Sunday, September 25, 2016

Hilltops, and Towers, and Castles, Oh My!

(with apologies to The Wizard of Oz)



As Carol and Roger traveled through the Piemonte, they ran across so many beautiful images that just didn't fit in our previous blog posts.



So, we'd like to share this portfolio of photos with all of you.













We'll start with the ruins of the castle and tower that overlooked the town of Cortemilia.

















The castle and monastery above the town of Prunetto.









You get no sense of how really huge these medieval castles are....
















...until you stand next to them.















The church in Cessole seemed pasted to the side of a hill.













In the year 1050, some monks built the first bridge over the Bormida River.  The stationed a toll keeper in the white building in the upper right corner of the photo.

With the tolls collected, they were able to build and maintain....








...this monastery...



...which, over time, grew into the town of Monasterio Bormida.














A pretty little balcony in the town of Perletto.











Our final stop in the Piemonte was the town of Monforte d' Alba...the base for our Barolo adventures.








These are some of the 11 villages that make up the Barolo wine country...









Grinzane Cavour (the castle where Count Cavour lived)







Serralunga d' Alba
















The view from the hiking path between Monforte and Barolo.

















The town of Barolo, surrounded by its bread and butter.














Castiglione Falletto.









La Morra.














A loggia overflowing with petunias.














The vineyards had an ordered geometry to them that is very pleasing to the eye.












A grizzled veteran of many years of wine production.




















The old and the new.






And finally, there was our lunch stop at the small osteria in the town of Arguello.


There was only one thing on the menu...tagliatelle with porcini sauce....


And the customer had to hand pick the porcini.














Saturday, September 24, 2016

The King of Wines, and the Wine of Kings



This is a glass of Barolo wine.  Many consider it Italy's best wine (though Carol and Roger would argue that a good Brunello is every bit its match).

Barolo is one of four red wines grown in the Piemonte.  The other three are Barbaresco, Barbera, and Dolcetto.

What distinguishes Barolo from the other three is the subject of this blog post.

Let's start with the color.  Barolo wine is garnet in color.  The others are a more traditional burgundy to purple in hue.





Barolo are grown on steep hillsides in 11 different comune (villages and surrounding countryside) roughly 70 km south of Torino, surrounding the town of...you guessed it...Barolo.




Barolo wine comes from the nebbiolo grape (as does Barbaresco, just to complicate things).  Grapes for Barolo are the last harvested in the Piemonte...usually the first week in October.

In 1966, the Barolo winemakers association (Barolo DOCG) was formed. They established a comprehensive set of regulations defining what Barolo wine is:

  • The vineyard must come from a well-defined "cru" list, currently comprising 4,285 acres.
  • The vineyards must be on steep hillsides with no northern exposure allowed.
  • Production must be limited to 3,000 bottles of wine per acre.
  • Only nebbiola grapes are allowed.  Alcohol content is high...a minimum of 13%.
  • The wine must age at least 3 years, 18 months of it in oak barrels.  Reservas must age 5 years.
There are 170 different wineries that are authorized to make Barolo.  Because of the terrain, enologists (wine scientists) have identified more than 200 different micro-climates that can have a profound effect on the taste of the finished product.

We spoke to one wine-maker named Gianfranco who told us his winery has two nebbiolo vineyards side-by-side that produce distinctly different-tasting wine.




A bit of history here.  The man at the right is Camillo Benso, the Count of Cavour and Italy's first prime minister.

Cavour was a master promoter.  He spent his life promoting two things: Italian Unification and Barolo wine.

It was he who coined the phrase, "The king of wines and the wine of kings."


The woman at the left is Juliette Colbert, the French wife of the Marquis of Barolo.  She was a contemporary of Cavour and brought French wine-making techniques to Barolo.  Before she worked her magic, Barolo wine was totally unpredictable... ranging anywhere from undrinkable to sublime.

One wine magazine described today's Barolo vintners as "small scale family wineries with a focus on quality that borders on obsession."

Yet, even today, there are significant differences in the taste of Barolo, 






The comune of La Morra sits perched on a very high hill west of the town of Barolo.  It produces ⅓ of all Barolo wine.  The soil is rich in lime, yielding a wine experts call "perfumed and velvety."  

It matures to its best flavor 8 to 10 years after the grapes are harvested.



Across the valley from La Morra, perched on another hill sits Castiglione Falletto.  In the vineyards surrounding this town, the soil is more sandy.  The wine produced here is described as "austere and powerful."

It takes longer to mature to its best potential...sometimes as long as 15 years.





Up until the early 1970's, Barolo did not have the same reputation as a great wine that it has today.

Then, Barolo was always aged in large casks, longer than the 18 month minimum required by the DOCG.

There were some vintners who thought they could improve the wine by changing the way they made it.





They shortened the fermentation process.  They aged the wine in smaller barrels and for a shorter time.  They bottled the wine sooner and let it age in glass.

They liked the results they got...and so did the wine-drinking public.  The traditionalists took note and worked hard to improve their product.  They too succeeded.

So technique can add yet another dimension to the ways in which Barolos can differ in flavor.

(By the way, if you're interested, there's a 2014 film, "The Barolo Boys" which documents the "war" between the traditionalists and the revolutionaries.)





Location, soil, microclimates, technique...Carol and Roger were simply befuddled.  There was simply too much to understand.


We headed to the epicenter of winemaking, the town of Barolo, where there is a wine museum and the Barolo Enoteca.

Perhaps they could help.









The enoteca has 200 different Barolo labels for sale...















...and 32 different Barolos to taste.




Agggh!  We needed some help.








We finally found it at "La Terrazza del Barolo" in the person of Enzio.

Full disclosure: La Terrazza del Barolo is the community wine cellar for the comune of Castiglione Falletto.  Their job is to promote (and sell) the wine produced in their comune.

Enzio walked Carol and Roger ever so slowly through the subtleties in the commune's different wines...

...big barrels vs little barrels...

...two wines from the same hill, one near the top the other near the bottom...

...current vintage vs wines aged a few years longer...






We finally began to understand.


There was just one problem:

After so many glasses of wine, it was impossible to remember any of it.






How expensive is a really good Barolo?  We checked several wine magazines and found an article entitled "Italy's Most Expensive Wines."  At the top of the list was Giacomo Conterno's Monforte Barolo Reserva...produced by a winery down a dirt road a short walk from our apartment.  His reservas averaged $755 a bottle...with the 2004 vintage going for $876.



Now, several days later, as we write this blog and try to figure out how to buy Barolos, two things stand out:

1)  It's the dirt.

2)  Older Barolos taste better than younger ones.  (The problem, of course, is tasting a young wine and trying to figure out how it will taste in 5 to 10 years.)









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Afterword: At a food shop in Alba, Roger found a book entitled Wine and Food.  The last chapter was titled "Rules for Pairing Wine with Food."

First came the French rules...11 different edicts filling two pages.  It included things like

"Never serve this wine with this meat..."

"Each course should be paired with a different wine..."

"Always serve sparkling wines before still wines..."

"Never serve a more robust wine before one that is less so..."



Then came the Italian rules.  It said simply, "Drink what tastes good."









Wednesday, September 21, 2016

The Palio at Asti



The Palio is a centuries old competition among neighborhoods in the medieval cities of Italy.  Asti's Palio is a bareback horse race around a triangular track in the heart of the old city.

Asti's Palio, overshadowed by the more famous race in Siena, started in 1275 and predates the Siena race by more than 300 years.


But it's so much more than a horse race...



For at least the week before the horse race, each of the 21 participating Rione (urban parishes) and burgos (nearby villages) deck themselves out in their neighborhood colors.




Fourteen of the 21 neighborhoods are from within the city.  They are very competitive when it comes to the Palio.









The seven burgos are looking for a chance to play spoiler.








The morning of the race, the first event is the blessing of the horses.

The horse representing each neighborhood shows up at the parish church for the benediction.












Then came the show by the sbandieratori (flag throwers).

















The show demonstrates increasingly complex and intricate maneuvers.











See what we mean?






Then the parade starts...








Neighborhood by neighborhood....


















....each dressed in the colors of his Rione....



















...the lords and ladies...








...their foot soldiers 
and damsels...




















...even the jailer and his prisoners.



Spectators jammed the parade route five and six deep.  It seemed as if half the city of Asti was there...








...while the other half was at the horse race.

Two preliminary races...three laps each around the triangular course... and then the top finishers from the prelim in the finals.












Remember, the jockeys were riding their horses bareback....



...so in each heat there were horses that finished without their riders.















The Kentucky Derby doesn't have to worry about the competition.







But the fans sure got into it.














The winning parish gets to take home this flag and display it prominently for a year.



This year's winner was Pizza Monferrato...a small town 26 km east of Asti.  

It was their first win in 23 years.



All in all, it's quite a spectacle.