
Tuscan cellar - Photo © skelter
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I Love Italian Wine and Food - The Tuscany Region
An article by: Levi Reiss
If you are looking for fine Italian wine and food, consider the
Tuscany region of central Italy. You may find a bargain, and I hope that
you’ll have fun on this fact-filled wine education tour.
Tuscany is located in the central western part of Italy on the
Tyrrhenian Sea. It gets its name from an Etruscan tribe that settled the
area about three thousand years ago. It has belonged to the Romans, the
Lombards, and the Franks.
More than four hundred years ago under the Medicis, Tuscany became a major European center. It is undoubtedly one
of Italy’s top tourist destinations as well as an ideal place for your
villa when you hit it big, really big. |
According to one Seinfeld episode
there are no villas to rent in Tuscany, but that was several years ago.
On the other hand, time in Tuscany as elsewhere in Italy is measured in
centuries. Tuscany’s total population is about 3.5 million.
Florence is the birthplace of the Italian Renaissance and the
administrative center of Tuscany. It is one of Italy’s top tourist
destinations, whose sites of interest are too numerous to list here.
Siena and Pisa are two other major tourist destinations.
Tuscany is a center of industrial production, in particular
metallurgy, chemicals, and textiles. Given the region’s importance as an
international art center for centuries, don’t be surprised that it is an
excellent place to appreciate and purchase fashion, jewelry, leather
goods, marble, and other items of beauty. Florence is the home of the
house of Gucci.
Tuscany produces a wide variety of cereal, olives, vegetables, and
fruit. But not only vegetarians eat well. It is home to cattle, horses,
pigs, and poultry. One local specialty is wild boar. On the coast,
seafood is abundant.
Tuscany devotes over one hundred fifty thousand acres to grapevines,
it ranks 4th among the 20 Italian regions. Its total annual wine
production is about 58 million gallons, giving it an 8th place. About
70% of the wine production is red or rose', leaving 30% for white. The
region produces 44 DOC wines. DOC stands for Denominazione di Origine
Controllata, which may be translated as Denomination of Controlled
Origin, presumably a high-quality wine and 7 DOCG white wine. The G in
DOCG stands for Garantita, but there is in fact no guarantee that such
wines are truly superior. The region produces 9 DOC wines. Tuscany also
produces Super Tuscan wines, wines that may not have a prestigious
classification but that are known to be outstanding. These wines are
arguably the main reason that Italy was forced to revise its wine
classification system. Fully 55% of Tuscan wine carries the DOC or DOCG
designation. And remember, many of Tuscany’s best wines carry neither
designation. Tuscany is home to more than three dozen major and
secondary grape varieties, about half white and half red.
Widely grown international white grape varieties include Trebbiano,
Malvasia, and Sauvignon Blanc. The best-known strictly Italian white
varieties are Vermentino and Vernaccia.
Widely grown international red grape varieties include Merlot and
Cabernet Sauvignon. The best-known Italian red variety is Sangiovese,
which is grown elsewhere, including California. A strictly Italian
variety is Canaiolo.
Before reviewing the Tuscan wine and cheese that we were lucky enough
to purchase at a local wine store and a local Italian food store, here
are a few suggestions of what to eat with indigenous wines when touring
this beautiful region. Start with Panzanella, Bread and Tomato Salad.
For a second course, eat or share a Bistecca alla Fiorentina,
(Texas-sized) Beef Steak. If you have room, indulge in a Torta Rustica,
Cornmeal Cake with Cream.
Wine Reviewed Badia a Coltibuono Chianti Classico 2004 12.8% alcohol
about $21
I’ll start by quoting the marketing materials. “…A wine that would
complement a veal chop or game birds, expect aromas of cranberry and
cherry. On the palate, it should be round and ripe with enough tannin
for balance.” As a point of interest, the label included the warning
“contains sulphites” in ten languages.
I first tasted this wine with slow-cooked boneless beef ribs and
potatoes accompanied by a spicy commercial Turkish salad. The wine was
thick, loaded with plum and cherry flavors, and some tobacco. The
tannins were moderate. Dessert was a cocoa cake whose label said
strudel. The wine went well, its fruit really came out.
I next tasted the Chianti Classico with slow-cooked meat balls,
cauliflower and chickpeas in a tomato sauce, and potato wedges. The wine
was plumy and powerful, with very pleasant tannins, a little tobacco and
a little earth. Just so you know, I’m not usually partial to tannins.
The wine was so round that I enjoyed finishing the glass when the food
was gone. No dessert this time.
I decided to follow the distributor’s suggestion and grilled a veal
chop with a mixture of spices (minced onion, cayenne, and a bit of curry
powder), accompanied by grilled eggplant slices with the same spices,
and a commercially prepared Turkish salad, based on red pepper and
tomato. The wine bounced nicely off the delicious somewhat fat, somewhat
rare meat. It didn’t add flavors of its own, but accompanied the food’s
flavors excellently. It was powerful, but not overpowering.
As its name indicates, Pecorino Toscano cheese comes from Tuscany,
where it has been made from sheep’s milk for thousands of years. The
cheese is moderately strong smelling and has a complex nutty flavor. The
wine was smooth and round and had a pleasant tinge of tobacco. Just for
the record I am not a smoker. In the presence of Asiago cheese from the
Trentino-Alto Adige region of northern Italy, the wine became more
robust.
I remember when Chianti came in straw-covered bottles. In fact, I
remember the bottles more than the wine itself. But times have changed.
This Chianti Classico was excellent, quite deserving of its
top-of-the-line DOCG classification and well worth the price.
About the Author
Levi Reiss has authored or co-authored ten books on computers and the
Internet, but to be honest, he would rather just drink fine Italian or other
wine, accompanied by the right foods. He teaches classes in computers at an
Ontario French-language community college. His wine website is
www.theworldwidewine.com. You
can reach him at ital@mail.theworldwidewine.com.
Wine Italy |