While you certainly don’t have to become a sommelier to enjoy or understand Italian wine, I hope my expertise will help direct you to Italian wines you will love. I’ve decided to pick a few of the most famous grape varieties such as Cabernet Sauvignon, Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, etc. and “translate” them into Italian. Enjoy the exploration!
Read moreMinty Sainsbury Renders Italy: Photorealist Drawings of Italian Architecture
Duomo, Milan
With her humble pencil in hand, British artist Minty Sainsbury Captures Italy’s grand architecture one square Inch at a time.
After discovering her impressive drawings on Instagram and playing message tag for months, Minty and I were finally able to connect this winter so that I could learn more about her art practice and its particular interest in Italy. Below is an interview as well as images of her meticulous artwork.
Read moreUNESCO World Heritage Wine Regions in Italy
From the north to the south, Italy’s staggering 55 natural and cultural wonders, will amaze you: Venice and its lagoon, the proud Baroque towns of Sicily, cave dwellings in Matera… But, perhaps the sites that will astound all of your senses are its three World Heritage Wine Regions. Where else can you actually taste the traditions and natural beauty?
Read moreWhite Wines from Mendoza: They exist!
Mendoza may be known mostly for Malbec and other powerhouse red grape varieties (and it is Malbec World Day today!), but the region’s white wines have been a major part of its viticultural history. From Chardonnay and Semillón to the native Torrontés and Italian-imported Fiano, Mendoza does not disappoint! Below are some of my favorites. Enjoy!
Read more25 Ways to Travel the World (Without Leaving Home)
Just because we need to stay at home for the foreseeable future to prevent the spread of the highly-contagious and life-threatening Coronavirus does not mean we can’t travel through other means! Below is a list of 25 ways you can quench your wanderlust from the comfort of your own home….and, if you’re like me, around-the-clock pjs!
Read more5 Wine Tasting Ideas for your next Zoom Happy Hour
Yes, it’s come to virtual happy hours. Around the country—and even world—friends are coming together on the virtual conference platform Zoom to clink glasses and unwind from their shelter-in-place days. To help liven up your next “get together” and to ensure the conversation sticks to something other than COVID-19, here are some wine tasting ideas and games for your next Zoom Happy Hour!
Read moreThe Valentine Typewriter
I have been waiting for February to arrive so that I could finally write about the Valentine Typewriter—a design icon created by the Italian architect and designer Ettore Sottsass and British industrial designer Perry King in 1969 for the Italian typewriter brand Olivetti. It is found in the collection MoMA, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, among countless other museums around the world. How did a typewriter achieve such a feat? Let’s jump back in time to the 1960s. [Wavy time jumping lines]
Read more10 Top Italian Language Films
In between the Golden Globes and Academy Awards, and on the 100th Anniversary of Italian director Federico Fellini’s birth (January 20th), I wanted to share with you my 10 favorite Italian-language films. Collectively, the films on this list offer a poignant view of Italy over the past 80 years. Whether you have been to Italy many times already or are looking forward to your first trip there, I hope these films will help you get to know Italy and Italian culture even better. Enjoy!
Read moreWine of the Month | Enduring Durella!
Alberto and Dario Spezzamonte of Estro Vino e Cucina in Venice, Italy.
The eve before I left Italy this fall, I stopped into Estro Vino e Cucina in Venice to say goodbye to my friends Dario and Alberto Spezzamonte, the owners of this contemporary Venetian bistrot, wine bar and wine shop. Over a glass of sparkling garganega, I asked Dario, the sommelier brother, to select December’s wine-of-the-month; he accepted, we said ciao, gave our do’ bazi (“two kisses” in Venetian dialect; a typical greeting in Italy), and I left. Four days later, on November 12th, Venice suffered from an acqua alta just two inches shy of the record-setting flood in 1966, which reached six feet and four inches.
Read moreDid Leonardo da Vinci invent the airlock?
On the 500th Anniversary of his death, I couldn’t not write about arguably one of the most prolific polymaths ever: Leonardo Da Vinci. Born Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci in 1452, this illegitimate son of a notary and peasant woman from Vinci, a small hamlet just outside of Florence would become known as the father of paleontology and architecture, one of the greatest artists of all time and inventor of futuristic machines and devices centuries ahead of their time.
What I wanted to get to the bottom of, however, is the legend I had heard since becoming a sommelier in Italy—that Da Vinci invented a simple yet genius device in wine-making called the airlock (sometimes fermentation lock)—that mesmerizing glass (sometimes plastic) ornament you see on top of oak barrels in winery cellars.
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