Wandering in Langa
What to do in the Langhe Easter & Easter Monday 2026
Easter and Easter Monday always arrive with the same promise: to unplug, get out, and change your pace. Around here, keeping that promise is all too easy.
Between Langhe, Roero, and Monferrato, the calendar fills up effortlessly: long lunches, tastings that become essential stops, outdoor events, concerts, and days built around a single idea: feeling good without overcomplicating life.
Like every year, here is a selection of events designed for exactly that: giving you a starting point and a few great reasons to get moving.
During the Easter weekend, some local wineries open their doors and turn a visit into something more direct and less structured: you taste, you listen, and you talk with the people who make the wine every day.

It isn’t just a tasting, but a journey through stories, choices, and different personalities, because every winery has its own way of telling its story.
It’s the kind of tasting that works whether you know exactly what you’re drinking or you prefer to let yourself be guided. And often, from one glass to the next, the day takes a better turn than expected.
An excursion with multiple layers of interpretation: landscape, history, and a tradition from afar. Starting from Magliano Alfieri, you’ll move along ridges, vineyards, and scenic paths, admiring a landscape that is at its best in spring.
But the heart of the experience lies elsewhere: in a quiet, almost suspended place where the sound of shells resonates—an ancient ritual revived on Easter Eve that transforms a simple walk into something deeper.
A picnic, but with an interesting twist. The idea is simple: take you among vineyards and woods and let you do something that usually stays off the itinerary—painting.

No technique, no expectations—just time to sit down, open a bottle, pick up brushes and colors, and see what happens. At the end, you can take your canvas home or exchange it with someone else, letting the day continue even after it’s over.
No beating around the bush here: you come to eat, and we take it seriously. In Lequio Berria, the Bersaglieri Easter lunch follows a clear line: traditional dishes served at the right pace.
What to expect? Appetizers that follow one another without haste, first courses that bring together the local area and the season, and main courses that immediately bring back the feeling of a “proper” Easter, if you love good food.
The same starting idea—sitting down at the table—but with a different approach. At Vitae di Langa, Easter moves on a different level: refined dishes and more sophisticated pairings, a different expression of the same territory.

The setting does the rest: surrounding hills, relaxed timing, and a lunch that becomes a complete experience. You come here to eat well, yes, but also to enjoy everything around you.
In San Damiano d’Asti, along the tree-lined avenue of Baluardo Palestro, the morning fills with cages, calls, colors, and movement: an exhibition-market where farm animals, small rodents, birds, and even ornamental fish coexist.
It’s not just a market, but a walk with a difference, made of stops, discoveries, and details that catch the eye, especially if you are with the little ones.
At the Scaparoni Belvedere, near the giant bench, the first edition of Easter Monday organized by Circolo Tanarito: live music, DJ sets, street food, stalls, and a continuous flow that goes from late morning until evening.

It’s not your classic organized lunch, but an open day to build as you go: you arrive, move around, and stop whenever you like. Between a concert, a quick bite, and a glass in hand, time flies, and that is exactly what should happen on Easter Monday.
At Tenuta San Sebastiano, visits become live stories: actors in costume give voice to the Rangone family and transform the visit into an immersive experience, somewhere between theater and storytelling.
The route can then continue through the historic center, among views and details that add depth to the day. You walk, you listen, you discover. And in the end, without realizing it, you’ve done much more than a simple day trip.
Here the perspective changes completely: no long tables, no music, no crowds. In Cravanzana, Easter Monday is experienced by walking, entering a quieter and more authentic Langa made of woods, ridges, and paths that follow ancient mule tracks.

It’s a real hike that requires time and a steady pace, but gives back so much more: wide panoramas, full nature, and that rare feeling of being in the right place without needing anything else.
And at the end, a shared snack closes the circle—simple, essential, and perfectly in line with the day.
Imagine taking an exploratory walk with locals who tell the story of the village from the inside, through anecdotes, views, and details you’d be hard-pressed to find elsewhere.
The day is divided into two parts: one more linked to the village and its history, the other to gastronomic tradition, with a focus on cugnà, a typical local preparation that you can also taste along the way.