Postcards

May 17, 2007


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In this issue:
Cinque Terre Wine

 

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Cinque Terre Wine

As we swirl the golden wine in our glasses, Susanna, a local sommelier, tells us that when we taste it we will taste the Cinque Terre: the sun, the salty air, herbs, and lemons. One taste confirms that it is the perfect wine for the cuisine of fish, pesto, and light pasta dishes served here. The sweet dessert wine was so popular that vessels from Roman times with their markings have been found in Pompeii, hundreds of miles down the coast.
The appreciation of this wine begins with the landscape. This wine is produced from incredibly steep hillsides on rocky manmade terraces. Locals say there are as many stones in these walls as the Great Wall of China. A thousand years ago the settlers here carved manmade terraces into the cliffs and filled them in with rocky soil. Hundreds of kilometers of these terraces undulate along the 12 kilometer coast of the Cinque Terre. Even today most vineyards can only be reached by footpaths. Traditionally grapes are harvested by hauling baskets up the steep steps to the road or down to boats in the sea. There are a few monorails now, “treninos”, that cross some of the slopes and helps to bring the grapes up to the road. But having ridden on one last summer we can say that the views were breathtaking. Now we know why the driver told us to brace our feet because at times we were nearly vertical. This landscape makes growing grapes backbreaking work. The dry stones walls have to be constantly maintained and the vines are grown low to the ground so pruning is done on the hands and knees. Most growers have such small pieces of land that they send their grapes to the local cooperative to be processed. There are only a few vineyards left that produce wine under their own label. One worth seeking out is Buranco, from Monterosso. This vineyard actually produces the only really good red wine of the area. But since this vineyard has recently been sold the future of this wine is uncertain.
In recognition of the uniqueness of the Cinque Terre it has been named a UNESCO World Heritage site and has been designated as a national park. One of the goals of the park is to restore the stone walls, maintain the footpaths between the villages and preserve the unique nature of this place. There is now a small fee to hike the trails that goes to the park to maintain the paths. Our favorite path begins from Volastra, above Manarola, and winds through vineyards and olive groves to Corniglia, the hilltop village most famous for wine. Many elderly people here still climb the slopes daily to tend their vineyards and then bring the harvested grapes into their cantinas in town to be made into wine. While in Corniglia one day we noticed Mario, who owns a wine bar there, had purple stained hands and feet. He explained that he had been stomping grapes in the old way in his cantina. He led us down the only small street to a small wooden door and into his cantina perfumed with the grape must. We’d missed the annual grape stomping by just a week. We would have proudly sported stained feet and hands just to get in on the fun.
We’ve tasted wine from some cantinas that was almost undrinkable. On the other hand, our friend Gianni served wine so intoxicating that we begged to buy some. He told us that it wasn’t for selling but only for sharing with friends. One of our favorite places to taste wine is above Monterosso at Gianni’s private cantina. He fills bottles of wine from large vats. He puts out plates of his homemade appetizers with the wine on his marble slab table. Then he sits down to tell us about restoring his home from a ruin and nursing along the traditional grape varieties in his vineyard surrounding the house. His goal is to keep alive the tradition of wine making here that is unique in the world. So when you taste the wine you also get a taste of the people and tradition of the Cinque Terre.

 

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