Numbers are limited to 15 on this small-group walking tour ensuring you’ll experience everything with personalized attention from your guide.
Highlights
- 3.5-hour Rome food walking tour to Trastevere, Campo di Fiori and the Jewish Ghetto
- Hunt out the local’s favorite eateries in Rome with your expert local guide
- Visit Campo di Fiori’s market to meet local traders and sample their quality produce
- Explore vibrant Trastevere and try food like a classic Roman pasta dish, gelato and tomato-free pizza
- Walk through Rome’s Jewish Ghetto and sample some of the area’s distinctive cuisine, like fried artichokes
- Small-group tour with a maximum of 15 people for a more personalized experience
Recent Photos of this Tour
Useful Information
Small-Group Rome Food Walking Tour: Trastevere, Campo di Fiori and Jewish Ghetto
First stop is Campo di Fiori to explore its famous food market – popular with locals and tourists alike. Browse the heaving market stalls with your guide, admiring artistically arranged stands of vegetables, cheeses and meats, while soaking up the market’s friendly ambiance. Your guide will introduce you to some of the traders here, who’ll happily let you sample some of their high-quality offerings.
A large concentration of the capital’s restaurants and bars are found in the picturesque cobblestone streets of Trastevere – a vibrant neighborhood where bustling eateries spill outside into its pretty piazzas. On a stroll through this eclectic end of town, your guide will show off some of the local’s firm favorites -- sample a classic Roman pasta dish inside a top restaurant and then stop at a café to try out the best pizza bianca (tomato-free pizza) in town. Taste fresh mozzarella with locally cured salami, and then stop at Fata Margana gelaterie for an artisan gelato – the Italian’s far superior answer to ice cream!
Continue your tour through Rome’s Jewish Ghetto, an equally bohemian neighborhood -- just south of the city’s historic center. Hunt out the ghetto’s most popular delicatessens and grocery stores that are peppered throughout the streets, sandwiched between interesting artisan studios and vintage shops. Try suppli – every Roman’s favorite fried risotto ball – and then sample some of the staples of Italian Jewish cuisine, like fried artichokes and codfish in Piazza della Cinque Scole.
After discovering the best foodie haunts around Trastevere, Campo di Fiori and the Jewish Ghetto, your tour ends in San Cosimato Square (Trastevere).


