One detail about Italy that strikes first time visitors is the ubiquitousness of the bar. Virtually every street corner, main square, and side alley is home to at least one…and often two or three, located just a storefront away from each other. For the uninitiated, the sight of so many signs emblazoned with the word “bar” can be perplexing. Do Italians really spend that much time quaffing beer in rowdy, smoky watering holes?
The answer is no, though they do occasionally spend an evening at the “pub”, which is the word used in Italy to indicate what most Americans would call a bar. Here, business booms after dinner, the main beverage is beer or other alcoholic drinks, and the atmosphere is typical of the sports bar.
What Italians call a “bar”, on the other hand, is a hybrid space, unique to Italy, which combines a café and community center, newspaper stand, tobacco shop, and/or bakery. The bar in Italy is one of the most important focal points of a neighborhood or town, where gossip is exchanged, friends meet, and, of course, espresso is consumed. Lots of espresso.
(Photo by Concierge in Umbria via Flickr)
All bars in Italy are first and foremost a coffee shop, open from early morning until after dinner to serve thimble-sized cups of espresso as fast as they are ordered. Some bars are also a “pasticceria”, or pastry shop, which make “cornetti”, or croissants, and other sweet and savory baked goods for breakfast or snacks throughout the day, and many are open into the evening hours for an aperitivo or digestivo.
(Photo by Concierge in Umbria via Flickr)
In addition to satisfying your cravings for caffeine and sugar, the bar also often sells newspapers and magazines, cigarettes, candy, potato chips, and other snack foods, along with toys and trinkets. In the countryside, the bar is usually where couriers leave their packages for rural residents, and in cities, fans commonly meet up to watch the Sunday soccer match at the neighborhood bar.
(Photo by julien Lecollinet via Flickr)
The most important role of the bar, however, is a de facto social club. Here, friends and neighbors meet for a speedy espresso or a long chat over the daily paper, school children gather for a “merenda” in the afternoon and a peek at the latest comic books, and flyers advertising local events, services sought or offered, raffles, and community meetings (often held in the bar) are pored over.
(Photo by Concierge in Umbria via Flickr)
If you’re not sure where to meet up with an Italian on your next trip to Italy, just suggest, “Ci vediamo al bar!” They’ll know exactly where to go.