Hotel Straf
Milan, Italy[view map]
Local restaurants
Visit L’Orangerie on the sixth floor of Hotel Duomo, Via San Raffaele (+39 2 88331), for nouvelle cuisine. Santani on Via San Marco (+39 2 655 5587) serves traditional, but not cheap, Italian cuisine to a cosmopolitan crowd. Chandelier on Via Broggi (+39 2 2024 0458) is a place you’ll either love or hate,with red-velvet decor, chandeliers, crucifix-covered drapes and dressed-up mannequins; the food comes second but is tasty. Open for dinner, La Libera on Via Palermo (+39 2 805 3603) calls itself a beer cellar, but the food is also very good. Claudio Sadler prepares seafood with a nouvelle approach at Sadler on Via Troilo (+39 2 5810 4451). Giulio Pane e Ojo on Via Muratori (+39 2 545 6189), is good for Roman cuisine. Nobu on Via Pisoni (+39 2 7231 8645) does Japanese-Peruvian fusion like its global siblings, in a corner of the Armani mini-mall. Chatulle on Via Piero della Francesca (+39 2 342 008) is a sparkling-white restaurant, serving imaginative Italian cuisine. Gioia 69 on Via Melchiorre Gioia (+39 2 667 10180) is a super-trendy combination of sombre Michelin-starred restaurant and black-velvet lounge bar. Osteria dell’Operetta on Porta Ticinese (+39 2 8940 7426) serves some of the best risotto alla Milanese in the world. The food is also recommended in Antica Trattoria della Pesa on Viale Pasubio (+39 2 655 5741). 360º on Via Tortona (+39 2 835 6706) is a great brunch stop for help-yourself salads, pasta and pudding.Local bars
At aperitivo time, the Porta Ticinese area gets packed out; a few hours here is a quintessential Milanese experience. Roialto on Via Piero della Francesca is 700 square metres of restaurant, cocktail bar and cigar bar, with a rooftop pool. Executive Lounge on Via di Tocqueville is a candlelit Indonesian-style bar with cushions and low wooden tables, open until 02h. By the entrance to Parco Sempione on Via Luigi Camoens, Just Cavalli Café is as flamboyant and sexy as one of designer Roberto Cavalli’s clinging mini-dresses, all oriental fabrics and antelope furs, open until 02h. Gioia 69 on Via Melchiorre Gioia (+39 02 667 10180) is a chic minimalist restaurant and lounge bar with a Michelin-starred kitchen, and a lounge filled with black-velvet sofas; it&rsquos great for either dinner or a drink.Local cafes
Marchesi, on Via Santa Maria alla Porta, is legendary for its coffee and cake. An institution for breakfast and aperitivi. Taveggia on Via Visconti di Modrone, appeals for its original furnishings and great panini. strong>Cova on Via Montenapoleone is famous for its rice pudding – stop here for post-shopping star-spotting.Nightlife
Open until 04h, Il Gattopardo Café on Via Piero della Francesca is a former church, converted in 2001. Its imposing chandelier and marble columns give it a fantastic ambience. The all-white G Lounge on Via Larga plays the best music on the nightlife scene.Worth getting out of bed for
Viewpoint It’s a good climb to the top of the Duomo – 166 steps,or there’s a lift – but worth it for the eyeful.Arts and culture A tour of La Scala (www.teatroallascala.org) is no substitute for a performance, but diverting nonetheless. Santa Marie delle Grazie houses da Vinci’s Last Supper (open until 18h45; closed Mondays; ring +39 2 8942 1146 to book). La Pinacoteca di Brera (+39 2 722 631) is a fine-art must.
Something for nothing At aperitivo time, 18h–21h,many bars lay on free canapés. Il Cimitero Monumentale (Tuesday–Sunday till 17h15), where Giuseppe Verdi lies, is an amazing open-air museum in its own right.
Shopping Via Montenapoleone, Via della Spiga and Via Sant’Andrea house the showrooms of the major designers, including Gucci, Prada, Versace, Dolce & Gabbana and Bottega Veneta. The Armani empire has its multi-concept store on Via Manzoni. For more affordable purchases (MaxMara, Bruno Magli, Pollini, H&M, Zara), head for Corso Vittorio Emanuele. The area around Porta Ticinese is good for street style (Diesel, Miss Sixty, Fornarina) as well as second-hand shops, handmade clothes and intriguing homewares. The Fiera di Senigallia market, every Saturday, sells ethnic handicrafts, records and bicycles along the Darsena dockyard. Mercato dell’Antiquariato di Brera, on the third Saturday of the month, has stalls selling books, jewellery, antiques and so on.
