Food & Drink

Don’t Prosciutt the Messenger

One of the challenges in blogging about our Umbria Food and Wine tours is to fight the temptation to chronicle and recount every single activity that we do each day.  First, the internet is not large enough to store all that we would write.  Second, no one would believe us.

So daily we modestly use a little artistic license to edit out and fit into a more believable human scale that where we go, those with whom we talk and laugh, and, especially that which we eat and drink.  The hardest job I have is making those editorial cuts. Continue reading Don’t Prosciutt the Messenger

One of the challenges in blogging about our Umbria Food and Wine tours is to fight the temptation to chronicle and recount ...

Grape Expectations

It’s harvest time in Italy. If you read my previous post about our visit to the Cipolloni olive mill you’ll know that it’s not yet olive harvest time. The summer’s dry scorching weather has delayed the harvest from its traditional early October start until later in the month.

But the grape harvest, similarly affected by the summer heatwave is coming to a close. We have been able to watch and experience the harvest this year for the first time. It is a fascinating process to observe. Continue reading Grape Expectations

It’s harvest time in Italy. If you read my previous post about our visit to the Cipolloni olive mill you’ll know that it’s ...

Redibis – Latin, you will come back

We’re back. Just as we knew we would be. But six, nearly seven weeks removed from Italy, since our last two month visit, is and was a long time away. It is, naturally, good to be back, especially as our month long itinerary will be a mix of the old and familiar and the new and exciting. Sicily, Ponza, Umbria. Beaches, Greek ruins, rental boats and Umbria Jazz, the villa and our Umbrian neighbors. Pete and Nancy (their fourth or fifth visit?), Bill and Corinna (their second), Willia and John (their second, too) and Bruce and Christine, John and Betty (their first). I can’t imagine ever getting tired of this. Continue reading Redibis – Latin, you will come back

We’re back. Just as we knew we would be. But six, nearly seven weeks removed from Italy, since our last two month ...

Home Cooking

Why is it that we tend to make friends in Italy so often with chefs and winemakers? It must have something to do with the question posed to Willie Sutton about why he robbed banks. “Because that’s where the money is.” Continue reading Home Cooking

Hunting, cooking and eating Read more

Why is it that we tend to make friends in Italy so often with chefs and winemakers? It must have something to ...

Cup of Joe

The history of coffee in Venice goes back to the 1600’s. Venice was a center of trade and merchants brought coffee beans from Africa, Yemen and Egypt to the city. Venetians immediately fell in love with this rich, exotic new drink (who wouldn’t!) It was a luxury item enjoyed by wealthy Venetians. Coffee shops and roasting facilities sprang up throughout Venice. By the middle of the 1700’s there were over 200 coffee shops in Venice. Just like today, it was the perfect place to meet and catch up on the local news and gossip. Continue reading Cup of Joe

The history of coffee in Venice goes back to the 1600’s. Venice was a center of trade and merchants brought coffee beans ...

One Cough Good, Two Coughs Better, Three Coughs Best

Bill, Austin and I spent the day at the Culinary Institute of America in Napa Valley for a full day course titled, “Olive Oil Flavor and Quality.” What a spectacular day. I haven’t been in a classroom for years and wasn’t sure how I was going to hold up for a nine hour class. Let’s just say there was no time to nod off. I am a huge olive oil consumer and advocate. I have access to some of the best olive oils and I use it in everything – baking, sautéing , frying and topping off my favorite dishes. At any given time I will have 10-12 bottles of olive oil open at the house – but not to worry there is no chance they will get overexposed or go rancid – a five liter tin doesn’t last long in our house.

The panels and presenters covered a wide range of topics focusing on ensuring that olive oils are labeled properly. Olive oils from all around the world are still being mislabeled and inferior oils are being sold at exorbitant prices. In all things, keep in mind you get what you pay for. A bottle of olive oil is no bargain if it is a blend of other oils or has old oil mixed with new oil.

Olive oil does not age well. It is meant to be young and fresh – and you should be able to taste the freshness in every bite. But how best to taste olive oil? We sampled 20 different varieties today and it was definitely sipped, let sit on the tongue and then slurped back. It gives you the ability to feel the taste in your mouth and then open it up and feel it in the back of your throat. A good fresh oil will leave a peppery taste in the back of your throat. There was a lot of happy coughing in the room today.

Bill, Austin and I spent the day at the Culinary Institute of America in Napa Valley for a full day course titled, ...

Olive U.

Is it possible to drink 18 cups of olive oil in one day?

We set out to find out today, arriving at the St. Helena (Napa Valley) campus of the Culinary Institute of America, known to foodies as the CIA.  Not that CIA.  Although we were told that the culinary version predates the spy version by a few years and rightly claims the acronym.  We were told, too, of the similarities between the two organizations.  They both use knives and they both keep secrets.  At lest when Dick Cheney is not outing them.  (We have it on good word that Scooter Libby leaked the recipe to McDonald’s secret sauce to the press.  Talk about a weapon of mass destruction!).

We arrived early in the morning at the CIA’s Greystone Lodge, an enormous stone building that was obviously something big and important before becoming the west coast center of the American cooking scene.   Something important like an insane asylum.

After being seated in the amphitheater-like lecture room together with a hundred other devotees of nature’s loveliest, most sublime, healthy liquid fat – olive oil, and specifically extravirgin olive oil – each participant being provided a cafeteria tray covered with a paper placemat with numbered silhouette circles over which were placed plastic jello cups filled with a couple tablespoons of various olive oils, and realizing that these samples were for tasting, perhaps the insane asylum metaphor was appropriate.  (Apologies for the run-on sentence.  An hour after the class I’m suffering slight olive oil withdrawal symptoms).  For an entire day, from 9am until 6:30pm we heard from experts in the field – producers who literally came from the field, chefs, writers and journalists, distributors, retailers and wholesalers about the state of the world of extravirgin olive oil.  And it is a story full of complexity, intrigue and, ultimately, incredible taste and potential.

The message from the day?  It would be hard to single out one thing.  But it is clear that the American market is in its infancy with regard to its understanding, appreciation and use of extravirgin olive oil.  But we need not fret our inferiority.  Even in Italy and Spain, the world’s largest producers and consumers of olive oil, misinformation and ignorance are widespread, too.  But it was refreshing to see professionals and passionate amateurs come together to grapple with how to make extravirgin olive oil assume its rightful place in our kitchens, on our plates and in our hearts.

More on the specifics later.  If you’ll excuse me now, I have to go drink a pint of balsamic to complete me.

Ci vediamo!

Bill and Suzy

Is it possible to drink 18 cups of olive oil in one day? We set out to find out today, arriving at the ...