| Hostaria 
                Antica Roma Running over 350 miles south to 
                Brindisi and lined with cypresses and umbrellas pines, Via Appia, 
                begun in 312 BC, is the oldest of the seven consular roads. The 
                ancients both pagan and early-Christian came here by torchlight 
                to bury their dead then just outside the city limits. At no. 87, 
                not far from the festooned round Tomb of Cecilia Metella and across 
                from St. Calixtus's catacombs is Hostaria Antica Roma. 
                It's also known as Liberti”  because 
                it was originally a columbarium or tomb 
                with niches for the urns of the Emperor Augustus 6,000 cremated 
                freed slaves. First excavated in the 18th century, there's been 
                a restaurant here since 1796, when it was the first stop on the 
                mail-route to Naples.
 
 Today's 
                owner Massimo Magnanimi's specialties include homemade gnocchi 
                with clam sauce, homemade taglioni with 
                smoked salmon and asparagus tips or grated white truffle, 
                pennette with spicy lobster sauce and an array of 
                homemade desserts. Complimenti allo chef, Massimo's 
                son Paolo, for his white chocolate mousse and 
                peppery flan! Like Giulia up-the-street, affable Paolo is a disciple 
                of Apicius, and willingly caters Roman banquets. (six guests minimum). Via 
                Appia Antica 87tel. 011-39-065132888;
 Website: www.anticaroma.it
 E-mail: hostaria@anticaroma.it
 Reservations recommended.
 Closed Monday.
 Ostaria 
                Da NeroneAfter allegedly setting fire to Rome in 64 
                AD, the Emperor Nero, less well-known as the inventor of ice-cream, 
                decided to build himself an outrageously luxurious new palace, 
                called the Golden House”. On its 
                marshy grounds his successor Vespasian commissioned the Colosseum 
                and later on the Oppian Hill above Trajan built his Baths. Here 
                on the corner overlooking these majestic monuments and next door 
                to Michelangelo's awesome statue of Moses, since 1965 brothers 
                Enrico and Eugenio De Santis have provided impeccable service, 
                excellent home cooking and warm hospitality consistent with the 
                saying abruzzesi forti e gentili”.
 There's 
                nothing fancy here two, small, wood-paneled rooms with an appealing 
                antipasto buffet at the center but this friendly, self-respecting 
                place is always booked solid with bespectacled professors from 
                the nearby engineering school plus tourists at lunch and neighborhood 
                regulars evenings. More like a club than a trattoria, 
                the house specialties are your classically Roman innards, succulent 
                roast lamb, an Abruzzese staple, and fettucine da 
                Nerone (with mushrooms, peas, ham, and salami in 
                an beaten egg sauce), but don't miss the tender grilled scampi 
                and swordfish steaks on Tuesday and Friday, traditionally fish 
                days in Rome.  Via 
                delle Terme di Tito 96tel. 011-39-064817952.
 Reservations essential.
 Closed Monday and the month of August.
 Reserve well in advance.
 Taverna 
                UlpiaDown the street from the Colosseum, with 
                a the terrace overlooking Trajan's Column, Forum, and Markets, 
                Taverna Ulpia, a popular hangout since the 1880s, 
                is the only restaurant in Rome owned by the Ministry of Cultural 
                Patrimony. Built into the Basilica Ulpia or law courts of the 
                Emperor Trajan's forum, the last and largest imperial forum, ask 
                for a table downstairs where the opus reticulatum 
                brick walls and mosaic floors date to the 2nd century AD. It's 
                also possible to book Mussolini's table. Before becoming Il 
                Duce”, he dined here regularly with his brother 
                Arnaldo, and afterwards arrived via a secret tunnel (now blocked) 
                from Palazzo Venezia for nightly government meetings.
 Via 
                Foro Traiano 2tel. 011-39066789980,
 Closed Sunday, all major credit cards accepted).
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