Tour Pasta, Queijo e Azeite – privativo invites food travelers to follow a single-day route through the heart of Tuscany. Based in Lari and operating from Firenze, Toscana, Italy, this private 8–9 hour excursion stitches together a medieval castle town, a traditional pasta atelier, cheese cave, industrial farmhouse, and an olive oil estate into a compact lesson in local flavor.
Begin in Lari, home to the Castello di Lari that watches over narrow cobbled streets. The town’s long pasta tradition unfolds at a small pasta factory where trafilata al bronzo is still used: bronze dies give the dough a rough surface that grips sauce. You’ll watch extruders, feel the coarse cut of fresh pasta, and taste shapes that carry the tang of regional wheat varieties.
From there the tour moves to a caveau de envelhecimento do queijo — a cool, humid aging cellar where wheels of pecorino and marzolino breathe for weeks or months. The lesson here is tangible: rind texture, microclimates, and the role of sheep’s milk in shaping pecorino’s grassy, nutty profile. A working cheese factory follows, one that produces dozens of varieties including fresh ricota; guided tastings highlight contrasts between young and aged cheeses and offer optional à la carte lunch pairings.
Olive oil concludes the palate arc. At a family-run azeite farm you’ll walk among gnarled olive trees, watch presses in action when in season, and sample varietal oils pared with crusty bread. The experience frames oil not as commodity but as expression — green, peppery, buttery — linked to soil, cultivar and harvest timing.
Guided in Portuguese, the route accommodates small private groups (De 1 a 6 pessoas). Meeting point: A ser comunicado após a reserva. The guide adds cultural context: why Lari’s castle once controlled trade routes, how local dairies evolved from subsistence herding to artisanal production, and how olive groves shaped village rhythms.
Practical notes: wear supportive shoes for cobbles and farm paths; bring a compact bag for purchases; alert the operator to dietary restrictions in advance. The tour highlights living agricultural landscapes — terraces, stone farmhouses, and the working textures of Tuscan hills — rather than dramatic peaks or waterfalls. It’s an ideal day for curious eaters who want behind-the-scenes access to product and people, and for travelers based in Firenze seeking an edible, hands-on encounter with Tuscany’s food heritage.
Booking in advance is strongly recommended for private groups and for visits to producers during harvest seasons when mills and dairies are busiest. Expect relaxed pacing with several tasting breaks and plenty of chances to buy bottles, cheeses, and pasta to take home. This tour is a practical, delicious primer on how Tuscan ingredients are made and why terroir matters to flavor.