Milan’s Brera
Milan’s Brera
Elizabeth De Filippo Jones
Enter the charming neighborhood of Brera and you’ll soon forget all thoughts of the drab, industrialist Milan. Bohemian grit began to fill the cracks between the uneven cobblestone streets here after WWII, and by the 1960s, the local cafes and galleries brimmed with neorealist filmmakers and designers vying for the Compasso d’Oro award. Due north from Milan’s tourist-filled Duomo and past the storied La Scala, austere, modern palazzos make way for colorful residential buildings, their balconies overflowing with succulents, wisteria and honeysuckle. The name Brera comes from the Lombard word ‘Braida’ which means ‘green space.’ Once a fishing village where boats arrived on canals into Milan from the Northern lakes, today it is considered the most bourgeois neighborhood in Milan.
To experience a hint of old-world Brera is to shop at the weekly outdoor mercato on Via San Marco, notable for its colorful, overflowing bouquets, ample fresh fish selection, multiple produce stands and Italian fashion staples such as leather gloves and cashmere sweaters. On the winding pedestrian streets, worthwhile boutiques and vintage shops are mixed with tourist-hungry restaurants (to be avoided – I recommend the old-school trattoria tucked away nearby). Brera freshly exhibits a new generation of designers and concept boutiques, and admiration of the supermodel-esque locals.
Although more recently famous as a creative’s haven in the 1960s, Brera has for centuries attracted artists and designers who came to study at the art academy within the internationally celebrated museum Pinacoteca di Brera. Soon after it opened, Napoleon, the newly crowned King of Italy, is said to have intended the Pinacoteca to become the Louvre of Italy (Antonio Canova’s colossal marble statue of the monarch sits at the center of the palazzo courtyard today). To follow in the brushstrokes of the prestigious academy’s centuries of attendees is to shop at the historic art supply and print shop Ditta Crespi or flip through the engraved leather journal selection at Pettinaroli.
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Shopping
10 Corso Como
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HighTech
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ATELIER VM
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Seletti Store Milano
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Milan is proud to be the home of artist Maurizo Catalan. This shop is dripping with ironic lamps and homewares most notably from Catalan’s Toiletpaper Magazine’s wildly successful home collection.
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Moroni Gomma
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Worth a gander if you’re on the hunt for humorous gifts or Izipizi glasses.
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Rossignoli Bicycles Milan
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Enoteca Cotti dal 1952
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PalermoUno
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The home of young collector Sophie Wannenes where every single piece of the furnishings is for purchase: from the sideboard to the brass toilet paper dispenser and the liquid soap.
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Pattini
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Ginori 1735
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Ditta Cesare Crespi di Massimo Morlacchi
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Aperitivo
Associazione Salumi e Vini Naturali
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Jamaica
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N'Ombra de Vin
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Eataly Milano Smeraldo
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Restaurants
Antica Trattoria della Pesa
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They have many sides options including stuffed eggplant and puntarelle salad. There are two risotto options plus the famous Milanese pancake that is crunchy and fun to eat. An institution in Brera. Closed Sundays.
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Al Matarel
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They are know to have the best risotto Milanese tucked into an alley in Brera. The broken website proves they are old school however the menu says they have Risotto alla Milanese and Risotto alla Monzese – sfumato con vino rosso e salsiccia.
Closed Tuesdays.
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La Libera
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Denis Milano Moscova
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La Latteria
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Coffee
Cafezal Torrefazione Specialty Coffee
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Fioraio Bianchi Caffè
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Gelato
Rivareno
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Gelateria Solferino
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Elizabeth De Filippo Jones
Tailor-Made Travel Design & Customized Tours
📍Milan, Italy
We are a boutique travel advisory and communications agency specializing in culinary and sustainable travel.
After growing up in New York and graduating in art history from Oberlin College, I landed my dream job in the San Francisco office of the first publisher of visitor travel guides in America. After 6 years away working in travel and hospitality in the West, I moved to Brooklyn for a Masters in food anthropology at NYU. In 2012 I founded the Food Book Fair, a festival at the intersection of food writing and culture (celebrated in the NYTimes, The New Yorker and many more!).
In 2015, I picked up and moved to Milan, Italy to produce the USA Pavilion at the food-themed World's Fair Expo Milano with the James Beard Foundation. I fell hard for Italy (and an Italian) and launched Risotto & Steel in 2017, determined to share untapped culinary Italy, helping visitors explore immersive, convivial and regional gastronomy.
I have written about Italy for Eater, Prior and Italy Segreta. I live in Milan, work in Tuscany and left my heart in Liguria on a steep olive tree-covered hill overlooking the Cinque Terre sea.
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