- Time of past OR future Camino
- May 2023: Via Francigena, Lucca to Rome
I think I'm set with all the important details (bags, shoes, rain gear), and now it's time to turn to the really important things in life: lunch.
Most of the gîtes offer to pack a lunch for between five and nine euros. How are these, in everyone's experiences? I can't find many concrete details beyond that they might include a sandwich or tartine, cheese, a piece of fruit, a salad composée, and maybe a sweet and a drink.
I can picture this being a great way to sample a better variety of local foods than I might manage on my own. I can also see this being an expensive way to buy a basic sandwich and apple.
I like the idea of visiting the épicerie, the boulangerie, the fromagerie, and the charcuterie each afternoon (am I forgetting anyone?) and making a picnic for the next day ... it all sounds so very cultured ... but I also like the idea of being a bit lazy and letting someone else do it.
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Interestingly, the packing advice I see on French-language websites is a bit different than on the English sites. The French advise pilgrims to both pack a lunch for the next day, and to always carry an en-cas consisting of:
- 2 packs of sardines or tuna
- cereal bars
- un morceau de pain: some bread
So far, this isn't too different from what everyone recommends. But then they'll include:
- pain d'epices: spice cake. I assume this keeps longer than a baguette.
- un tube de lait concentré sucré: a tube of sweetened condensed milk! Because it is rare to find sugar in the albergues and gîtes.
- fromage à tartiner: cream cheese.
They also often mention that two small pieces of tupperware are indispensable.
I was surprised that the sites don't talk about buying a chunk of cheese and some sausages, which would've been my stereotype of what a French person would always pack.
Most of the gîtes offer to pack a lunch for between five and nine euros. How are these, in everyone's experiences? I can't find many concrete details beyond that they might include a sandwich or tartine, cheese, a piece of fruit, a salad composée, and maybe a sweet and a drink.
I can picture this being a great way to sample a better variety of local foods than I might manage on my own. I can also see this being an expensive way to buy a basic sandwich and apple.
I like the idea of visiting the épicerie, the boulangerie, the fromagerie, and the charcuterie each afternoon (am I forgetting anyone?) and making a picnic for the next day ... it all sounds so very cultured ... but I also like the idea of being a bit lazy and letting someone else do it.
*********************************************
Interestingly, the packing advice I see on French-language websites is a bit different than on the English sites. The French advise pilgrims to both pack a lunch for the next day, and to always carry an en-cas consisting of:
- 2 packs of sardines or tuna
- cereal bars
- un morceau de pain: some bread
So far, this isn't too different from what everyone recommends. But then they'll include:
- pain d'epices: spice cake. I assume this keeps longer than a baguette.
- un tube de lait concentré sucré: a tube of sweetened condensed milk! Because it is rare to find sugar in the albergues and gîtes.
- fromage à tartiner: cream cheese.
They also often mention that two small pieces of tupperware are indispensable.
I was surprised that the sites don't talk about buying a chunk of cheese and some sausages, which would've been my stereotype of what a French person would always pack.