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Press
The Guardian
  • Sleeping with the... Case Sgadari - 25 Mai 2011

    Sleeping with the Finzi-Continis: Case Sgadari - 25 Mai 2011




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    THE GUARDIAN: Northern Sicily's Madonie mountains are a haven for hikers and nature-lovers. Lovely, I'll just view them from this idyllic poolside at my hotel...

    It is a cliche of writing about Sicily that you mention The Godfather in the opening lines, but the first thing that greets visitors to Case Sgadari is a horse's head. OK, it isn't on your pillow but on an imposing terracotta fountain in the cobbled courtyard, which nevertheless looks slightly menacing lit up at night.

    We were immediately bustled into a bright dining room with murals depicting pretty dancing ladies. It could easily have accommodated a gathering of the Corleone clan, but we were the only guests.

    We were presented with a hearty dish of meaty pasta, which we devoured like the tired and hungry travellers we were, only to realise that the rest of the animal was to follow as our secondo piatto. As we struggled to do our polite best by the poor beast, the cook, an elderly man, whose face had been carved into rocky crevasses by years in the Sicilian sun, joined us bearing a bottle and three glasses. Our tourist Italian made attempts at conversation impossible, but we shared a good part of the – as I remember it – delicious Sicilian dessert wine in amicable silence.

    This was the second leg of our visit to less well-trodden Sicily, after a few days on the south coast (the less pretty, but arguably more interesting alternative to immaculately groomed Taormina and Cefalù). And now we were somewhere in the Madonie mountains, in the north. Our journey here had been long: it's not far from the coast, but the road had more hairpins than a Sicilian wedding. Add to this darkness, mist and the fact that the communes of Petralia Soprana (our destination) and Petralia Sottana (its larger, and lower twin sister) can sound very similar if your Italian is rubbish.

    After supper our drinking companion escorted us wordlessly back across the courtyard to our bedroom in a large converted stable. Here was the sort of rustic chic the designers of the Toast catalogue can only dream of – iron bedstead, rug, heavy chest of drawers. Once the light was out we were plunged into the same darkness, in a universe before Toast eiderdowns, that the region's first medieval settlers would have known.

    By daylight, at first just glimpsed through a small window high in the eaves, we found we were as much in the world of the Finzi-Continis as the Corleones: even the horse's head looked aristocratic in the sunshine. There was an idyllic "kitchen" garden (to call it such makes my own patch in Shepherd's Bush practically a litter tray), carefully tended and filled with the scent of rosemary and other lovely smells. A large terrace conjures up images of beautiful people in sharp suits and party dresses.

    But best of all was the pool: where most villas boast pocket-handkerchief paddling pools, here was a pool in which to do solitary laps before breakfast, while staring out over miles of burnt-umber fields.

    Breakfast had the usual delicious holiday stuff, but most memorably (for me at least) enough varieties of cake to fill a church fete stall – and we were still the only guests.

    The Madonie mountains are, so the literature tells you, ideal for hiking, mountain biking, horse riding and nature watching. Sad to report, apart from one slightly arduous walk – which took in an ancient, empty hamlet with an ominous memorial to a mafia victim, and a village so sleepy even the stray cats couldn't be bothered to stir – we succumbed to the lure of having that glorious pool and view to ourselves.

    We did, however, drag ourselves away to pay a visit to those twin Petralia sisters who had led us such a merry dance on arrival. Pinned like medieval brooches on the mountain spur, Sottana and Soprana are two of the highest and best-preserved towns on this range. I wish I could tell you that in daylight I could tell them apart, but they are equally enchanting.

    Both are a jumble of narrow streets and buckling stone buildings (it's not for nothing that the tiny, plucky Fiat is one of the country's national emblems); it is easy to imagine Lampedusa's Don Fabrizio creeping down one of the shadowy alleyways to visit his mistress, or into one of the beautiful churches to confess. Magnificent baroque cathedrals, hoarding centuries of secrets, sorrows and treasures, stare imperiously out from the mountainsides.

    According to legend, the Madonie mountains were where Hades abducted poor unsuspecting Persephone into the underworld, and there is something dark about the heart of Sicily, and a little bit dangerous. But this is what makes it so romantic – it is a world away from the seaside whiff of Ambre Solaire and the noisy glitter of beachfront bars, and, well, other tourists. And Case Sgadari, with its horse's head fountain, vaulted stable rooms and majestic views, is the perfect place from which to explore it.

    Case Sgadari has four suites, together sleeping up to 20. Each has its own patio and kitchen. The property also offers traditional local meals. A week at Case Sgadari in September costs €1,463 in a suite sleeping four or €5,850 for a party of 20 through soloSicily (020-7193 0158, solosicily.com). The nearest sandy beach is at Cefalù, 37 miles away. Ryanair (ryanair.com) flies from Stansted to Palermo from £72 return, or Luton to Trapani from £76 return. More information on solosicily.com/sicily-holidays

    Artikel auf der Website der Zeitung The Guardian

  • Where's hot now?: Badia Tower - 29 Januar 2011

    Where's hot now?: Badia Tower - 29 Januar 2011




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    THE GUARDIAN: February average high: 16C
    Avoid the crowds at one of SoloSicily's secluded properties. The Badia Tower, for example, is a 16th-century building near the medieval town of Erice.
    A three-night stay with SoloSicily (020-7193 0158, solosicily.com) in the Badia Tower over Valentine's Day costs from £310 for two. Ryanair (ryanair.com) flies to Trapani from £27.99 one way

    Artikel auf der Website der Zeitung The Guardian

  • Sicily's secret south: Casa d'Eraclea - 10 Oktober 2009

    Sicily's secret south: Casa d'Eraclea - 10 Oktober 2009




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    THE GUARDIAN: Excuse me," says Gioacchino Sortino – who looks every sharp-suited inch the Sicilian businessman – reaching for his mobile. "It's my mama, she worries about me." And Gioacchino is worried about us. Wild, beautiful, unpredictable – and a little bit scary, Sicily has lived up to its tempestuous reputation by staging the most spectacular electrical storm. During the night, our villa – a glass hymn to modernism – felt as insubstantial as one of those plastic snow-storm domes as the elements raged about us. It's not hard to see why the ancient Greeks chose to settle in Sicily on this imposing cliff top facing Africa – or to imagine what portents they might have read into the furious display from the gods above. This morning, though, all – with the exception of Gioacchino's mama – is calm, the horizon as straight as the crease in his trousers.

    Gioacchino used to work as a sommelier at Gordon Ramsay at Claridge's, but came home to set up SoloSicily – with his brother, naturally – to prove to visitors that there's more to his country than the mafia. Compared with the manicured elegance of its most popular destinations, fashionable Taormina or charming Cefalu, southern Sicily is still undoubtedly the scruffy relation. It might not be as conventionally pretty as its neighbours, but the south coast has its own rugged beauty and plenty to recommend it that still seem to be something of an inside secret, remaining largely untouched by the tourist explosion that followed the arrival of cheap flights to Palermo and Catania around a decade ago.

    Casa d'Eraclea perches on the edge of Europe, its magnificent infinity pool dropping, apparently seamlessly, into the Mediterranean below. A modern architect-designed house, everything is clean lines, light and glass. Pool and sea dominate. It is like waking up to find oneself in the bright, deliquescent world of a David Hockney LA painting. Even the cactus-studded, hammock-slung garden is all symmetry and pleasing shapes. Its surroundings may be a little rough around the edges, but Casa d'Eraclea most certainly is not.

    Den ganzen Artikel auf der Website der Zeitung The Guardian lesen

  • The Poet's Corner, Enna, Sicily - 21 Februar 2009

    The Poet's Corner, Enna, Sicily - 21 Februar 2009




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    The Poet's Corner

    THE GUARDIAN: Set in Sicily's heartland, within walking distance of Lake Pergusa, from the outside the house looks every inch the 19th-century aristocratic retreat it once was, but inside it's another world. Strong, sober, contemporary design reigns, but the abiding influence is literature. One bedroom features acres of verse to browse through; there's even a blackboard wall for when inspiration strikes. A stunning pool in stirring surroundings makes for a fitting final chapter.

    • Solo Sicily (020-7193 0158, solosicily.com) has seven nights' rental only from €4,550 in May (the house sleeps 17). Book before 31 March for a €200 discount. Nearest airport: Catania.

    Artikel auf der Website der Zeitung The Guardian

  • The tower of love: Badia Tower - 17 Januar 2009

    The tower of love: Badia Tower - 17 Januar 2009




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    THE GUARDIAN: The perfect spot to let down your hair, Badia Tower is a 16th-century tower for two that stands alone in the gardens of an estate in Sicily, within easy reach of the Greek sites at Selinunte and Segesta, and the beaches of San Vito lo Capo. The Rapunzel-esque crenellated tower is surrounded by palm-filled gardens and has traditional interiors with blue tiled floors, a kitchen, a double bed in an alcove and a large sun terrace. Beyond the grounds lies the Marsala district with its wineries, and you can take a day trip to the Aegadian archipelagos. It's totally romantic, and the good news is it's still available for Valentine's Day
    • 020 7193 0158, solosicily.com. A three- night stay costs €321 for two people.

    Artikel auf der Website der Zeitung The Guardian

  • In the red: Farm Campagna - 11 Oktober 2008

    In the red: Farm Campagna - 11 Oktober 2008




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    THE GUARDIAN: No one was hurt during this photo shoot. Just kidding, but someone should tell the owners of Farm Campagna (pictured right) in Butera, southern Sicily, that there's a reason why blood-red swimming pools are not popular (it claims to be one of only three in the world). No one wants to dive into what looks like the set of a horror movie. Other than the disturbing pool, the restored 18th-century villa is every bit the trad Italian country pad, surrounded by 200 hectares of vineyards, olive and almond trees. It also has a spa, small gym and gallery.
    Hire the eight-bedroom villa (which sleeps 22) before the end of October for the last of the Mediterranean sun, or in November for a knock-down price.
    020-7193 0158, solosicily.com. Four nights in Oct/Nov costs €3,422/€2,714, including breakfast and daily cleaner. The villa is still available for Christmas/New Year for €4,085 for four nights or €7,150 for a week. British Airways (0844 493 0787, ba.com) flies Gatwick-Catania from £103,50 rtn inc tax.

The Independent
  • Sicily: Standing at a... Renèe - 21 September 2011

    Sicily: Standing at a spectacular crossroads 21 September 2011




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    Centuries of Arab rule helped forge the uniquely Sicilian way of life. It's a cultural influence that's still felt by visitors today, says Sarah Merson

    It was another scorching hot day in the seaside town of San Vito Lo Capo on Sicily's west coast, so I sought shade under one of the tented canopies belonging to Thàam, a charming little restaurant tucked away on a side street, with a menu centred around couscous dishes. The tables were decorated with ornate North African lanterns; scatter cushions shone with ethnic colour.

    In 1768 German polymath JW Goethe pronounced that "without Sicily, Italy cannot be fully understood". Yet Sicily – and certainly San Vito Lo Capo, which occupies the tip of a north-western promontory jutting out into the Mediterranean – cannot be understood without understanding the influence of North Africa. Geographically, it is closer to Tunisia than the Italian mainland. And from a culinary point of view, such is the reverence felt for the couscous specialities in San Vito Lo Capo – they are found in almost every restaurant in town – that this week marks a six-day festival dedicated to the dish. Among the highlights of "Couscous Fest", which runs every September, is a couscous cook-off, where local chefs compete with their African counterparts, who arrive from as far away as the Ivory Coast and Cape Verde.

    Multiculturalism in action? It's certainly a contrast to Sicily's ancient history, which is a tapestry of invasions, intrigues and internecine battles. The Phoenicians, Greeks, Romans, Arabs, Normans and the Spanish have all fought for and dominated the island in turn over the centuries. The result is a complex heritage – yet a significant part is still based around Arabic culture.

    At the tip of the headland, San Vito Lo Capo has been developed as a seaside resort, with sun seekers flocking to make the most of the sugary-white sand of the crescent-shaped beach and glittering waters. Patrolling among them are Tunisian beach vendors proferring fresh coconuts sourced from Tunis. Earlier in the day, I'd sipped the deliciously sweet milk, sand between my toes, with my back to the Mediterranean. The view beyond the orange-coloured buildings was dotted with giant carobs and windswept palm trees in a scene reminiscent of the North African landscape.[...]

    I was staying at Renèe, a white-washed villa close to the village of Scopello, which lies to the south of San Vito Lo Capo. Inside, the terracotta floor tiles keep it cool, while the kitchen is festooned with 19th-century ceramics. The owner, Renata Plaja, was keen to stress Sicily's unique character:

    "I'm Sicilian," said Renata, "but like most Sicilians, I've adopted a social attitude which is inherent in the Arabs: we don't like to live life in a hurry, and we enjoy lengthy siestas... We are welcoming and hospitable, openly accepting of people from other countries and cultures, and over time those people have come to identify themselves as Sicilians too."

    As I reclined on my sun-lounger by Renèe's swimming pool, the Mediterranean shimmering in the distance, it seemed a reasonable moment to indulge in a lengthy Sicilian siesta of my own. Whether a snooze in the afternoon is profoundly North African or Italian, there's little doubt that Sicily's epic history has shaped the island and its people in myriad ways. And the couscous, you can be assured, is always excellent.

    Travel essentials

    Getting there

    easyJet (0843 104 5000; www.easyJet.com) flies to Palermo from Gatwick. One-way prices start at £29.99. Palermo is also served by Ryanair (0871 246 0000; www.ryanair.com) from Stansted.


    Staying there

    Solo Sicily (020 7193 0158; www.soloSicily.com) offers a week's rental of Renée, which sleeps six, from £1,650.

    Den ganzen Artikel auf der Website der Zeitung The Independent lesen

  • A spring break in Sicily: Tanguera - 5 März 2011

    A spring break in Sicily: Tanguera - 5 März 2011




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    THE INDEPENDENT: Every week we invite competing companies to give us their best deal for a specific holiday. Today: a one-week holiday in Sicily in early April. Prices are per person, based on two travelling together on 9 April.

    SoloSicily

    £448: Palermo

    Includes one week's rental of Tanguera, a chic villa with outdoor sunken bath, close to the seaside resort of Mondello. Flights are not included. "This is a great option for anyone who wants to combine a beach break with visiting Palermo's great food markets, churches and palaces," says Gioacchino Sortino at soloSicily (020-7193 0158; solosicily.com).

  • A self-catering break in Sicily: Badia Tower - 25 Juli 2009

    A self-catering break in Sicily: Badia Tower - 25 Juli 2009




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    THE INDEPENDENT: €800: Badia Tower, Marsala. Flights not included. "This offers the chance to stay in a romantic private tower for two in the gardens of an aristocratic estate, close to the sandy beaches of San Vito lo Capo and some of Sicily's magnificent Greek ruins," says soloSicily's Gioacchino Sortino. (020-7193 0158; solosicily.com)

  • Island life? Palazzo Federico - 7 Februar 2009

    Island life? Palazzo Federico - 7 Februar 2009




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    THE INDEPENDENT: If you crave personality as well as historic architecture, the Palazzo Federico in Palermo should fit the bill. Dating back to the 12th-century, it is stuffed with chandeliers, heirloom portraits and an antique weapon collection. A big selling point here is that the current count and countess are usually on hand to guide you around in person. A guest room, the Federico Suite, has been available for several years. In addition, the palazzo now offers new self-catering apartments, set in the old stables. Each sleeps two and rental rates start at €190 per night. You can book through Solo Sicily (020-7193 0158; solosicily.com).

    Artikel auf der Website der Zeitung The Independent

Junior
  • Sicilian Mardi Gras: Melaverde - Februar 2012

    Sicilian Mardi Gras: Melaverde - Februar 2012




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    JUNIOR: Sicily is a colourful island all year round, but never more so than during the February Carnival period. The Acireale Carnival (February 4–21)on the island’s east coast at the foot of Mount Etna, just a few miles from the tourist hotspot of Taormina, is Sicily’s oldest. The carnival is best known for its amazing floral displays and floats portraying celebrities, politicians and fantasy creations. Stay in the heart of Acireale at the Melaverde apartment, which sleeps seven and costs from £760 for three nights.

    Artikel auf der Website der Zeitung Junior

  • Peace in Sicily: The Poets' Corner - Dezember 2010

    Peace in Sicily: The Poets' Corner - Dezember 2010




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    JUNIOR: To truly experience peace on Earth this Christmas, head to Enna in central Sicily and stay at the tranquil Poet's Corner – the seven-bedroom, four-bathroom former holiday home of the aristocratic Grimaldi family. It sleeps 12 and was designed as a literary escape, so the white-washed walls feature the odd blackboard for moments of self-expression, while you can also enjoy wintery walks around Pergusa Lake or visit the snow-capped Madonie Mountains. If the countryside adventures sound like too much effort, relax in the Reading Room (left). One week in December from £3,950. including breakfast and maid service. Tel: 020 71930158; www.solosicily.com

  • Sicilian sunshine: Il Gattopardo - April 2009

    Sicilian sunshine: Il Gattopardo - April 2009




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    JUNIOR: Book a luxury villa in Sicily before March 31 and save €150 per week with villa specialist soloSiciliy. Il Gattopardo, near the pretty resort of Taormina, is a 19th-century manor house with stunning lavender- and hibiscus-filled gardens. Surrounded by a private vineyard and lemon plantation, the villa is an hour's drive from Sicily's famous volcano Mount Etna.
    A vine-draped gazebo overlooks the swimming pool and the interior of the house is filled with antique furnishings. The villa sleeps ten and costs €5,050 for a week in June. Smaller properties are also available, to see the full range of villas, tel: 020 7193 0158; or visit www.solosicily.com

    Artikel auf der Website der Zeitung Junior

Daily Express
  • Family warms to Sicilian escape: Mariuccia - 9 Juli 2011

    Family warms to Sicilian escape: Mariuccia - 9 Juli 2011




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    DAILY EXPRESS: A break from their usual summer haunts led SARAH MERSON and her clan to discover the island's delights

    IT MUST have made an unusual sight. Myself and our three young children hanging around outside the grocery shop in the heat of the afternoon, waiting for it to open.
    Ostensibly we were there to replenish stocks of bread and milk for our nearby villa but who were we kidding? What we really craved was more of the shop's delicious Sicilian gelato.
    My husband Josh and I along with our brood, Louis, eight, Olivia, six and three-year-old Jude, arrived at the island's capital Palermo two days earlier. Picking up our hire car, we'd driven the two hours direct to our villa, Mariuccia, through the mountainous interior.
    Set just inland from Sicily's Mediterranean coast, our plan was to use it as a base to explore the island's beautiful western expanse.
    It was late into the evening as we drove through the grand gates of the three-acre estate containing Mariuccia, so we were pleasantly surprised to find the owners waiting for us with a warm welcome.
    Any apprehension we had about taking a break away from the standard family-friendly Med destinations quickly evaporated: the children were instantly adored. In Sicily, family is the bedrock of day-to-day life.
    A few hours later, the sun was up and Jude insisted that we all were, too. We spent the day familiarising ourselves with the villa, which had a slightly incongruous Californian feel, inside and out.
    The three terraces were decked out with BBQ and wood-burning pizza oven and various sitting and dining areas surrounded by colourful flower beds. Beyond that, the oak and olive trees offered privacy and shade. Inside, children delighted at the snooker room, table tennis table and PlayStation.
    With five double bedrooms, it was a toss up who got the one with a balcony overlooking the wonderfully inviting pool. That evening a catering team organised by soloSicily, the villa letting agency, prepared us a tailored three-course dinner. Expecting the children not to deviate far from the pasta main course, I was amazed to see them tucking in to the freshly caught king prawns wrapped in deep-fried spaghetti.
    Their liking for dessert was far more predictable: Sicily's beloved cannoli – tubes of fried pasta dough filled with ricotta, candied fruit and chocolate.
    Sicily's sense of history was tangible every direction we went. A 10-minute drive took us to Burgio, a small farming settlement (with the gelato-stocked grocery shop).
    Developed around the remains of a Norman castle, it is a beguiling warren of narrow streets and uneven rooftops with a defiantly laid-back air.
    The focal point, the Mother Church, is intricately detailed with frescoes and mosaics but the pride and joy of the town is the Museum of Mummies.
    Forget figures wrapped in bandage-like material; these are ancient corpses embalmed in oil and placed strategically in coffins.
    The children were enthralled rather than unnerved at this bizarre spectacle and the stories surrounding them.
    Later at Valley of the Temples, close to the city of Agrigento, we walked among the ruins of an ancient Greek city.
    The area is dotted with gnarled olive and almond trees and the three temples, dating from 430BC, were extraordinarily beautiful against a brilliant blue sky.
    One, the Concordia, looked strangely familiar. It was only later that I realised it is the model for Unesco's logo.
    Returning for a day in Palermo, we shopped in the bustling street market, sampling “cucina povera” (cooking of the poor), effectively traditional Sicilian dishes. None of the children tried the snails, despite the stallholder gushingly insisting that the “bambini” must take one each, gratis.
    The architecture of Palermo is enchanting, the car-choked streets and erratic driving less so. So we headed for the beautiful coastal resorts of Scopello and nearby San Vito lo Capo, perched on the tip of the north-west peninsula.
    The former won us over with its white houses and smooth-stone streets, while the shimmering beach at San Vito lo Capo was in a league of its own. Here you are closer to Africa than the Italian mainland and the arid landscape and ubiquitous seafood couscous seemed to reflect that.
    Back at our villa, the days took on a relaxed rhythm. Olivia overcame her fear of the pool's deep end, Louis kept a vigil for geckoes and Jude took delight in watching the wild Tibetan goats on the nearby hillside.
    Come evening, the routine would always be the same. As we opened a bottle of red from the local Planeta Estate, the children would tuck in, once more, to the gelato. No wonder we were always running out.

    THE KNOWLEDGE
    soloSicily (0207 193 0158/www.solosicily.com) offers seven nights at Mariuccia from £2650 (sleeps six), selfcatering.
    easyJet (0843 104 5000/www.easyjet.com) offers return flights from Gatwick to Palermo from £60. Italian State Tourist Board: 0207 408 1254/www.italiantouristboard.co.uk

    Artikel auf der Website der Zeitung Daily Express

Elle
  • Villa Elena, Sicily - März 2010

    Villa Elena, Sicily - März 2010




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    THE SPACE
    ELLE: If you want head off on a relaxed yet luxurious holiday with friends, Villa Elena in the southeast of Sicily is the perfect choice. Sleeping up to 12 people in extreme comfort - all colour-themed double rooms with en-suite bathrooms and flat-screen TVs - the attention to detail here rivals the best five-star hotels. There are iPod docks in every room, a cabinet full of the latest DVDs, hair straighteners in the bathroom and basketball and volleyball nets by the pool. We loved the huge kitchen (and the fact that someone came in every morning to clean it), which had a glass wall where we sat looking out at the sunset, drinking local wine and playing high-stakes Monopoly. The sourrounding towns are small, but you'll find street markets almost every day, as well as grocery stores with fresh produce and well-priced wine. Our final tip? Forget the diet and try ricotta-filled delicacies from the local bakeries.

    THE AREA
    The closest major city to Villa Elena is Agrigento, worth a visit for its ancient temples and boutique shops. Near by Camastra provides daily essentials and you'll often find the town's menfolk lining the pavements watching the world go by. If you like sand and surf, head to San Leone, a 20-minute drive away - the sandy beaches stretch for miles along western and eastern coastlines.

    THE FOOD
    This place is a foodie's paradise. There's an option to have chefs come in and cook for you, but you can also take cookery classes in the villa or visit the local vineyards. Our tip for dinner is La Borghesiana in Naro (335 574 9503), where we ate the best meal we've ever tasted.

    THE EXTRAS
    It's the non-essentials that really take this place to the next level. There's a games room, Powerplate and running machines, an outdoor area with a huge table, pizza oven, barbecue and herb garden. And you can even arrange for a beauty therapist to drop by to give you a treatment.

    GETTING THERE...
    A one-week stay at Villa Elena starts from £3,400 in June, enq(020) 7193 0158;solosicily.com. Reduced prices are available for smaller parties. Villa Elena is a 90-minute to two-hour drive from each of Sicily's airports (Catania and Palermo) and its hillside location means you'll need to drive to most places. Car hire can be arranged with solosicily.com.

The Times
  • 20 Med beach villas: Casa d'Eraclea - 4 Februar 2012

    20 Med beach villas: Casa d'Eraclea - 4 Februar 2012




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    THE TIMES: Spend mornings on the long, sandy untouristy beach, a ten-minute walk from this modern villa on the brow of a hill.
    While away the afternoon by the infinity pool surrounded by decking with panoramic sea views. It's the perfect spot for cocktails because the sunsets are stunning. If you feel like venturing farther afield, the Valley of the Temples and the Greek ruins of Selinunte are near by. The four-bedroom villa has contemporary, unfussy decor – white with splashes of colour – giving it a light, bright ambience.
    Details From £1,825 for six, from SoloSicily (020-71930158, solosicily.com).

  • Villas in moderation: Sirena - 13 Februar 2011

    Villas in moderation: Sirena - 13 Februar 2011




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    THE TIMES: Italy is probably the most expensive country in southern Europe for self-catering in summer. Within that context, however, Sicily stands out – in particular, if you are after some sandy toes, the west cost of the Island. A stunning and secluded designer property, sleeping four, with a private pool and a hilltop vista to the coast, would set you back much more than £974 a week in Tuscany, but in May, June and September (Sicily's best months), that's what soloSicily (020 7193 0158, solosicily.com) is charging for Villa Sirena, near Scopello. (...) New flights from Luton to the western airport of Trapani with Ryanair (0871 246 0000 ryanair.com) might ease the pain still further, if you book far enough in advance (service starts in late March; we found seven-day return flights in May for about £115). It also flies from Stansted and Dublin. Europcar (0871 384 9847, europcar.co.uk) a week's car hire from £125.

  • Short haul: Princely Houses - 11 Januar 2011

    Short haul: Princely Houses - 11 Januar 2011




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    THE TIMES: Solo Sicily has properties available for dates coinciding with half-term in the UK and the annual carnival, dating back to the 16th century, in Acireale, on the east coast between Taormina and Catania. Cottages for four on the Queen’s Jewels farm estate near Taormina cost from £335 for a week; an elegant apartment for seven in Acireale is from £726 for three nights. Flights extra; BA operates from Gatwick to Catania. 020-7193 0158

  • Last-minute escapes... Badia Tower - 28 August 2010

    Last-minute escapes to the sun for under £500: Badia Tower - 28 August 2010




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    THE TIMES: Marsala, Sicily – £499
    Best for a romantic getaway
    Badia Tower is a lovely 16th-century tower tucked away on an estate just outside Marsala in western Sicily. The building has a bedroom in an alcove and a terrace with mini day-beds. Sandy beaches are close by. The price includes flights and car hire. Details SoloSicily (020-7193 0158, solosicily.com) has a week at Badia tower from £499pp with car hire and flights from Luton. Peak season price: £580.

  • Something sweet... Cambiocavallo - 30 January 2010

    Something sweet in Sicily: Cambiocavallo - 30 January 2010




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    THE TIMES: Cambiocavallo is a former posada that has been converted into an eight-bedroom hotel in Val di Noto (020-7193 0158, solosicily.com). Rooms have satellite TV, internet access and verandas. Noto, Scicli and Avola, and several beaches, are near by. Ryanair flights included. High season: £785

  • 20 best villas by the sea: Casa d'Eraclea - 12 Juni 2010

    20 best villas by the sea: Casa d'Eraclea - 12 Juni 2010




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    THE TIMES: Designer chic Italy Positioned on the brow of a hill on Sicily’s southwest coast, Casa d’Eraclea is a four-bedroom, architect-designed house (sleeping up to nine) that bags the title for having the most spectacular terrace: an infinity pool, surrounded by hammocks and panoramic sea views. Inside, the style is modern and bold — white and orange walls, yellow and blue furnishings — and there’s a spacious sitting room and (though most wouldn’t dream of it on a beach holiday) a gym. Stroll down to the sandy beach, a few minutes’ walk away, visit the Valley of the Temples archaeological site, or just relax by the pool and enjoy the views.

    Details From € 3,450 a week based on six sharing (additional charge for extra persons); 020-7193 0158, solosicily.com

    Den ganzen Artikel auf der Website der Zeitung The Times lesen

Sunday Times Travel Magazine
  • The Easter celebration: soloSicily - März 2011

    The Easter celebration: soloSicily - März 2011




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    Sunday Times Travel Magazine: Join the war between good and evil with the Dance of the Devils in the remote village of Prizzi (April 17-24). Wearing demonic costumes and enormous masks, locals put on plays and processions throughout Easter week – until Sunday, when devils momentarily win the day, before being slain by angels. After all that effort beating Satan, boost your energy with a (freely distributed) sweet cannateddi rice cake. Solo Sicily (www.solosicily.com) has villa breaks from £250pp for a week. EasyJet (www.easyjet.com) flies to Palermo from Gatwick.

Daily Mail
  • New don for Sicily: Fattoria Corleonese - 29 Januar 2011

    New don for Sicily: Fattoria Corleonese - 29 Januar 2011




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    DAILY MAIL: The Mafia are going. Bring on the tourists! 
    PIZZAS poured from the wood-fired oven but the chef still had time to hiss under his breath as he deftly swept them into cardboard boxes for takeaway: 'Turisti. Inglese.' Fascinated locals spun round for a look at the 'English tourists.' Well, we were Scottish but we let it slide. Here we were in Corleone and it was nice to be something of a novelty attraction, nodding as the locals wished us 'Buona sera' as they left the restaurant.

    So why were we such a star turn in a town with a name recognised the world over thanks to Mario Puzo's fictional Godfather? For a start, the real Corleone is also intertwined with the very real Mafia - the Corleonesi clan having taken control of organised crime in Sicily and America.

    So tourists come to Corleone, many of them Americans fancying that their forefathers left here because of blood feuds and not just poverty. But most hop off the coach, pause long enough to buy a Godfather coppola - a kind of hat - as a souvenir and move on.

    We were different, in town in the evening because we were staying nearby. But surely the heart of Mafia country in the hills 40 or so miles south of Palermo is an odd choice for a family holiday? Not if you want a real sense of being in a foreign country. It's possible to sit in any of the northern cities, or even in Rome, sip a G&T and hear more Home Counties accents than in Kensington.

    Not so Sicily. The landscape is both spectacular and unique. Great peaks soar from fertile plains and all around Corleone rock pinnacles jut out from the soil like the bones of some long-dead great beast.

    The roads wind and sweep through the hills offering tantalising vistas one minute and hemming you in with great rockfaces the next. Little villages cling to the top of great mounds of jagged rock.

    You're close to Africa here and that shows up in unusual ways. There are lots of chillies on the menu and you're likely to get a handful of sultanas thrown over your pizza - sounds crazy but it's an unlikely stroke of genius.

    Corleone is close to bustling Palermo - well worth a visit but expect a white-knuckle ride if you're driving; its traffic is seriously daunting - and within striking distance of the gorgeous beaches where many tourists spend their entire stay.

    But they are missing out. We stayed at the flawless Fattoria Corleonesi, in the heart of a bustling working estate producing cheese and olive oil. Our beautifully furnished and equipped apartment was part of a building that's still a family home, built around a dramatic and ancient courtyard yet with all mod cons - if we could just drag ourselves off the sun-drenched patio...

    Our elegant hosts had provided us with a table groaning with local fruit, bread and their own magnificent pecorino cheese, made from sheep's milk and with a glistening, salted crust. There was also a bottle of a luscious Tancredi wine from the Donnafugata estates just a few miles away towards Marsala.

    The draw of the swimming pool, set in an olive grove and just a short stroll out of the main courtyard and through delightful gardens, was strong.

    But there was exploring to be done and so we took our Ford from Avis - public transport is problematic, so renting a car is advisable - into Corleone.

    There are outlying parts of the town that look pretty unattractive - much of western Sicily got knocked about a bit during the war. The centre of town, though, is different. The streets are an exciting jumble in the way that only medieval towns, never designed with the car in mind, can be.

    The whole place is a mass of hills but it's great fun to wander, getting lost up little stairways and marvelling at the higgledy-piggle way the town has grown.

    As well as plenty of tourist-trap shops selling Godfather tat, there are supermarkets, chic designer outlets and no end of churches. For all its Mafia links, Corleone is known as 'the town of 100 churches' - all old and mostly with amazing architecture.

    Hungry travellers can find everything from a quick bowl of linguini and a beer to formal dining. Choice is a little limited but you do feel you're getting authentic local fare.

    And part of that is cracking Sicilian wine. The whites are refreshing on days when the sun is blazing while the reds, often using the Nero D'Avola grape native to Sicily, are a complex taste treat.

    The Donnafugata estates have blended modern know-how with ancient techniques and a real feel for Sicilian ground and grapes to craft delightfully drinkable wines.

    Prices? Expect to be shocked both by how little you'll pay here and how much more you pay for inferior rubbish back home.

    For a change from the pool, we headed south to the coast.

    We took our first dip in the sea on a sandy beach on the edge of Selinunte and then dined on fish at a restaurant right on the sand, the catch of the day having arrived just moments before us.

    We then struck out for Agrigento and another spectacular sandy beach - we had it all to ourselves - before making for the area's big draw, the Valley of the Temples.

    The sheer scale of these Greek ruins is astonishing. Even the children, who - let's be honest - don't do history, were dumbstruck.

    Let the Yanks pretend they are the scions of Mafia dynasties. Here you can become part of Sicily's aristocracy, lovers of art and fine food, wine and conversation.

    All of which is now within much easier reach thanks to Ryanair, who fly in to Trapani on the west coast.

    If you're looking for a holiday within Europe that makes you feel like you're in a different world, sizzling Sicily ought to be high on your list.

    PATRICIA KANE TRAVEL FACTS Part of soloSicily's new collection of budget villas with pools, Fattoria Corleonese (sleeps 6) starts at [pounds sterling]1,158 per week, rising to [pounds sterling]1,990 in August). www.soloSicily.com or tel 020 7193 0158.

    Fly with Ryanair to Trapani from London Stansted, from [pounds sterling]12.99 one way. New route from London Luton starts March 29, from [pounds sterling]14.99 one way. See www.ryanair.com For Avis, see www.avis.com

Condé Nast Traveller
  • Una casa in un clic: soloSicily.com - August 2009

    Una casa in un clic: soloSicily.com - August 2009




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    CONDÉ NAST TRAVELLER: Il sito solosicily.com, ha in catalogo abitazioni lussuose come Villa Matal, ex residenza del principe di Villadorata sulle colline di Noto con piscina, terrazza, giardino, panorama e 5 raffinate camere (6.470 € la settimana); Perla Nera, magnifica villa su due livelli alle pendici dell'Etna, con piscina in pietra lavica, giardino d'inverno e 3 camere (4.340 € la settimana); il casale del primo Ottocento Villa Musa, nei pressi di Catania, con arredi d'antiquariato, piscina e 2 camere (2.345 € a settimana); Villa Elena vicina ad Agrigento, struttura di design (dentro e fuori) su 2 livelli con piscina e 3 camere (3.900 € la settimana); la tranquilla e panoramica Villa Borbone, sulle alture di Palermo, con 3 camere e piscina fra le palme (3.900 € la settimana).

    Die Villen, die in diesem Artikel erwähnt wurden, sind:
    Matal
    , Perla Nera, Musa, Elena, Borbone

     

Marie Claire
  • Hot Stuff: Elena - April 2012

    Hot Stuff: Elena - April 2012




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    MARIE CLAIRE: (...) Driving across the interior of the island towards the south coast and Agrigento is equally dramatic. A bridge that seems to go on forever lifts up the road as if we're flying through the arid valley. We pass small shabby farms and the sheep that make all that pecorino cheese, plus thousands upon thousands of olive trees. Then, just as I spot the sea in the distance, the landscape becomes gentler, greener and more open.
    Our next home is a palatial, six-bedroom porperty with grand modern arches. Villa Elena's pool is ridiculously huge, there are stylish black hammocks rocking under artfully planted palms, enormous comfy beds, a five star kitchen and an outdoor wood-fired pizza oven, It's like arriving at a slick boutique hotel minus the sniffy guests and overly trendy staff. Instead we get the rabble that is all our friends, hot from their long journeys from the UK and claiming they've already bought up all the booze in our local alimentari. Better still, they all love cooking and every evening the kitchen buzzes with masterchefs whipping up a feast. Suddenly, I realise – despite all the chaos and wrangling when you're trying to organise it – holidaying with a big group is just brilliant. (...)

Prima
  • Sizzle in Sicily: Sirena - Februar 2012

    Sizzle in Sicily: Sirena - Februar 2012




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    PRIMA: Sicily has a wilder, more rugged beauty than mainland Italy. The Sicilian sea is clean and warm and you can rent a beach lounger and watch the Sicilians at play.

    There is much to explore in the Scopello area on the unspoilt western side of the island. Take a trip to Segesta, where high on a mountain stands the majestic and amazingly intact ruins of an Ancient Greek Doric temple, one of the many treats for archaeology fans. Or try a nail-biting drive up to the medieval mountaintop town of Erice, with hairpin bends all the way. You'll be glad you made the journey when you enter this ancient town, all cobbles, winding lanes and more churches than people.
    Nature-lovers can visit the Zingaro Nature Reserve for a hike among rare plants and wildlife. And don't miss a day in Palermo, the elegant but shabby capital where, astonishingly, you'll see whole ghost squares bombed out in World War ? still in ruins. Restaurants dish up the Italian favourites of pizza, pasta and grilled meat and fish, as well as the Sicilian specialities of arancini (rice balls) and caponata (vegetable stew). Dinner generally costs around £ 15 per head.


    BOOK IT

    • soloSicily offers villas and boutique hotel accommodation with properties ranging from budget family villas with pools, to large country estates.
    • The Villa Sirena is a neat little house perched on a mountain just outside Scopello with breathtaking views across the valley of farms, mountains and the sea below.
    • One week at Villa Sirena starts at around £830 (sleeps four). Prima readers will get ten per cent off during June 2012. Visit www.solosicily.com and quote ref PR1.
    • Fly to Sicily with easyjet from £ 120 return. Visit www.easyjet.com
The Sunday Times
  • Go for it...: Tanguera - 22 April 2012

    Go for it...: Tanguera - 22 April 2012




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    Too highbrow? No worries: the same weekend sees the less challenging World Festival on the Beach (www.wwfestival.com), in Mondello, just outside Palermo. Feature event is the fascinating ladies' beach volleyball. There are also less captivating happenings involving boats. Stay at the self-catering Tanguera, a one-bedroom designer villa within walking distance of the beach. a week here costs from £620pp, with SoloSicily (020 7193 0158, solosicily.com). Allow £100 for flights with Easy Jet (0843 104 5000, easyjet.com).

Olive
  • Calamari and Marsala in Sicily: Badia Tower - März 2009

    Calamari and Marsala in Sicily: Badia Tower - März 2009




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    OLIVE: Head to pretty 16th-century Badia Tower, Marsala to get away from it all - it stands alone in the magnificent gardens of the large Badia estate. There's one double bedroom, kitchen, living/dining area and a large private terrace with barbecue outside. One week costs from € 750 (soloSicily.com). Just 1Km away is local restaurant Bacco's, in a 19th-century villa with views over the Egadi Islands. Book a table on the outdoor terrace and enjoy stunning sunsets and fresh calamari or Sicilian pasta with sardines and fennel (baccos.it).
    Close by are the sandy beaches of San Vito lo Capo and Marsala producing vineyards such as Cantine Florio (cantineflorio.it) and Carlo Pellegrino (carlopellegrino.it). Try real Sicilian sweets at Pasticceria De Gaetano in Piazza Mameli, 9, Marsala, where the most popular pastries and sweets include cassata (iced sponge cake with candied fruit), and cannoli (tube-shaped pastry filled with ricotta combined with vanilla, chocolate or pistacchio). Ryanair flights to Palermo from London Stansted (ryanair.com)

Cult
  • Ville da sogno per vacanze indimenticabili - Juni 2009

    Ville da sogno per vacanze indimenticabili - Juni 2009




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    CULT: 37 dimore di lusso scelte da soloSicily per un turismo che coniuga relax ed esclusività.

    Ville esclusive, per lo più di proprietà dell'antica nobiltà siciliana, meta dell'alta borghesia inglese e americana, ma anche di grandi manager e star dello jet set, da affittare per soggiorni fuori dai classici circuiti turistici. Sono le ville proposte da soloSicily, la giovanissima azienda dei fratelli palermitani Gioacchino e Roberto Sortino. <<soloSicily nasce nel 2006, dopo la mia esperienza a Londra, - racconta Gioacchino Sortino, trentunenne amministratore unico dell'azienda - dove ho avuto modo di osservare il continuo aumento dei flussi turistici della medio alta borghesia inglese verso la Toscana e le sue ville. La Sicilia non ha nulla da invidiare, in quanto a location, alla Toscana, cosi sono tornato, ho individuato delle ville dagli alti standard qualitativi e ho contattato i loro proprietari per proporne l'affitto. Si è rilevata una formula di successo, che ci farebbe piacere proporre ancje al pubblico siciliano>>. Mentre Gioacchino cura la parte commerciale dell'azienda, Roberto, esperto delle tecniche online, ne cura l'aspetto tecnico: prenotazioni e invio materiali avviene tutto per e-mail. <<E' una scelta voluta, - spiega Goacchino - per evitare l'eccessiva produzione di materiale cartaceo e, quindi, sostenere l'ambiente>>. Insieme, i fratelli Sortino hanno selezionato le ville e le case di campagna più eleganti e i più lussuosi boutique hotels, gioielli immersi in affascinanti scorci di una Sicilia quasi sconosciuta, per offrire ai loro clienti una vacanza indimenticabile, circondati da paesaggi naturali surreali e patrimoni archeologici e architettonici.

    Oggi sono trentasette le ville in Sicilia e nelle isole proposte da soloSicily, spaziando dalle ville al mare o con piscina, a quelle in montagna o per gli amanti del design super moderno che sfida la tradizione che lo circonda, sino ad arrivare alle ville Food and Wine, con un cuoco a propria disposizione, anche per corso di cucina tipica siciliana. Per chi è alla ricerca di una vacanza romantica, magari per festeggiare una ricorrenza o un anniversario, Pantesco Garden, a Pantelleria in località Karuscia, può essere la soluzione ideale: due camere da letto e due bagni in un dammuso di charm, co piscina e giardino in stile arabo privati. Se non si vuole rinunciare ad una cena romantica in una terrazza sul mare, con accesso privato alla spiaggia, dallo stile semplice e di buon gusto che consente sino ad otto posti letto. <<Soggiornare in dammuso, in questo periodo, ha un costo di 2000 euro, mentre una settimana a villa Hibiscus è pari ad euro 2450. - prosegue Gioacchino - Però, prenotando con anticipo sul nostro sito, solosicily.com, si ha la possibilità di risparmiare sno ad euro 300 per settimana: una promozione che scadeva il 31maggio e che abbiamo deciso di prolungare. Inoltre, prenotando ora le vacanze per il 2010, i prezzi applicati rimarranno quelli previsti per il 2009>>. Inoltre, quest'anno, una parte dei ricavi sarà devoluta per la ricostruzione dell'Abruzzo. <<Quanto raccolto sarà donato con una manifestazione che si terrà il 24 dicembre prossimo: il regalo di Natale di soloSicily per le popolazioni dell'Abruzzo>>, commenta Gioacchino, orgoglioso dell'iniziativa, che ha coinvolto anche i proprietari delle ville, che devolveranno una percentuale del proprio guadagno.

    Per chi non vuole rinunciare ai servizi offerti da un hotel a cinque stelle, ma vuole concedersi anche una vacanza lontana dal caos, soloSicily propone anche i boutique hotels, strutture di lusso con poche camere per una clientela selezionata. Come il Quartara, prestigioso ed esclusivo boutique hotel di Panarea, a pochi metri dal porto ma lontano dai circuiti mondani dell'isola per un soggiorno fatto di quiete e relax. Solo tredici camere, di cui quattro vista mare dotate di balcone, tutte arredate con un stile differente: coloniale, minimalista o cinese. Un soggiorno di minimo tre notti, pernottamento e prima colazione, ha un costo, per notte per camera, di euro 170. soloSicily offre anche la possibilità di potere realizzare una vacanza personalizzata, in alternativa ai classici soggiorni settimanali. Nella sezione short breaks and flexible stay del sito www.solosicily.com, infatti, è possibile prenotare weekend, soggiorni infrasettimanali o quindicinali, scegliendo, ad esempio, tra villa Barresa, a Lentini, dallo charm unico per una vacanza caratterizzata dall'atmosfera e fascino di una casa di una famiglia della vecchia aristocrazia siciliana, ma senza rinunciare ai comfort più moderni, o il Poet's Corner, la casa per le vacanze estive della famiglia Grimaldi ad Enna.

  • Il gusto etnico di Renata Plaja: Renèe - Juli 2004

    Il gusto etnico di Renata Plaja: Renèe - Juli 2004




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    C'è un dato di fatto: la casa di Renata assomiglia a Renata. C'è un gusto tutto personale che sbuca fuori da ogni tavolino in vimini, da ogni candela, dalle sedie in ferro e dalla cucina con le mattonelle antiche siciliane.
    Renata Plaja adora le isole siciliane. E si vede: la terrazza affacciata sul golfo, a Fraginesi, la dice lunga sull'affetto per i patii eoliani, bianchi di calce viva, con la bouganvillae che colora i muri, un banano che sbircia da una grata che chiude una delle finestre e i gerani dai colori accesi che accompagnano fino all'ingresso. Renata Plaja si è innamorata dell'Africa del Nord, Marocco per la precisione: ed allora ecco le lampade in ferro e i tagine in cotto, le ceramiche e i cuscini. Dalla finestra che illumina il soggiorno, entra il sole calante del tramonto: e colora tutto di una luce morbida e serena che si annida sui divani dalla base in muratura, sul camino che corre verso il soffitto, sui due sottobalconi che son diventati uno sparecchiatavola, tra le travi a vista che non servono a nulla ma sono belle.
    Renata, che vive con Francesco, il figlio di undici anni, fa l'arredatrice e fino a poco tempo fa guidava anche un negozio palermitano specializzato in arredi etnici: l'esperienza accumulata è tutta in questa casa di Fraginesi.
    Poco lontano, le case delle sorelle, una mano di Renata è arrivata anche lì, di fronte il prato con le sdraio: un'oasi leggera di tranquilla precarietà, tutto quello spazio che in città si può solo sognare.
    La casa non è grandissima, 130 mq su livelli sfalsati, Renata la affitta anche per brevi periodi, accompagnando i turisti in giro alla scoperta della zona, da Custonaci allo Zingaro, magari cucinando per loro una cena marocchina.
    Dalla zona soggiorno si passa alla cucina: quattro fuochi all'antica, con i cerchi in lega che restringono la fiamma, foderati di mattonelle siciliane recuperate nei mercatini (come alcune delle porte), il resto è moderno, ma non disturba. Dietro un piccolo patio per una cena in famiglia, e la cameretta di Francesco. Quattro giardini e si sale nelle stanze: due bagni decorati a stencil, due camere da letto che sanno di nonna, alla testiera del letto una tavola antica in legno dipinto. Insomma, una cuccia leggera, disegnata e arredata con cura, nata su un pezzo di terreno delle zie, impossibile da coltivare.
    Renata sta acquistando anche una casa più piccola a Scopello, da affittare per l'estate, il suo gusto è pronto a rimettersi in gioco.

The Daily Telegraph
  • Sicily flower festival: soloSicily - 16 April 2011

    Sicily flower festival: soloSicily - 16 April 2011




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    THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The Baroque town of Noto in southern Sicily will become even more splendid than usual next month during the Infiorata di Noto flower festival (May 13 to 15), when artists transform the main street with mosaic-style pictures filled with petals.

    The most convenient airport is Catania Fontanarossa, to which British Airways flies from London Gatwick. A budget alternative is to take a direct flight to Milan, then connect to Sicily using the Italian low-cost airline Wind Jet (www.volawindjet.it).

    The luxury villa specialist Solo Sicily (020 7193 0158; www.solosicily.com), has a property overlooking Noto (sleeping 10) from £3,620 for a week in May. For more information on the area read the recent article “Sicily’s New Dawn” by Telegraph Travel ’s Italy expert Lee Marshall.

    Artikel auf der Website der Zeitung The Daily Telegraph

  • Guide to villas in Italy... soloSicily - 6 January 2011

    Guide to villas in Italy: holiday planner 2011 - 6 January 2011




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    THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Solo Sicily (0207 193 0158; www.solosicily.com) Specialises in large villas on aristocratic estates and architect-designed modern villas, including two new properties near Menfi on the unspoilt south coast.

  • Sardinia and Sicily: Castello Falconara - 9 Januar 2010

    Sardinia and Sicily: Castello Falconara - 9 Januar 2010




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    THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Solo Sicily (020 7193 0158; www.solosicily.com) Specialises in large villas on aristocratic estates, such as 14th-century Castello Falconara, set on a rocky promontory with its own private beach, which sleeps 32. This year has introduced more cottages and manors for smaller parties

  • Farm Stay on Sicily: Princely Houses - 12 April 2009

    Farm Stay on Sicily: Princely Houses - 12 April 2009




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    THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: Tuck into home-produced olive oil, jam and eggs, staying on a farm estate in eastern Sicily at "The Queen's Jewels", five cottages (sleeping from four to eight people) with a large shared pool. Solo Sicily (020 7193 0158, www.solosicily.com): £433 (based on four sharing), including flights.

Sunday Mirror
  • Top 10 Holidays... Princely Houses - 9 Oktober 2011

    Top 10 Holidays.. for two families: The Queen's Jewels - 9 Oktober 2011




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    SUNDAY MIRROR: SICILIAN ADVENTURE

    A heated swimming pool and October temperatures hovering in the mid-20s make a stay at Queen's Jewels estate in Sicily feel more like a summer holiday than half-term break. The estate has an eight-bed cottage and is near the elegant clifftop town of Taormina. The cottage has a terrace overlooking lemon and olive groves and you can buy fruit, olive oil, home-made jam and fresh eggs from the farmer. The owner has also arranged family discounts at the pizzeria. Go mountain biking with the kids in the nearby Gorge of Alcantara and watch for puffs of steam and even molten lava on a trip to Mount Etna.

    How Much? A week at half-term starts at £1,145 total (£572.50 per family) excluding flights through www.soloSicily.com. Ryanair return flights to Trapani during half-term average £179 ex-Luton (www.ryanair.com).

  • Great late deals in the... Princely Houses - Juli 2011

    Great late deals in the school holidays: Princely Houses - Juli 2011




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    SUNDAY MIRROR: Although the summer school holidays are almost upon us, even more families have left it to the last minute to book this year because of worries over the economy. As a result there have been reports of a surge in demand at the eleventh hour. But if you haven't booked yet there's no need to panic... there's still plenty of availability and a bit of careful searching on the internet could throw up a good deal.

    If you want to join forces with another family which guarantees the kids will have playmates, Solo Sicily (www.solosicily.com, 020 7193 0158) has some big reductions on its larger villas. Throughout August, Casa Etna, which sleeps 12, costs £4,780 per week (a saving of £530). Flights and car hire not included.

  • Festival fun in... Princely Houses - 25 January 2009

    Festival fun in February: The Queen's Jewels - 25 January 2009




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    SUNDAY MIRROR:
    Q CAN you tell me anything about the carnival in Sicily? And where should we stay? - Lisa Brume, Southampton

    A HEAD for Acireale, a sea-side town at the foot of Mount Etna on the east coast which stages a flamboyant carnival between February 7 and 24. Stay at The Queen's Jewels cottages. A week for four costs pounds 280 at www.solosicily.com or call 020 7193 0158.

Irish Daily Mail
  • Time to join the... Fattoria Corleonese - 26 März 2011

    Time to join the flash Mob: Fattoria Corleonese - 26 März 2011




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    IRISH DAILY MAIL: Time to join the flash Mob
    With the Mafia in full retreat, suddenly Sicily is in demand - by Patricia Kane 
    PIZZAS poured from the wood-fired oven but the chef still had time to hiss under his breath as he deftly swept them into cardboard boxes for take-away: ‘Turisti. Inglese.’
    Fascinated locals spun round for a look at the ‘English tourists’. Well, we were English-speaking, if not English, but we let it slide. Here we were in Corleone and it was nice to be a novelty attraction, nodding as the locals wished us ‘Buona sera’ as they left the restaurant.
    So why were we such a star turn in a town with a name recognised the world over thanks to Mario Puzo’s fictional God-father, who hailed from here and ended up with the town name as his surname through an Ellis Island mix-up?
    For a start, the real Corleone is also intertwined with the very real Mafia, the Corleonesi clan controlling crime in Sicily and the U.S. in a brutal war master-minded by Toto Riina, Boss of Bosses.
    So tourists come to Corleone, many of them Americans fancying that their fore¬fathers left here generations ago because of blood feuds and not just poverty. But most hop off the coach, pause long enough to buy a Godfather coppola – a kind of hat – as a souvenir and move on.
    We were different. We were staying nearby. But surely the heart of Mafia country in the hills 40 or so miles south of Palermo is an odd choice for a family holiday?
    Not if you want a real sense that you are in a foreign country. Sicily feels very different, even from the rest of Italy. The landscape is spec¬tacular and unique. Great peaks soar from fertile plains and all around Corleone rock pinnacles jut out from the soil like the bones of some long-dead beast. The ef¬fect is not unlike Monument Val¬ley, the backdrop for so many cow¬boy films.
    The roads wind and sweep through the hills offering tantalis¬ing vistas one minute and hem¬ming you in with great rockfaces the next. Villages cling to the top on great mounds of jagged rock.

    YOU’RE close to Africa here and that shows up in unusual ways. There are lots of chillies in the food and you’re likely to get a handful of sultanas thrown over your pizza – sounds crazy but it’s a stroke of genius.
    Corleone is handily situated close to bustling Palermo – well worth a visit but be prepared for a white-knuckle ride if you’re driving; its traffic is seriously daunting – and within striking distance of the seashore.
    Sicily’s western fringes boast some gorgeous beaches but the interior has much to offer. We stayed at the Fattoria Corleo¬nese, at the heart of a bustling working estate producing cheese and olive oil.
    Our apartment was part of a building that is still a family home built around a dramatic court¬yard. We had all mod cons – if we could just drag ourselves in off the sun-drenched patio...
    Our elegant hosts had provided us with a table groaning with local fruit, bread and their own magnificent pecorino cheese, made from sheep’s milk and with a glistening, salted crust. There was also a bottle of a luscious Tancredi wine from the Donna-fugata estates a few miles away.
    One of our apartment’s more unusual features was a corridor with gorgeous old artworks, each lit as if in a gallery.
    I strolled down for a look, wine in one hand and in the other, bread dripping olive oil and cheese so fresh I swear it bleated. Here was the taste of real Sicily.
    The draw of the swimming pool, set in an olive grove, was strong but there was exploring to be done so we took our Ford from Avis into Corleone, a few minutes away. The streets in the centre are an exciting jumble in the way only medieval towns can be. It’s great fun to wander, getting lost up little stairways and marvelling at the higgledy-piggledy way the town has grown. It feels like the invading Moors only just left.
    For all its Mafia links, Corleone is known as ‘the town of 100 churches’. It feels like there are that many, all old, most with amazing architecture and graphic statues of Christ on the cross.
    The hungry traveller can find everything from pizza and a beer to formal dining with tremendous local wines. The whites are refreshing on sunny days while the reds, often using the Nero D’Avola grape native to Sicily, are a complex taste treat.
    Prices? Expect to be shocked both by how little you’ll pay here and how much more you pay for inferior rubbish back home.
    We jumped in the car and headed south to the coast. We took our first dip in the sea on a sandy beach on the edge of Selinunte – just one of many Sicil¬ian towns that boast amazing Greek ruins – then dined on fish at a restaurant right on the sand, the catch of the day having arrived moments before us. And we struck out for Agrigento, mak¬ing for the area’s big draw, the Valley of the Temples. The sheer scale of these Greek ruins is astonishing. Even the children, who – let’s be honest – don’t do history, were dumbstruck.

    THERE are great pillars dashed to the ground as though by a giant, but other temples, notably the Temple of Concord, built around 430BC, are intact and picture-perfect.
    Let the Yanks pretend they are the scions of Mafia dynasties. Here you can become part of Sici¬ly’s aristocracy, lovers of art and fine food, wine and conversation.
    The postcard-perfect proper¬ties of SoloSicily, all classy and quirky, are all within much easier reach thanks to Ryanair, which flies in to Palermo. Suddenly Sicily, even the Sicily of luxury such as Santa Maria del Bosco and the flawless, effortless charm of Fattoria Corleonese, is much closer at hand.
    If you’re looking for a holiday within Europe that makes you feel you’re in a different world, sensational Sicily ought to be high on your list.

    TRAVEL FACTS  Part of soloSicily’s new collection of budget villas with pools, Fattoria Corleonese (sleeps six) starts at €1,358 per week, rising to €1,990 in August with soloSicily (0044 20 7193 0158 www.soloSicily.com). Ryanair flies from Dublin to Palermo from March 27, with prices from ¤31.99 (www.ryanair.com). Avis has rental locations across Sicily (www.avis.com).

Ryanair
  • Zest of the West: Cantine Virzì - 15 September 2011

    Zest of the West: Cantine Virzì - 15 September 2011




    Artikel sehen

    The Trapani province in western Sicily is rich in scenic landscapes
    When Giuseppe Garibaldi landed in the port of Marsala, western Sicily, in 1860, he was in a hurry.
    Coming ashore with just 1,000 men, the revolutionary leader fought his way across country to unite Italy as a new nation state.
    Yet had he chosen to stay in this corner of the island a while longer he could have enjoyed some of its fine food and wine, beautiful rugged coastline and abundance of ancient sights. Of course, if he had then modern Italy would not be celebrating its 150th birthday this year.
    Once king and country had been established, Garibaldi did return to Marsala, paying a visit to the town’s famous Florio winery in 1862 – as a plaque on the wall testifies. “Some people say this place is like a museum, I say it’s more like a cathedral,” says Florio tour guide Marcelo, as he gestures towards its lofty ceilings. Giant 100-year-old casks tower above us, giving off a mellow aroma of oak and ageing wine.
    Marsala made its way onto the world stage in the 18th-century thanks to the ingenuity of British merchant John Woodhouse. A fortified wine similar to Port, its ability to withstand long ocean voyages made it ideal for export, and Marsala was soon being stocked on the ships of Nelson’s navy.[...]

    TRAPANI AND BEYOND
    Back in the city, Trapani offers a compact old town, with baroque facades and ancient churches to discover. It’s a town steeped in traditions, one of which can be observed at the Chiesa del Purgatorio. This church is filled with huge religious figures that are carried on the shoulders of the faithful during the city’s fervent Easter processions.
    Once you’ve seen Trapani, investigate the nearby countryside. The landscapes here are ethereal, with mountains capped by whisps of cloud framing sweeping valleys of fertile farmland. It’s not normally advisable on any trip to leave the highway and attempt to get lost, but in western Sicily it’s well worth going off the beaten track – and you won’t find a car or soul in sight.
    Various farmstays and villas offer a great way to wake up to this kind of vista each morning. Just off the main road between Trapani and Palermo we drop in at Cantine Virzì, a winery and boutique hotel run by the Spadafora family. Their former sharecroppers’ apartments overlook fields of vines, harvested each summer by hand. With space for just 14 guests and a location literally in the middle of nowhere, it’s a peaceful escape for a few days swimming in the pool and drinking the wines – they even leave a free bottle in your fridge!

    Where to stay
    CANTINE VIRZÌ
    This working winery is one of several unique accommodation options from soloSicily, a company that off ers tailor-made holidays and expert local advice on Sicily. Cantine Virzì has a pool, on-site chef and wonderful remote location on sprawling farmland near Segesta. Among soloSicily’s other properties are a villa with a pool in Scopello and a period aristocratic residence in Marsala.
    TEL: +44 (0)20 7193 0158, WWW.SOLOSICILY.COM

    Den ganzen Artikel auf der Website der Zeitschrift Ryanair Magazine lesen

  • A Tower for two in Sicily: Badia Tower - 15 Januar 2011

    A Tower for two in Sicily: Badia Tower - 15 Januar 2011




    Artikel sehen

    RYANAIR MAGAZINE: Forget lavish hotel suites – this hideaway home is a dinky 16th- century turreted tower in the gardens of the Badia Estate near Marsala in western Sicily. Close to the sandy beaches of San Vito lo Capo and the Greek sites at Selinunte and Segesta, this makes for a relaxed weekend of romantic wandering. Featuring an alcoved bedroom, open-plan kitchen (for self-catering) and large private terrace, you also have the bars and enoteche of Marsala just 2km down the road.

    THREE-NIGHT STAY FROM £320 (€375), WWW.SOLOSICILY.COM

    Artikel auf der Website der Ryanair Magazine

I Love Sicilia
  • Le Ville e una notte: La Sicilia in affitto - Juni 2011

    Le Ville e una notte: La Sicilia in affitto - Juni 2011




    Artikel sehen

    I LOVE SICILIA: Dal mare alla montagna. Dalle città d’arte all’enogastronomia, la Sicilia per le proprie vacanze. E I love Sicilia vi propone le più belle ville da affittare nelle varie provincie.

    Chi, giunti in questo periodo dell’anno, non sogna di andare in vacanza e abbandonare agende, appuntamenti e scadenze? Bene, allora, seguiteci in questo viaggio virtuale (che starà a voi rendere reale) attraverso le più belle ville in affitto in Sicilia. Dal mare alla montagna, dalle città d’arte all’enogastronomia, ciascuna proposta, neanche a dirlo, porta con sé le bellezze di un’Isola dai mille volti. E dai mille profumi. Come quelli che avvolgono Villa d’Eraclea, ad Eraclea Minoa, nell’Agrigentino, inserita l’anno scorso dal Times tra le 20 ville più belle d’Europa. All’ombra di una lussureggiante vegetazione, poggiata delicatamente sulla cima di una collina che dà su una spiaggia privata, in un angolo pacifico della Sicilia sud-occidentale, Villa d’Eraclea apre il nostro tour all’insegna dello charme: design moderno, caratterizzato dalle tonalità vivaci dell’arancio, del giallo e del blu. Quindi, la chicca, rappresentata dalla piscina asimmetrica che sembra estendersi all’orizzonte diventando tutt’uno col mare. E sempre nella campagna agrigentina sono immerse le Ville Elena e Mariuccia, la prima col suo giardino mediterraneo, e la seconda immersa nelle campagne di Burgio. Ed è proprio questa parte di Sicilia che custodisce un tesoro unico al mondo, tappa obbligata per che scegliesse l’Agrigentino per le proprie vacanze. Tra le campagne dei mandorli è , infatti, immersa la Valle dei Templi, splendida testimonianza della civiltà greca.[…]

    Die Villen, die in diesem Artikel erwähnt wurden, sind:
    Tanguera
    , Perla Nera, Farm Campagna, Elena, Casa d’Eraclea, Mariuccia

  • Due Ville Siciliane nella top 20 del Times - Oktober 2010

    Due Ville Siciliane nella top 20 del Times - Oktober 2010




    Artikel sehen

    I LOVE SICILIA: Stile moderno e colori mediterranei per strutture che si affacciano su paesaggi da cartolina. Sono queste le caratteristiche che hanno permesso a due ville siciliane di sbaragliare ogni concorrenza ed essere inserite dal Times tra le venti strutture più belle d'Europa.
    Profumo di zagare e gelsomini avvolge la villa "Il Gabbiano", a Cefalù, incastonata su un costone roccioso, con l'accesso privato al mare. Posizione che garantisce a questa villa una serie di incredibili viste panoramiche: il Mar Tirreno si estende in tutte le direzioni, il profilo della costa serpeggia languido a est, mentre a ovest si trova il porto di Cefalù e il monolitico promontorio calcareo che domina il paese. All'ombra di una lussureggiante vegetazione, invece, si nasconde "Villa Eraclea" ad Eraclea Minoa (nelle foto), poggiata delicatamente sulla cima di una collina che dà su una spiaggia privata, in un angolo pacifico della Sicilia sud-occidentale. Il design della casa è deliziosamente moderno, con angoli simmetrici che caratterizzano l'esterno e vivaci tonalità dell'arancio, del giallo e del blu che danno un tono deciso all'interno. Pareti bianche e arancio fanno da sfondo a poltrone blu e luminosi scaffali in legno. La cucina dipinta con i toni del giallo è dolcemente celata dietro una parete diagonale e il tavolo si trova di fronte. Lo stesso tema vivace e colorato viene riproposto nelle quattro camere da letto, sapientemente distribuite fra i due piani della casa. Incantevoli le cascate d'acqua della piscina asimmetrica che sembra estendersi all'orizzonte diventando tutt'uno con il blu del mare. Due angoli di paradiso per vacanze da sogno.

Italy
  • soloSicily, Villas in Sicily and Sicily Holidays - Juni 2009

    soloSicily, Villas in Sicily and Sicily Holidays - Juni 2009




    Artikel sehen

    The finest collection of elegant villas, charming country houses and luxury apartments situated in the most beautiful and unforgettable locations in Sicily.
    Also available, a select range of boutique hotels and wineries where you can sample the best food and wine while relaxing and enjoying the excellent service

  • soloSicily Sponsored "La Dolce Vita" London - März 2009

    soloSicily Sponsored "La Dolce Vita" London - März 2009




    Artikel sehen

    The finest collection of elegant villas, charming country houses and luxury apartments situated in the most beautiful and unforgettable locations in Sicily.
    Also available, a select range of boutique hotels and wineries where you can sample the best food and wine while relaxing and enjoying the excellent service.

  • soloSicily, Sicily Villas - September 2008

    soloSicily, Sicily Villas - September 2008




    Artikel sehen

    The finest collection of elegant villas, charming country houses and luxury apartments situated in the most beautiful and unforgettable locations in Sicily.
    Also available, a select range of boutique hotels and wineries where you can sample the best food and wine while relaxing and enjoying the excellent service.

Piscineoggi
  • Piscina con Vista: Renèe - Juni 2009

    Piscina con Vista: Renèe - Juni 2009




    Artikel sehen

    PISCINEOGGI: Una piscina che gareggia con lo splendore naturale del Golfo di Castellamare; una realizzazione che mette in mostra sobrietà ed eleganza, risultato di una accurata scelta progettuale di forme, colori e materiali.

    Una villa che sorge su una lieve altura , dalla quale lo sguardo è libero di spaziare su uno degli scenari più rappresentativi dell'Italia del Sud: il golfo di Castellamare, in Sicilia. L'azzurro luminoso della piscina si rivela proprio a ridosso dell'abitazione, della quale sono state riprese le linee essenziali e la raffinatezza, grazie ad alcune scelte architettoniche calibrate sin dalla fase progettuale. Concepita affinché assumesse una foggia regolare, non invasiva, la piscina è stata concretizzata in uno specchio d'acqua di forma rettangolare di 55 mq e 70 mc di capacità. La vasca è realizzata tramite una tecnologia mista, con sfondo in calcestruzzo e pareti in acciaio zincato di altezza 1,25 m, con una squadra in lamiere montata sul pannello che permette il montaggio del canale del bordo a sfioro, anch'esso in acciaio zincato. In riferimento a quest'ultimo, elemento distintivo è il controllo automatico del livello, con sonde elettroniche e sistema di reintegro automatico, completato con dispositivo “troppo pieno” dedito allo smaltimento di eventuale acqua in eccesso.
    La profondità è costante – 1,25 m – con scala laterale realizzata sul lato lungo, ideale per agevolare discesa e risalita in acqua e concedersi momenti di completo relax. Il rivestimento, in liner pvc armato con fibre Trevira (spessore 1,5 mm) e termosaldato in opera, è contraddistinto da un effetto mosaico, le cui diverse tonalità donano particolare luminosità all'impianto. L'insieme è reso ancora più suggestivo del bianco candore della residenza, che contrasta con l'azzurro dell'acqua e il verde intenso del prato, lasciato volutamente spontaneo. La vegetazione presente è infatti caratterizzata da piante tipiche dell'area mediterranea, affiancate da piante ornamentali: yucche, draceni, palme, alloro e soprattutto fiori di stagione, che contribuiscono con i loro cromatismi a evidenziare la dinamicità infusa al giardino dal trascorrere delle stagioni.

    La scelta del bordo a sfioro su tutti e quattro i lati crea l'illusione di uno specchio d'acqua da sempre inserito nell'ambiente.

    La scalinata di accesso e la pavimentazione in cotto siciliano contribuiscono ad accentuare l'eleganza della piscina.

Glos Pruszkowa
News
News

Neues Angebot: 7 Nächte zum Preis von 6



soloSicily schenkt Ihnen eine Nacht in einem seiner exklusiven Ferienhäuser. Buchen Sie 7 Nächte für den Zeitraum 19. Mai bis 14. Juli und übernachten Sie ein Mal gratis! Wir verwöhnen Sie bei Ihrer Ankunft mit Wein und Champagner - besser kann der Urlaub nicht beginnen.

Klicken Sie hier für weitere Details zum Angebot

Märchenhaftes Ferienhaus mit Pool nahe dem Ätna



Unser jüngster Neuzugang, Le Dimore dell'Etna, ist ein märchenhaftes Anwesen für bis zu 20 Gäste in dem pittoresken Städtchen Trecastagni zwischen dem Ätna und Taormina.

Das Anwesen besteht aus einem Hauptgebäude mit 3 Schlafzimmern und sechs unabhängigen Ferienhütten inmitten eines weitläufigen Gartens mit wunderbarem Pool.

Beim Pool befindet sich eine 4-Personen-Finnensauna und eine externe Dusche. Eine Fitnessanlage mit zahlreichen hochwertigen Geräten befindet sich zwischen dem Haus und den Hütten. Ein Obst- und Gemüsegarten und ein kleines Hühnergehege im terrassierten Pinienhain am Ende des Gartens versorgen Sie täglich mit frischen Bio-Produkten und Eiern.

Für weitere Informationen klicken Sie bitte hier.

Neu bei soloSicily: Die exklusive Poolvilla Il Poggio in herrlicher Panoramalage bei Monreale



Wir freuen uns, Ihnen unseren Neuzugang Il Poggio vorstellen zu dürfen: Das exklusive Landhaus erhebt sich über dem "goldenen Becken" (Conca D'Oro) von Palermo und dem herrlichen Tyrrhenischen Meer. Die elegante Villa wartet mit einem traumhaften Pool, einem überdachten Barbecue und erstklassigen Stallungen mit acht reinrassigen Pferden auf. Entdecken Sie die umliegenden Wälder vom Pferderücken aus. Die Reitmöglichkeit steht kostenlos zur Verfügung. Klicken Sie bitte hier für weitere Informationen.

Neuer Look für unsere sizilianische Rezeptsammlung



Wir haben unsere Seite Sizilianische Gerichte und Rezepte neu und interaktiver gestaltet! Jetzt können Sie Ihre Lieblingsrezepte ganz einfach per Mausklick ausdrucken oder per E-Mail an einen Freund senden. Noch keine Idee, was Sie kochen sollen? Probieren Sie ein traditionelles sizilianisches Rezept aus, klicken Sie hier.

Dürfen wir vorstellen? Villa Lory: das neueste Ferienhaus von soloSicily



Wir freuen uns, Ihnen Villa Lory vorstellen zu dürfen: Eine Strandvilla mit privatem Wellnessbereich und direktem Zugang zum Sandstrand. Die Villa ist eine wahre Wohlfühloase mit Fitnessraum, Jacuzzi, Sauna und Hamam und verfügt über sechs Schlafzimmer mit eigenem Bad und Meerblick, zwei Zimmer haben einen Balkon. Das Gartentor öffnet direkt zum herrlichen Sandstrand. Worauf warten Sie? Sichern Sie sich einen erholsamen Urlaub, klicken Sie hier.

07/03/2012

Osterangebot 2012



Erleben Sie Ostern einmal anders! soloSicily bietet Ihnen eine 10% Ermäßigung auf alle NEUEN Buchungen, die vor dem 31. März 2012 getätigt werden. Buchen Sie eine unserer exklusiven Villen und lassen Sie sich von den sizilianischen Osterbräuchen verzaubern!

Klicken Sie hier für alle Details zum Osterangebot.

Frühbuchungsangebot für Sommer 2012



soloSicily bietet ein tolles Frühbucher-Angebot für Ihre Sommerferien auf Sizilien.

Es betrifft einige der schönsten Ferienvillen von soloSicily und bietet die perfekte Gelegenheit, Ihre Sommerferien auf Sizilien jetzt zu buchen und von einer unglaublichen Ermäßigung zu profitieren.

P.S. Das Angebot ist nur bis zum 29. Februar 2012 gültig!

Klicken Sie hier, um Bedingungen & Details zu lesen.

Bianca - eine neue Villa in Scopello von soloSicily



Wir sind froh, Ihnen unsere neue fabelhafte Villa zu zeigen.
Bianca ist ein wunderschönes Ferienhaus am Meer in Cala Bianca (weiße Bucht) gelegen, der eindrucksvollste Ortsteil von Scopello – mit einem privaten Jakuzzi-Pool und einem üppigen mediterranen Garten. Die Terrasse mit Meerblick ist komplett eingerichtet und ideal für Ihre Mahlzeiten im Freien. Bianca darf sich einer herrlichen Panorama-Position rühmen. Der paradiesische Strand und das kristallklare Meer sind von der Villa aus zu Fuß erreichbar.

Neue Villa mit Meerblick in Scopello



Wir sind froh, unser Portfolio zu erweitern, um die erlesensten Villen auf Sizilien anbieten zu können.

Margherita ist eine Panorama-Villa am Meer mit Pool, auf dem Gipfel eines Hügels mit Blick auf den Golf gelegen und mit atemberaubenden Aussichten auf Brandungspfeiler, unberührte Buchten und Strände.

Die Villa verfügt über zwei überdachte Terrassen, einen ausgerüsteten Grillplatz und einen Panorama-Poolbereich ausgestattet mit komfortablen Liegestühlen. In Fußnähe zum mittelalterlichen Dorf Scopello gelegen, befindet sich die Villa Margherita in einer idealen Lage, um alle Besonderheiten von Scopello zu entdecken.

Neue Villa in Avola mit endlosem Pool



Wir sind froh, Ihnen unsere neue Villa auf Sizilien Elisa zu zeigen, eine wunderschöne 3-Schlafzimmer-Villa in Avola in Fußnähe von einem Sandstrand entfernt. Sie liegt in der Nähe von Naturschutzgebieten und barocken Städten wie Noto, Modica und Ragusa und darf sich eines großen Pools, eines üppigen Gartens und eines großartigen Spielzimmers mit Billard und Tischtennis rühmen. Perfekt für Familien und Gruppen, hat diese Villa alles was man braucht, um einen wunderschönen Urlaub auf Sizilien zu verbringen.

Cous Cous Fest 2011: das Video von soloSicily auf YouTube!



Das Team von soloSicily war auf dem Cous Cous Fest in San Vito Lo Capo und hat ein schönes Video aufgenommen: eine großartige Veranstaltung mit schöner Musik, Bauchtänzen, Folklore und einem vorzüglichen Couscous!
Klicken Sie hier, um unser Video des Cous Cous Fest auf dem neuen YouTube-Kanal von soloSicily zu sehen.

Neue Villen in der Kollektion von soloSicily: Oro Blu & Casa Vittoria



Oro Blu – eine Villa mit Meerblick an der nördlichen Küste Siziliens zwischen Cefalù und Palermo gelegen. Wunderschöne Aussichten aufs Meer von der Terrasse und ein schöner Pool mit Hydromassage und chromatischer Außendusche sind die richtigen Zutaten für einen entspannenden Urlaub am Meer!

Casa Vittoria – eine moderne Villa mit Pool, die in einem bezaubernden Bergdorf am Fuße des Ätna liegt.
Der Innenbereich weist eine stilvolle moderne Einrichtung auf und verfügt auch über ein Spielzimmer mit Tischtennis & Tischfußball.
Im Außenbereich bietet die Villa einen wunderschönen Pool mit Sonnenterrasse und sogar ein Volleyballnetz und einen Basketballkorb im Hintergarten. Eine perfekte Wahl für große Familien oder Reisegruppen!

soloSicily.de ist jetzt auf Facebook und Twitter!



soloSicily.de hat jetzt auch eine neue Facebook- und Twitter-Seite. Klicken Sie auf "Gefällt mir" auf Facebook oder folgen Sie uns auf Twitter, um die neuesten Meldungen von soloSicily zu erhalten: stündlich aktualisierte Angebote, Neuzugänge von Villen, News, Veranstaltungen & Events Ihres Reisezieles auf Sizilien und vieles mehr...

Neue Bilder von Costanza & Il Vignale



Unser Fotograf hat neue Bilder von den traumhaften Villen Costanza & Il Vignale aufgenommen!

Ins Land getaucht und von schönen sanften Hügeln umgeben, weist die Villa Costanza in Cefalù einen wunderschönen gut-gepflegten Garten auf, mit einem einladenden Pool und vielen schattigen Ecken, um sich zu entspannen und das herrliche Panorama zu genießen.

Klicken Sie hier, um die neuen Fotos der Villa Costanza auf Sizilien zu sehen.

Il Vignale, eine fantastische Villa auf Sizilien mit schönen Aussichten auf die hügelige Landschaft, hat jetzt einen neuen Poolbereich mit einem atemberaubenden Blick auf die Alicudi Insel (Äolischen).

Klicken Sie hier, um die neuen Fotos der Villa Il Vignale zu sehen.

Neu-Zugang Villa in Milazzo



soloSicily erweitert sein Portfolio mit einer neuen fantastischen Villa mit Pool in Milazzo: Vittoriana, eine elegante Villa auf zwei Ebenen mit Gewölbedecken und vier Schlafzimmern, die auch über ein Fitnesszimmer und eine Sauna verfügt.
Sie werden die herrliche Jacuzzi-Badewanne im Obergeschoss sicher lieben...
Der Poolbereich ist großartig und bietet viel Privatsphäre zum Schwimmen oder zum Sonnenbaden. Villa Vittoriana befindet sich zwischen dem Festland Siziliens und den Äolischen Inseln, eine herrliche Inselgruppe mit sieben wunderschönen Inseln, die alle zu entdecken sind.

Klicken Sie bitte hier, um mehr Informationen über Vittoriana zu erhalten.

Ein neuer Pool in der Villa Sea Gate!



Sea Gate verfügt jetzt auch über einen neuen herrlichen Swimmingpool!
In einer strategischen Position gelegen, darf sich der Pool einer atemberaubenden Aussicht aufs wunderschöne Meer der südlichen Küste Siziliens und auf den schönen Sandstrand von Eraclea Minoa rühmen. Klicken Sie hier, um die neuen Bilder von Sea Gate und seinem Pool zu sehen.

soloSicily hat das beste Angebot!



Profitieren Sie von unserem Angebot, eine Ermäßigung von 10 % in verschiedenen Villen, die jeden Monat zufällig ausgewählt werden, zu erhalten. Eine exzellente Gelegenheit für Sie, um einige unserer Luxusvillen auf Sizilien zu unschlagbaren Preisen zu buchen. Überprüfen Sie diese erstaunlichen Sonderpreise und sparen Sie bis zu € 495 mit unserem speziellen Angebot.

Werfen Sie einen Blick auf unsere unglaublichen Villen, die wir diesen Monat ausgewählt haben:

Mariuccia: ein Paradies der Ruhe mit einer stilvollen Einrichtung und geräumigen Außenbereichen mit Blick über grüne Täler.

Olga: unsere Perle mit Meerblick, eingetaucht in herrliche Weinberge mit unglaublichen Panoramaaussichten auf die Südküste.

Costanza: eine wunderschöne Luxusvilla in Cefalù in der Nähe von Strand, Geschäften und Restaurants, eingebettet in einem Hügel für komplette Privatsphäre und Ruhe.

Musa: unser auserlesenes Luxusjuwel mit Meerblick, mit einzigartigen antiken und preziösen Gemälden aus dem 18. Jhd. fein eingerichtet.

Um unser spezieller Katalog zu sehen, klicken Sie bitte hier.

Letzte Ausgaben der monatlichen soloSicily Newsletter



Der monatliche Newsletter von soloSicily ist das beste Hilfsmittel, um Inspiration für Ihren herrlichen Urlaub auf Sizilien zu finden. Haben Sie eine Ausgabe verpasst? soloSicily hat eine Seite erstellt, wo Sie alle unsere vorherigen Ausgaben finden, so dass Sie einfach nur auf das Ausgabedatum, das Sie lesen möchten, klicken müssen, um sie zu lesen.
 

Klicken Sie hier, um das Newsletter-Archiv von soloSicily zu sehen.

Klicken Sie hier, um sich für unseren Newsletter einzutragen.

Neuer Bereich der Webseite, speziell für sizilianische Kochrezepte vorgesehen



Essen ist eine fundamentale Weise, die Traditionen und Bräuche Siziliens kennenzulernen, denn die sizilianische Küche weist viele Spuren aller Kulturen, die die Insel in den letzten Jahrhunderten dominiert haben, auf. Deswegen hat soloSicily sich entschieden, nur die traditionsreichsten sizilianischen Kochrezepte zu sammeln – einige davon auch von Starköchen übermittelt – und sie durch unsere Webseite zu veröffentlichen. All die Kochrezepte, die wir ausgewählt haben, sind leicht vorzubereiten und werden Ihren Gerichten bestimmt einen frischen Hauch von Sizilien geben.

Klicken Sie hier, um den neuen Bereich unserer Webseite über sizilianische Kochrezepte zu sehen.

Der internationale Filmregisseur Emanuele Crialese in Villa Tanguera von soloSicily



Der internationale Drehbuchautor und Filmregisseur Emanuele Crialese verbrachte einen Vorfrühlings-Urlaub in der Villa Tanguera, einer stilvollen ruhigen Villa im modernen Stil in Mondello, dem begehrtesten Sandstrand von Palermo. Sehr begeistert von der Innen- und Außenausstattung sowie von den ultramodernen Annehmlichkeiten Tangueras, sagte Crialese:

"Villa Tanguera ist der ideale Ort für Konzentration und Kreativität. Von der Villa aus hat man einen wunderbaren Blick auf den Berg Pellegrino, den Berg der Heiligen von Palermo (Santa Rosalia). Der Besitzer des Hauses hat uns zwei Musikanlagen installiert, die einem Aufnahmestudio gleichen. Es ist ein Ort, den ich jedem, der Ruhe und Privatsphäre liebt, empfehlen würde.."

Hier in soloSicily hoffen wir wirklich, dass Crialese, während seines Aufenthaltes in Tanguera, die richtige Inspiration für seinen erfolgreichen Film fand.

Herrliche Neuzugang-Villa, nur wenige Schritte vom Strand entfernt



soloSicily ist stolz, Ihnen Villa Apolline aufzuweisen, eine wunderschöne Neuzugang-Villa mit Meerblick, nur wenige Schritte von einem der schönsten Sandstrände von Porto Palo di Capo Passero entfernt. Apolline darf sich eines geschmackvollen Designs in modernem Stil, eines großen überdachten Patio für entspannende Mahlzeiten im Freien und eines ausgedehnten Barbecue-Bereiches rühmen. Apolline liegt in der Nähe von drei herrlichen Sümpfen, wo Flamingos und Enten wohnen, ideal für Vogelbeobachtung. Porto Palo di Capo Passero ist auch in der Nähe von einzigartigen Barockstädten wie Noto, Syrakus, Modica und Scicli.

Leticia, Neuzugang-Villa mit Meerblick in Scopello



Leticia ist unsere Neuzugang-Villa mit Meerblick in Scopello, die über zwei überdachte ausgerüstete Terrassen, einen herrlichen Pool/Jakuzzi Bereich mit einer Sonnenterrasse, einen Barbecue-Bereich und einer Außenküche mit Holzbackofen verfügt. Genießen Sie die Panoramaaussichten aufs Meer, während Sie einen kühlen Aperitif unter einem überdachten schattigen Patio schlürfen. Schauen Sie nach weiteren Informationen über diese außergewöhnliche Villa. Sie hat alles, was Sie für Ihre nächsten Ferien auf Sizilien suchen.

Neuzugang-Villen mit Meerblick auf Sizilien



soloSicily ist immer noch dabei, sein Portfolio zu erweitern und fügt drei großartige Meerblick-Villen auf Sizilien hinzu.

Casa Chiara ist eine schöne mediterrane Ferienvilla, die sich auf Favignana – die größte der Ägadischen Inseln – befindet. Die Villa darf sich eines herrlichen Gartens und eines atemberaubenden Pool-Bereiches rühmen. Der Pool bietet auch etwas besonderes für Sie: Sie können die Lichtfarbe des Pools über eine Fernbedienung ändern und dadurch ständig eine unterschiedliche herrliche Atmosphäre schaffen. Stellen Sie sich vor, in einem roten, gelben, purpurroten oder blauen Pool zu schwimmen, mit Blick auf die wunderschöne Landschaft von Favignana.

Mit seinen eleganten Zimmern, einem Hauch von Natur und herrlichen Besonderheiten im Innern wird Nilla Ihnen bestimmt starke und intensive Momente schenken. Genießen Sie Ihre Mahlzeiten im Freien unter einer überdachten Terrasse oder relaxen Sie mit einem Buch im Garten, inmitten von Rosensträuchern und Palmen. Nilla liegt in Seccagrande, in der Nähe von wunderschönen Sandstränden. Das Tal der Tempel von Agrigent ist nur eine 40minütige Fahrt entfernt und Sciacca, eine der meist besuchten Städte im Süden Siziliens, ist nur 20 Minuten Fahrt entfernt.

Genießen Sie den großartigsten Blick aufs Meer von den altrosa Bögen von Sea Gate!
Die Glaswand des Doppelschlafzimmers im Erdgeschoss blickt aufs Meer und ist von üppigen Sträuchern abgeschirmt. Sea Gate ist von schönen Orangen- und Olivenhainen umgeben und gewährt komplette Privatsphäre sowie Ruhe und Stille. Seine atemberaubende Panoramaterrasse, der ideale Ort um sich zu sonnen und zu entspannen, darf sich eines spektakulären Meerblicks im Hintergrund rühmen.

soloSicily ist Mitglied von ASTA



soloSicily – Spezialist in Ferienvillen auf Sizilien – ist Mitglied von der amerikanischen Gesellschaft der Reiseagenturen ASTA (American Society of Travel Agents).

Für weitere Informationen besichtigen Sie bitte die Seite http://www.travelsense.org/agents/agntdetail.cfm?i=900194130

soloSicily ist Mitglied von ABTOI



soloSicily – Spezialist in Ferienvillen auf Sizilien – ist Mitglied von ABTOI (Association of British Travel Organisers to Italy).
Für weitere Informationen besichtigen Sie bitte die Seite http://www.loveitaly.co.uk/associate/solosicily


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