years inside one set of walls — Etruscan foundations, a Roman theatre, a medieval centre, the alabaster artisans still working as they have for centuries. The afternoon is unhurried. Volterra rewards walking slowly.
The farewell dinner is at the elegant restaurant owned by the Tenuta San Guido family — the family that makes Sassicaia. We will pour their wines. The kitchen is refined, the room is quiet, and the eight of you, who did not know each other on Sunday night, are now a small temporary household. You exchange addresses over coffee. You feel like a friend who happens to be here.
Day Five
Breakfast on the terrace, one last time. Then we drive you to the train, or to whatever onward transport you have arranged. This is the morning Arnaud has been filming, year after year, on the platform.
You will go home with a Tuscany of your own. Some guests come back three times. Some send photographs of the pasta they have made in their kitchens at home, years later. Some write at Christmas. The five days are over, but the friendship — the small one, the real one — has just begun.

“Treat yourself to a wonderful experience and tour with Chicca her charming Tuscan village, taste delicious pasta, gelato, and many other local specialties. It’s an unforgettable immersion in Tuscan culture, and we felt like locals!”

“We loved Castagneto Food tour. We sampled several traditional Tuscan recipes paired with great wines from the area. Lots of food! Our guide was great and told us stories about ancient history and local life as we toured in Castagneto. I learned a lot and had fun!”

“I would highly recommend Tuscan Wine & Food Tours! We did Bolgheri Food Tour, this village is stunning! We tasted delicious local food and amazing wines. We learn a lot about history, wine culture and traditional recipes from our fun and knowledgeable guide. Don’t miss it!”
The Etruscan Coast, in motion
Arnaud filmed the coast — the villages, the cypresses, the light, the sea. A few minutes of where the week actually lives.
The practical
Spring 2026
Autumn 2026
Eight chairs at each table. Once a date is full, it is full.
€4,280
per person · double or twin occupancy · single supplement available
The price covers everything from the moment we collect you at Castagneto Carducci train station to the moment we drop you off again five days later: four nights at Luca’s boutique hotel, all meals (five breakfasts, two lunches, four dinners), all wines and tastings, all entrance fees and guides, every coffee and gelato in between, all transfers throughout the week.
You will only need your wallet for things you choose to buy yourself.
Looking ahead to 2027
Many of our guests plan twelve to eighteen months in advance — that is genuinely how this works. The 2026 spring dates are already filling. If 2026 is not the right year for you, write to me anyway. The 2027 dates will open in summer 2026, and I will add you to the small list of people I notify before the dates go on the website.
For groups of four or more
If you are a group of four or more — couples traveling together, a friend group, a multi-generational family — we arrange a small number of custom private tours each year. The eight chairs become yours alone. The dates can be ones that fit your calendar rather than ours. The shape of the week can be tilted toward whatever matters most to you — more cooking, more wine, more region, or a different balance.
Round-trip airfare. Private transfers from Pisa, Florence, or Rome airports — we can arrange these for an additional fee. The seafood lunch on Day 2, where Arnaud and I quietly pay our own bill because we want to be at that table with you as friends, not as hosts. And travel insurance, which we ask all our guests to carry.
The closest airport is Pisa, an hour by train. Rome is two and a half hours, Florence about ninety minutes. Castagneto Carducci has its own train station. We collect you there.
If you would rather have a private transfer from the airport, we can arrange one — there is an additional fee. We will send you the simple directions when we confirm your dates.
A short conversation first — the video call, no commitment. If we are right for each other, we hold your dates with a small deposit. The remaining balance is due ninety days before arrival. We will walk you through the details on the call.
Moderate and unhurried. We walk through medieval villages on cobblestones with some hills and stairs. We stand during cooking classes. We stroll through vineyards. If you can comfortably walk one to two miles and handle stairs, you will be fine. We move at a leisurely pace with plenty of pauses.
Have other questions? See the full FAQ — or write to me directly. The real conversation is the call.
A presto, Chicca