Experience Italy

Press Release

EVOO

Fresh olives are harvested as fall begins to break in the Italian countryside, picked by the hands of families who nurtured these olive trees and the land in which they have sent forth their roots for generations. Then they are crushed, ground and turned, which coaxes a green elixir from their pulpy flesh.  This liquid gold is bottled especially for us and put on a boat and is heading our way straight from the Cipolloni olive orchard in San Giovanni Profiamma, in the heart of Umbrian olive oil country.

Oil right out of the press
Oil right out of the press

Olio Novello – on its way to Via Umbria in time for our grand opening this November.

You will not want to miss this.  Georgetown has been waiting for this olive oil.

Olio Novello is the first pressed olive oil of the season, and offers the first taste of the season’s harvest.  Made from the earliest ripened, slightly immature olives, olio novello possesses a fluorescent green color and a pungent, strong flavor that reminds us what the word “fresh” really means.  It is to be used frequently and non-sparingly, with a heavy hand.  This oil is meant to be used when it is young, when it possesses the vigor of the plant it just came from.

Via Umbria owners Bill and Suzy Menard just recently returned from Italy, where they led their annual Fall Food and Wine Experience Tours with a small select group of foodies in tow.  There they shared the experience of the family olive harvest and olive oil pressing.  “We watched them pick the olives, smelled the air as they were being pressed, oh, my goodness what a crop!  It is hard to imagine anything any simpler or better than this delicious, elemental olive oil drizzled on anything at all and eaten with people you love.”

The just-harvested olives
The just-harvested olives

Cipolloni’s award winning olive oils come from a farm that numbers over 35,000 olive trees, but despite the abundance of trees theirs is very much a small scale family business.  Every taste of this oil reveals the bitterness and sweetness that is encapsulated by the earthy, grassiness of the oil, developed out of the soil and in the sun of this very farm.  Every olive oil should have a family lineage like this, and at Via Umbria, they do.  And you don’t have to travel to Italy to get it. Let us share the many ways to enjoy its flavor before it’s gone!

 

Ci Vediamo!

–Via Umbria

Georgetown Olive Oil With A Family Line Read more

Fresh olives are harvested as fall begins to break in the Italian countryside, picked by the hands of families who nurtured these ...

Food and Wine Tour

Taking some time out of their busy harvest day, the crew at the Cipolloni mill in Foligno welcomed the guests of our Food and Wine Tour to watch the fresh pressing of this years EVOO.

 

After a tour of the press, we were treated to some snacks over a wood burning grill, focused on the olive oil. As our Chef and Somm, Vickie Reh, says:

The dish could not have been simpler–charred potatoes and onions, salt and pepper, and that incredible oil. I would like to say the surroundings didn’t hurt, it was fall in Umbria after all, but the simplicity and perfection of that dish were flawless—easily one of the best dishes I have ever had and I feel like I would have loved it just as much no matter where I was. It will be nigh on impossible to recreate. After all, I don’t have Colfiorito potatoes or onions from Cannara, let alone new oil pressed only minutes before, but I will try. The lesson was clear and it is one I preach on a daily basis. Buy the best ingredients possible and get out of their way. Deliciousness will follow.

 

We hope you enjoy the photos from this eye-opening day! If you want some of this magical oil for yourself, we carry it over at our online store.

Arriving at the Mill
Arriving at the mill
The just-harvested olives
The just-harvested olives

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Bill and Suzy with the owners of the mill
Bill and Suzy with the owners of the mill

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Inside of the mill

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Peering into the olive press
Peering into the olive press

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the press _DSC0075

Oil right out of the press
Oil right out of the press

First Taste _DSC0085

Hot off the grill - we await hungrily
Hot off the grill – we await hungrily
Fresh grilled onions and potatoes with olive oil
Fresh grilled onions and potatoes with olive oil
Cannara onions
Cannara onions
The final product
The final product

Cipolloni _DSC0098 _DSC0103 _DSC0108 _DSC0113 _DSC0119 _DSC0123 _DSC0128

Ci Vediamo!

–Via Umbria

 

 

 

 

Cipolloni Olive Oil Mill Read more

Taking some time out of their busy harvest day, the crew at the Cipolloni mill in Foligno welcomed the guests of our Food and ...

Food and Wine Tour

For those of you who know Via Umbria, you know we are closely tied with the Geribi Studio in Deruta.

The hand-painted designs are the brainchild of Gerardo Ribigini, who inherited the studio from his father, but the workmanship reflects the talents of his wife, Assunta, and their children, Frederico and Claudia. Over three generations, they have sustained a family business that embodies the quality and integrity of true Italian artistry. Gerardo’s unique vision imbues the historic designs of the Renaissance with fresh colors and modern motifs.

On our tour, we were lucky enough to stop by the studio for lunch with the Geribi family. Eating lunch surrounded by all of their pieces was a treat indeed!

 

Gerardo and Suzy
Gerardo and Suzy

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In partnership with Geribi, Via Umbria is pleased to make the craftsmanship and striking palette of Deruta accessible to American customers. They are a beautiful expression of the rich history that thrives in the bountiful region of Umbria.

 

Ci Vediamo!

–Via Umbria

Lunch at the Geribi Studio Read more

For those of you who know Via Umbria, you know we are closely tied with the Geribi Studio in Deruta. The hand-painted designs ...

Food and Wine Tour

After a thorough tour around the Il Molino grove, and speaking with Annalisa Torzilli on everything that goes into the final product, we were able to sit down as a group and enjoy the fruits of the labor.

There is something magical about walking through the storied trees that produce olive oil that goes into almost every dish. To be able to share new flavors with new friends, and eat olive oil in the very place it was just pressed, is part of what makes Umbria so special. Here are our photos from lunch at the Il Molino farm.

 

Press Pressed Oil
Fresh Pressed Oil

Marco Palermi of Via Umbria

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Umbrian Flatbread

 

Food and Wine Tour Il Molino

 

 

Fresh Mozzarella di Bufala
Fresh Mozzarella di Bufala

Grilled Eggplant

Torta

Pie

Ci Vediamo!

– Via Umbria

Lunch at Il Molino Read more

After a thorough tour around the Il Molino grove, and speaking with Annalisa Torzilli on everything that goes into the final product, we ...

Umbrian Street Food

Summertime torta al testo stuffed with mozzarella, arugula, garden lettuce, and garden tomatoes
Summertime torta al testo stuffed with mozzarella, arugula, garden lettuce, and garden tomatoes

For all of the truffles, wine tours, and olive oil slurping that occurs during a food and wine tour, there is also a simpler side of Umbrian cuisine. While we love the gourmet, there is one Umbrian specialty that stuns with its straightforward deliciousness. Let me introduce you to the torta al testo.

 

A lightly leavened bread made on a huge flat round stone in a fire, this bread is classically Umbrian, and specifically from Perugia. Like a Christmas cake made once a year, this bread is made even more delicious by the fact that you essentially must be in Umbria to eat it.

 

Somewhat like a pita, the torta can be stuffed with any number of grilled meats and veggies. Customizing your own is part of the fun, though as Italians are creatures of habit, most people have their favorite combination they stick to. Once you find the best, why change?

 

Torta Al Testo

When I was taken to one of the more famous torta al testo restaurants by a local winemaker back in August, I was halfway through my piece when I fully registered how simple my torta was. Comprised of only eggplant, mozzarella, and olive oil, it was easily one of the best sandwiches I have ever eaten. Paired with a Birra Perugia golden ale, it was a lunch from heaven.

Umbrian street food at its most essential, Via Umbria just wouldn’t be complete with out it. Which is why we are very excited to announce that when we re-open, we will be offering the official sandwich bread of Umbria in Georgetown.

Correct eating technique
Correct eating technique

We can’t wait to savor the bites straight out of Umbria with you in the Fall!

 

Ci Vediamo!

–Elsa at Via Umbria

Torta Al Testo Read more

For all of the truffles, wine tours, and olive oil slurping that occurs during a food and wine tour, there is also a simpler ...

Truffle Hunting: Part II

After a thrilling morning hunting trufflesthe guests of the food and wine tour get to enter the magical kitchen of Gabriella Bianconi. She lets us smell each type of truffle (there are many different types for different uses!) as she gently incorporates them into a myriad of tasting dishes. Once we understand the general characteristics of each truffle, we sit down for a full meal where we delight in simple yet rich dishes. It’s truffle season: feast your eyes.

white truffles
White truffles
Instant mashed potatoes with truffles, which we will carry in our store
Instant mashed potatoes with truffles, which we will carry in our store

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All of the different types of Truffles to sample
All of the different types of Truffles for us to sample
Tartufi Bianconi
Gabriella Bianconi tells us the secrets of the truffle. Via Umbria Wine Director Vickie Reh listens in the background.
Mache with cheese
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Truffled Eggs
Truffled Eggs
Umbria Truffles
A drizzle of truffle honey adds sophistication to so many dishes
The pre-meal crostini platter
The pre-meal crostini platter

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The simple delight of eating what you have just found!
The simple delight of eating what you have just found!
Scrambled egg with truffles
Scrambled egg with truffles

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Precious Black Truffle
Precious Black Truffle

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Did this photoset make your mouth water? Luckily for you, we will carry most of these products in our new store, as well as offering fresh truffle dinners. So stay tuned..soon you will be able to have a truffle feast of your own!

 

Ci Vediamo!

 

–Via Umbria

Eating the prize Read more

After a thrilling morning hunting truffles, the guests of the food and wine tour get to enter the magical kitchen of Gabriella Bianconi. She ...

Photo diary

Il Molino

We visually take you though our day at Il Molino in our latest installment of our photodiaries.

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Il Molino Olive Oil _DSC0056 _DSC0096 _DSC0116

 

il molino olive oil _DSC0135 _DSC0146 _DSC0148 _DSC0154 _DSC0160 _DSC0172 _DSC0190 Our food and wine crew!_DSC0210 _DSC0240 The machine that removes the olives from their tree.  _DSC0253

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A wonderful day was had by all. We can’t wait to serve this new pressed oil in Georgetown this winter.

 

Ci Vediamo!

–Via Umbria

 

 

Il Molino Visit Read more

We visually take you though our day at Il Molino in our latest installment of our photodiaries.   ...

Bill’s Travel Journal

_DSC0382Annalisa Torzilli is the reason we are in this business. Well not literally, but the charming owner of il Molino farm just outside the village of Montefiascone is emblematic of all the things we love about being in the business of discovering, savoring and sharing experiences. She’s got a great smile, too.

_DSC0058We have been customers of il Molino products for a number of years, having been introduced to them by our friend and supplier Andrea Tosolini who raved about and vouched for the quality and authenticity of il Molino’s organic olive oils, olive oil-based cosmetics, sauces, condiments, pastas and more. So this year at the Fancy Food Show in New York, Suzy decided to take the opportunity to meet Annalisa, the owner-operator of il Molino and as fate would have it, Andrea happened to wander by as she approached the il Molino stand, to make a proper introduction. It was love at first sight. Suzy returned to the hotel that day, beaming, and carrying on about how we were going to visit il Molino on our Food and Wine Experience tour. Fate often smiles on us like this and we are grateful.

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Foto-7-Montefiascone

Montefiascone is not exactly close to our farmhouse, but our tour guests seemed as excited as we were when we boarded Simone’s taxi for the nearly two hour drive from Umbria to Lazio. Along the way the scenery changed and transformed from verdant wild hills to rolling, rocky terrain. But the villages that dotted the countryside, perched on impossibly steep craggy hilltops seemed to spring from the same source, each speaking of a long unbroken chain of history and housing cultures and habits as old as the hills themselves. Montefiascone itself is such a walled hilltown, with its enormous duomo squeezed over to one end of town so massive that it feels like the whole place may tip up and slide off the hill. One could say that it is a place of legend, the home of Est! Est! Est! white wine that those legends tell us was the exuberant exclamation of a papal emissary from long ago sent out to find good wine for the Pope on his journey from Rome to Orvieto, signaling his discoveries by posting a note on the doors of taverns with good wine saying ‘est’ (here it is). No offense intended to the emissary, but he should have tried our trebbiano spoletino in Umbria. The Pope would have found the detour completely worthwhile.

_DSC0245Our visit with Annalisa at both il Molino and the nearby Fornovecchino mill lasted the whole day, and started with a visit to the olive mill, where Annalisa was already harvesting and producing new oil. The excitement of seeing fresh, ripe olives being stripped from the tree, the acrid smell of polyphenols that burn your throat as the olives are being crushed into paste, and the glorious stream of almost phosphorescent green oil that trickles out of the stainless steel spigot, bound for a bottle or can, never gets old. And in this setting of over three hundred hectares of beautiful, natural, organic farmland, lovingly maintained by Annalisa and her caring staff it meant even more.

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Lunch was served as though we had been friends forever, which after an hour in her company is how we all felt. There we discovered and savored pasta made from the farm’s farro and senatore cappelli grains, both ancient grains that have been rediscovered and popularized (for a reason) of late. There was much discussion over whether farro and spelt were the same thing (it’s complicated) and the difference between and relative advantages and disadvantages of grano duro (the hard wheat family that senatore cappelli belongs to) versus grano tenero. There was no arguing, however, that both pastas are something different than your ordinary pasta, a distinct cut above in flavor, mouthfeel and satisfaction. (My favorite is the senatore cappelli and I am on a mission to spread the word.)

It tastes even better than it looks!
It tastes even better than it looks!

_DSC0472After lunch and a stroll around the beautifully maintained property we were off to Fornovecchino, the nearby organic mill where Annalisa’s (and other local organic farmers’) grain is transformed into flour and then into bread, pasta and other finished products.   As we arrived, some local customers were negotiating the purchase of several huge sacks of different flours and after they left Annalisa introduced us to the owners who took us on a tour of the mill, hustling us into the inner sanctum where we were shown how the grains are milled into finer or coarser flour. An exposition of beans and legumes, most of them tracing their roots (literally) to ancient forebears and unique to small, particular areas ensued, with our new Chef in residence, Vickie Reh, soaking up this information more readily than the ceci nero would soak up water that evening.

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Saying our goodbyes to Claudio and Romina and to Annalisa, laden with purchases and gifts from both, we boarded Simone’s taxi, for the long drive home. Home to Umbria, having spent the day in Lazio. A day that enabled us not just to understand the connection between man and la terra but to experience and feel it. And that, after all, is the reason we are in this business.

Ci vediamo!
Bill and Suzy

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Experience Lazio Read more

Annalisa Torzilli is the reason we are in this business. Well not literally, but the charming owner of il Molino farm just ...

Truffle Hunting Part 1

One of the delights of doing a Food and Wine tour in the fall is truffle season. We get the amazing opportunity to see where and how this elusive fungus is obtained! Truffle Hunting

The hunt is on as our truffle hound, Camilla, sniffs out the first treat of the day. _DSC0058 _DSC0068

Truffles cannot be cultivated by humans, and so these specially trained dogs seek them out, using their noses to find the hidden treasure slightly below a layer of dirt. _DSC0079 _DSC0094 _DSC0096

The smell of the truffles is enchanting!

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A successful hunt! And now, back to the kitchen to cook up the goodies…

 

Stat tuned for part II: in the kitchen!

 

Ci Vediamo!

–Via Umbria

 

 

 

 

In the Forest Read more

One of the delights of doing a Food and Wine tour in the fall is truffle season. We get the amazing opportunity ...

Bill’s Journal

_DSC0182We’re back in Umbria for our annual fall pilgrimage, our fall Food and Wine tour. This year Suzy and I are hosting two small groups over two week long itineraries, which we plan to punctuate with a brief side trip to Piemonte (for the White Truffle Festival) before returning home to DC. We have the small matter of reopening Via Umbria to attend to back home.

Returning to Umbria, particularly during the fall harvest, is always a homecoming of sorts for us, summoning up a host of emotions and memories. It is a special time of year, with the orange and rust hues of the vineyards, each one in a different state of harvest, combined with the early evenfall to create a sense of quiet and peacefulness tinged with just a po’ di malincholia.

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_DSC0009-2We come to Umbria this year as we have for the past eight, on a mission to offer our Food and Wine tour guests an opportunity to discover with us the Umbria we have come to know and love. A land where the earth gives forth an incredibly rich bounty, coaxed lovingly from nature by men and women who respect nature by taking what it has to offer and leaving it better off than they found it.

But we come this year, too, with eyes even wider open than normal, seeking to put our finger on those elusive sights, sounds and smells that when combined together shout out “benvenuto in Italia.” To identify those iconic details that define Italy so we can bottle them up and bring the back home with us, spraying them into the air on Wisconsin Avenue so that our customers, breathing deeply of them will know what it is to experience Italy.

Our Food and Wine tour this year is not just an exercise in loving the here and now, it is a mission to capture and bring home the essence of Italy so we can share it. For nearly two decades we have been bringing back pieces of Italy to share with our customers. This fall we are tasked with bringing back the nature of Italy itself.

Food and Wine TourHow better to understand Italy than by experiencing the bounty of its land and its people. And so we started our trip, a group of eight, by exploring the Etruscan town of Todi and the Umbrian settlement of Gubbio. By delighting in the recounting of the history of these places by a guide with palpable pride in her land. By lingering over meals of local meats and cheeses, regional pastas and wines that come from here and can only come from here. By getting to know Simone, our driver, and each other.

What better way of exploring what makes Italy Italy and what makes Umbria Umbria than to arrive at the farmhouse on our first day and to discover Ernesto Parziani, the chef and owner of our favorite local restaurant Perbacco, in the kitchen of our farmhouse with his daughter, preparing the first night’s dinner. To spend time in the kitchen with Ernesto and Agata rolling balls of baccala, pureeing broccoli for gnocchi alla romana, of discussing the menu, discussing family, discussing nothing at all.

_DSC0751_DSC0288What better way of enjoying our first evening in Italy than by sitting down over this home cooked feast and culinary history lesson with the new friends we have made, our travel companions for this week, along with Ernesto and his wife Simona. To drink wines that our friends the Pardis have labored over just a dozen miles from here. To talk and eat and laugh and relax deep into the night long after most mortals would have succumbed to jet lag.

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Suzy and I have long maintained how difficult it is to neatly and cleanly and succinctly define Italy and the Italian experience. There simply is no one thing that says it all, no Tower of Pisa, no fettuccine alfredo, no Madonna col bambino that one can point to and say, “ecco qua, Italia!” Yet we keep coming back, time after time, and millions of visitors keep making the pilgrimage to the boot each year for that something special that speaks to them.

In the end, maybe it is just simply its incredible bounty that defines Italy, that makes Italy Italy. Perhaps that is the magic potion Suzy and I are searching for. Italy itself didn’t even exist a little more than 150 years ago, a crazy quilt of city-states, kingdoms, alliances and fiefdoms then and even now resembles less a well ordered English country garden and more the wild, natural orto that we find when we step out back, behind our farmhouse kitchen.

After our first night back in Umbria, following a day of discovery, of enjoyment, of relaxing and of peace and contentment, perhaps we are inching closer to understanding the secret that is Italy. Perhaps it is not one thing that makes Italy Italy, perhaps it is the sweep, the bounty of this place. But those things – the food, the wine, the landscape, the history, the art, the lyrical language, crazy drivers in tiny cars and museum-like cities – they are not the answer themselves. They are the things that satisfy the cravings that Suzy has. That I have. That our tour guests have. That Ernesto and Simona have. Each craving personal, each craving as deep as the soul and each craving desperately in search of satisfaction. Put simply, Italy feeds what you hunger for.

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Italy, with its richness and its willingness to let you live in the here and now, scratches the itch, the longing in our souls for connection and meaning. And as far as we have figured it out, it does it better than any other place on earth.

Perhaps that is the secret of Italy, the ingredient we can bottle up and bring back to Georgetown with us. Suzy and I certainly look forward to testing this hypothesis for the next three weeks.

Ci vediamo!
Bill and Suzy

Feed Me Read more

We’re back in Umbria for our annual fall pilgrimage, our fall Food and Wine tour. This year Suzy and I are hosting ...

Photodiary

After a day of gathering, walking, and eating, what’s a slightly jet-lagged crew to do?

SpritzTime

Head to Bevagna for the classic ritual of #spritzoclockin the restaurant of our good friend, restaurant owner, and chef Simone

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Our group nestled into the evening hour, apperitivo drinks in hand.

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And with a little visit from Salvatore, the hour was complete.

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Then back to the nearby Fattoria Del Gelso, where our caretaker Marco was busy prepping a simple Umbrian dinner.

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After a perfect, and perfectly tiring day, what you really need is a home-cooked meal and some local wine.

 

Stay tuned to see where our crew is off to tomorrow!

 

Ci Vediamo!

 

Via Umbria

 

 

 

 

Food and Wine Tour, Day I Part II Read more

After a day of gathering, walking, and eating, what's a slightly jet-lagged crew to do? Head to Bevagna for the classic ritual of ...