Travel video guide
Where to Eat in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Veneto: Pizzeri From Mark Wiens | Varedelo
This guide turns Best Food Ever at The @Olympics! #invitedbyyoutube from Mark Wiens into a practical restaurant map with 3 saved spots around Cortina d'Ampezzo and Milano. The mapped places include a historical landmark, a restaurant stop, and a place marker. Use it to understand the places, dishes, and trip context before saving the map in Varedelo.
What the creator captured
Mark Wiens visited Livigno, Italy, where he braved a terrifying elevator ride to the top of a 60-meter ski jump before attempting to ski for the first time. After working up an appetite, he enjoyed a traditional mountain feast featuring buckwheat pasta and a giant grilled beef and pancetta skewer. He concluded his day with a unique experience involving several squirts of an unnamed fermented liquid.
What this map is good for
- Planning an italian restaurant stop or short itinerary in Cortina d'Ampezzo.
- Comparing food stops from a creator or saved local map before you commit time in the city.
- Saving 3 mapped spots into Varedelo so the list stays usable on the ground.
- Using the original video as context, then turning it into a clean place-by-place map.
Featured spots on this map
- Alajmo Cortina
Italian Restaurant in Località Ronco, 123, 32043 Cortina d'Ampezzo BL, Italy, Cortina d'Ampezzo, Veneto, Italy
Hours: Hours available - Italian Olympic Ski Jump
Historical Landmark in Località Zuel di Sotto, 32043 Cortina d'Ampezzo BL, Italy, Cortina d'Ampezzo, Veneto, Italy
Hours: Hours available - Fondazione Milano Cortina 2026
Place marker in Piazza Tre Torri, 3, 20145 Milano MI, Italy, Milano, Lombardia, Italy
Hours: Hours available
Food notes from the video
- pizzeri
- salervo
- beef and panchetta wrapped on a stick
- unnamed fermented liquid
Experiences captured
- visited Winter Olympics 2026 site in Livigno
- rode a makeshift elevator 60 meters high
- viewed the big air ski jump
- went skiing for the first time
- dined at a traditional mountain restaurant
Planning notes for Milano
Quadronno is a district in the historical center of Milan, situated between the Porta Vigentina and Porta Lodovica areas. Historically, the neighborhood maintained a religious character until the 18th century, defined by a concentration of churches and monasteries. During the 18th and 19th centuries.
Must-try foods nearby
- Panino al Prosciutto di Camoscio
An iconic sandwich from Bar Quadronno, Milan's first late-night paninoteca. Originally marketed as 'monkey ham' (prosciutto di scimmia) to intrigue locals in the 1960s. - Risotto alla Milanese
The quintessential golden rice dish of the district, often found in its most refined form at the Michelin-starred [bu:r] by Eugenio Boer. - Costoletta alla Milanese
A traditional bone-in veal cutlet, breaded and fried in clarified butter until golden. - Mondeghili
Traditional Milanese meatballs made from leftover boiled beef, mortadella, and liver mortadella, mixed with bread soaked in milk. - Michetta with Salame Milano
The classic Milanese 'michetta' is a hollow, star-shaped roll with a crunchy crust.
When to go: The best time to visit Quadronno is during late spring (May to June) or early autumn (September to October) when the weather is mild and ideal for walking the district’s residential streets. Summers can be oppressively humid and many local boutiques close in.
Local tips
- Use the Crocetta M3 metro station for quick access to the Duomo, as the neighborhood is primarily residential and lacks large pedestrian zones.
- Greet shopkeepers with a polite 'buongiorno' or 'buonasera' upon entering, as this is a standard sign of respect in this refined district.
- Expect restaurants to open for dinner no earlier than 7:30 PM, and always request the check when you are ready to leave since servers will not bring it automatically.
- Avoid ordering a cappuccino after 11:00 AM or following a meal, as locals strictly consider it a morning-only beverage.
What travelers are noticing
- Winter Olympics Cultural Olympiad: Multi-venue exhibitions and events across the district celebrating the synergy of sport and Italian design.
- Palazzo Acerbi Openings: The 17th-century baroque palace on Corso di Porta Romana opening to the public for exclusive design collaborations and immersive art installations.
- The Macchiaioli Exhibition: A major 2026 art event featuring over 100 works and geolocated audio-storytelling experiences integrated into the neighborhood's historic venues.
Planning questions
What is this video map?
It is a crawlable guide to the mapped places from Best Food Ever at The @Olympics! #invitedbyyoutube, with the creator video, a static map preview, and selected spots from the trip.
Can I save these spots?
Yes. Open the map in Varedelo to save the places, keep planning notes, and revisit the guide from your phone.
Does this replace watching the video?
No. The video remains the source, and the map makes the places easier to scan, compare, and save while planning.
Use it on your trip
Save this restaurant map before you go
Keep the mapped spots, creator context, food notes, and planning details together. Varedelo turns the page into a phone-friendly map you can revisit when you are choosing where to go.