Click here for the fair information and details.
Over the last month, I’ve been Skyping frequently with Vini Veri founder and natural wine advocate Giampiero Bea (above).
I’ve always been a fan of his and his wines, wines that Tracie P and I enjoy together with gusto.
But our chats have given us a chance to learn more about each other’s lives and families: our conversations are punctuated by our children’s booboos and laughter as my girls vie for my attention in the early morning and his son flops in his lap, curious about the American on the other end of his father’s afternoon call.
This newfound and cherished intimacy has been the backdrop for a much more serious dialog about the present and future of natural wine.
Now that I’m a dad (with a 4-year-old and a 2-year-old), I have an even greater appreciation of the urgency of his mission. What world will we leave our children when we’re gone? It’s a question I ask myself all the time. And the answers will be as intimate as they are universal.
“Natural wine is not an abstract concept,” he said to me emphatically yesterday before work obligations forced us to end our call.
It is the very real “application of our conscience,” he said as he spoke of his dream of creating a natural wine protocol that will be recognized and embraced as cultural patrimony.
After much back-and-forth and many wonderful and colorful confabulations, he and I have agreed that in coming months, I am going to give him a hand in giving an English-language voice to the ViniVeri fair.
It’s a labor of love and I began today with a nuts-and-bolts post on the dates, hours, and location of the fair, as well as some other useful information.
The boilerplate is accompanied by my translation of Giampiero’s notes on this year’s fair and its themes.
There are a lot of technical issues to be ironed out in terms of the fair’s English-language media presence. We are working on it and in the meantime, I hope that my contribution will facilitate my American colleague’s attendance.
I’ll be spending a day in Cerea with Giampiero this year and we are organizing a TBD event where I will be participating as well. Stay tuned…
The mosaic of Italian food and wine never ceases to surprise, delight, and thrill my senses and sensibilities.
A delicious organic Charmat-method Pinot Noir from Oltrepò Pavese was another discovery for me.
My good friend and winemaker extraordinaire Nico Danesi and my bromance Giovanni Arcari came down from Brescia to Verona to meet me for lunch on my last day in the city for the Amarone vintage debut event in late January.
Nico’s son got the alla diavola, i.e., devil’s style, topped with spicy salamino, what we in America would call pepperoni, although in Italy it’s generally a lot spicier.
Above: the President of the Italian Republic Sergio Mattarella visited the Johnson Space Center in Houston earlier this month. He was accompanied by Italian astronaut
Yesterday evening, after the girls helped me cook the tomato sauce (from chopping the shallots and crushing the garlic to deglazing with Garganega and stirring as the cherry tomatoes simmered), the four of us sat down at the dinner table and Georgia P asked me, “daddy, how do you say ‘family’ in Italian?”
But as far as linguistic inquiry goes, this was a special one.
And before their bedtime, Tracie P had a special request for a couple of rounds of “ready, set, go!” (below).
American wine writer and natural wine advocate Alice Feiring (above) will chair a new “natural wine” competition this year at Vinitaly, the annual Italian wine industry fair held in Verona.
Traveling and tasting across the U.S. since the beginning of the year, I’ve been impressed by the number of restaurant wine professionals who have offered me a glass of unconventional Roero Arneis.
Yesterday, one of the leading wine professionals in Los Angeles, Giuseppe Cossu, tasted us on this skin-contact Arneis from Luca Faccenda.
I went to a public university that had a
So many groovy opportunities to taste Franciacorta coming up…
When Alfonso and I visited in Italy in late January, only a few days had passed since