Short Stays Available                                                                      Please telephone +44 (0)20 7401 1039 for details of 3 or 4 night stays

Masseria Torre Coccaro

Boutique Hotel

The sensitive conversion of this 16th century Masseria has produced a charming luxury hotel where guests can enjoy the simple pleasures of rural life.

The 16th century Masseria Torre Coccaro was once a fortified farm dominated by a tower built to keep watch for the marauding pirates of the times.

Now converted into a 5-star hotel, it retains the intrinsic simplicity of a traditional farmhouse, but the owners have decorated it with wit and flair, contrasting the rough, uneven walls and ceilings with exquisitely elegant furnishings.

Two of the rooms are in the ancient grottoes, and have a unique charm that includes in one case a private olive grove and swimming pool – a true secret garden. There is a stunning ‘lake’ swimming pool and a quite sensational Aveda spa located in a fantastic grotto of its own. The huge fruit and vegetable garden provides many of the organic ingredients for the marvellous Puglian dishes served in the hotel restaurant; the hammocks slung here and there in this garden between almond and pomegranate trees are irresistible. The Masseria is stylish in a way that the Italians do so well, and has a very relaxed, modern and unstuffy atmosphere –to which the friendly and endlessly obliging staff contribute greatly.

Room Description

Superior rooms can be twin or double and overlook the estate. Some have a bath-tub but most have shower.

Deluxe rooms are in the main courtyard and have a private porch and garden. The rooms are bigger than the classic and have a small sitting area for breakfast.

Junior suites can either be in one of the courtyards, these have a terrace and some have fireplaces, or in the tower where they have a small balcony and sea views.

Deluxe Junior suites are located either on the top floor of the tower and have a large bathroom with jacuzzi and balconies with fantastic sea views, or there is one in the caves which has a fireplace and large private garden.

Olive Suite is in a quiet part of the hotel and has a lounge as well as a large terrace with views over the olive groves.

Tower suite is on the top floor of the tower and has a large living room with fireplace and dining table. There is also a balcony with sea views, and bathroom with jacuzzi.

Orange garden suite is a spacious suite located in the cave, with private orange garden with private heated pool and large jacuzzi in the room.

Room facilities:- Air conditioning • En suite bathroom • satellite TV • Music system • Mini-bar • Safe • Internet access.

Some rooms have jacuzzi and some have fireplaces.

Restaurants & Bars

A good variety of cuisine is available at the hotel, the majority of which is sourced locally from the regions many farmers and fishermen, or harvested by specialists from the wild. Egnathia restaurant is located in the old stables and offers typical me

Key information

Total Amount of Rooms
  • 37
Airport Transfer Time
  • 1 hr to Bari or Brindisi

Price Includes

Prices start from £685 per person based on two sharing a standard room for 5 nights, including breakfast.

Regional flights and room upgrades available, different durations and multi-centres available.

Boutique Hotel

Facilities

4 Restaurants • Bar • Heated outdoor pool • Spa with indoor pool, jacuzzi, Turkish bath • Fitness room • Yoga • Beach (Reached By Free Shuttle Service) • Beach volleyball • 5-a-side Football pitch • Jogging paths • Private boat hire • 9 hole golf course • Bicycles • Cookery school.

Water-sports and Golf available locally.

Childrens facilities:- Mini-club located on the beach • Babysitting (payable locally).

Spa & Wellness

The spa is located in the atmospheric rock caves, and the treatments make great use of the organic herbs and fruit available from the hotel gardens.

There is a wide choice of massages and treatments including shiatsu and foot reflexology.

Spa treatments are also available at the beach under straw pavilions.

Activities

At the renowned cookery school guests will visit the colorful fish and vegetable market in Monopoli with the chef, and tour the estate gardens to pick organic vegetables and fruits.

Lessons include how to make typical Apulia dishes, home made pasta, fish and meat plates, and the local desserts. There is also a firewood oven dating from 1500 to learn how to make pizza and also panzerotti for the kids. Other lessons include how to make mozzarella and burrata.

The 14 metre private motor yacht with skipper is available for excursions to the sea caves of Polignano a Mare, the antique port of Monopoli to swim in quiet bays and scuba diving.

Torre Coccaro has its own 9 hole Golf course, set amongst the huge olive groves overlooking the sea with sand and pitching green, putting green and driving range.

Your Location

Watersports available locally include Jet-ski, scuba dining and wind-surfing and kite-surfing.

There are also go-karts and quad-bikes near the hotel, as well as a flood-lit tennis court and clay-pigeon shooting.

There are 5 golf courses, all within easy reach of the hotel. The closest is the San Domenico course, just 1 km away, and an 18 hole, par 72 course.

Just 5 kms from the hotel is a stables where you can indulge in a ride through the countryside either by horse or pony. Lessons are available for beginners as well.

Climate data for this region.

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Explore the surroundings

Destination introduction

Flying over the crystal clear waters of the Adriatic sea on one side and Ionion on the other, Puglia immediately strikes you as utterly different from the rest of Italy. Far removed from the gentle hills of Tuscany, the flatter countryside of Italy’s heel stretches out before you, covered in puffs of green – endless groves of ancient twisted olive trees, as old as the hills, scattered with white houses, which lead to the beaches and blue sea.

In the fertile hills of Valle d’Itria, round ‘trulli’ houses pepper the countryside, with their conicle stone roofs and pinnacles. It is here that the pretty hills towns of Alberobello, Locorotondo, Cisternino and Ostuni rise out of the flat valleys below, reminiscent of Greece, with their white stone buildings and cobbled streets, dramatic by day but lit up at night, they seem almost magical.

The proud ‘Pugliese’ people describe themselves as ‘nearly in Africa’, not only a reference to the hot summers and southerly location, but also to their Moorish past and strong traditions. Italian musicians perform in some of the most beautiful settings in Puglia throughout the summer months, at coastal towns and village piazzas. Even the smallest villages sprout ‘feste di paese (village festivals), attracting the residents to dance the ‘pizzica tarantata’ to the ancient rythms of the haunting tarantella music. Nearby seafood restaurants are plentiful, but for many it is the informal coastal cafes which hold more appeal, where a plate of fresh sea urchins and local wine after a refreshing dip in the sea is just part of daily life.

Salento is a special part of the Puglia region characterised by rich historical remains from  its Greek and Roman ancestry, whose traces remain both in the architecture and  language of the area. This area is enjoying a cultural renaissance, the extraordinary Baroque towns of Lecce is known as the Florence of the South), and those with an interest in architecture can find many Byzantine remains.

Relaxed,  friendly and with an appetite for good living, the Salento people are almost  universally kind and hospitable. Whilst English may not be widely spoken, a  willingness to help is, and many a time a request for directions has been met  with a guided escort and a friendly wave the only expectation by way of thanks.  Local restaurants serve a population which is passionate about food, so the most basic trattoria generally offers wonderful food at a fraction of UK prices. 

The wonderful coastline offers a great variety of options. Kitesurfing and windsurfing at Puntarenas, rock-jumping for dare devils in the  many grottos on the Otranto coastline, and pay per day lidos for those who like  their beaches manicured and their sunloungers reserved.

During  summer there's a choice of several festas to attend most evenings. Many involve old religious rites, like the carrying of a  Virgin Mary statue around Lecce (August 24-6) or into the sea at Otranto (September 6). Others, like Novoli have bonfires and spectacular fireworks  (January 16-17).  Maglie has a wonderful 5 day food festival during August,  extraordinary in scale and in the quality of its local producers. 

Most  festivals include the pizzica, a fast and compelling rhythmic dance done to the  accompaniment of the tambourine, accordion and violin. The atmosphere is  pulsing, whether it's a modest village festa or the August event in Melpignano,  which has international guest stars and attracts audiences of 150,000. Thousands of lights and torches create a  carnival atmosphere. The pizzica band will start playing at 11pm when young and  old dance together.  The pizzica’s origins are Greek, its function being  therapeutic. Women living hard and restricted lives would dance themselves  through the night into a cathartic trance. The next day they would go to be blessed at the chapel of St Paul in Galatina - a pizzica and special mass is still held there every June.