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Showing posts with label villa tuscany. Show all posts
Showing posts with label villa tuscany. Show all posts
Wednesday, 7 August 2013
Learning the true meaning of slow food
Read this new post about a week with friends in Lucca in Tuscany
http://www.travelblog.org/Europe/Italy/Tuscany/Lucca/blog-801600.html
Thursday, 21 March 2013
Door To Door In Tuscany
It is no secret that the world
economy is in a rather bad shape. Every day brings new headlines of companies
or countries in deep financial trouble and talks of the time frame needed to
recover are enough to concern the most optimistic amongst us. In such a depressing
environment you have the choice to either wait for the storm to pass or to try
and take your fate into your own hands. The second option is exactly what some
young Italian citizens have elected to do.
Take the agricultural sector in Tuscany as an example. Not easy to make a living out of tending your own fields nowadays but it does offer a number of opportunities asking to be explored. If you are prepared to work hard and to be inventive it could very well pay off in the end. This reasoning has now started an interesting trend: If the customers do not or cannot come to you then go to the customers. Packing their vans to the hilt with top quality goods, these visionary men and women travel the Tuscan roads up and down the picturesque hills, bringing their products to their expanding clientele. Who do they visit? Mostly families too busy to complement their weekly shopping with fresh produce in between or inhabitants of remote villages, many of them older and without the necessary car that would take them to the nearest town. The majority of village shops have disappeared over the years, enabling this new breed of entrepreneurs to find their niche in the market.
Take the agricultural sector in Tuscany as an example. Not easy to make a living out of tending your own fields nowadays but it does offer a number of opportunities asking to be explored. If you are prepared to work hard and to be inventive it could very well pay off in the end. This reasoning has now started an interesting trend: If the customers do not or cannot come to you then go to the customers. Packing their vans to the hilt with top quality goods, these visionary men and women travel the Tuscan roads up and down the picturesque hills, bringing their products to their expanding clientele. Who do they visit? Mostly families too busy to complement their weekly shopping with fresh produce in between or inhabitants of remote villages, many of them older and without the necessary car that would take them to the nearest town. The majority of village shops have disappeared over the years, enabling this new breed of entrepreneurs to find their niche in the market.
Another idea is to bring a specific product to an area where it would not be easy to find it. Fish is the perfect illustration of that concept. If you live by the sea you will of course be spoiled for choice in the form of local fishermen or fish markets. But when you have made your home inland the sight of a refrigerated truck pulling up on the main square on market days will be very welcome.
Nicely ripe, sun-kissed fruit and extra fresh vegetables that have just been pulled out of the soil are also proving a hit. One entrepreneur selling baskets of home grown produce saw his customer base triple simply through word of mouth. Regional specialties are popular too: olive oil, sausages, pasta, biscuits or jams, to name but a few.
These initiatives have turned struggling and often unemployed women and men into business people. They may not have come up with anything new; they have however re-invented themselves, finding pleasure and enthusiasm in their working days again.
Author: K J S
Labels:
business,
casa winther,
design villas in italy,
entrepreneurship,
fish,
fruit,
luxury villas in italy,
olive oil,
pasta,
sausages,
self-employed,
slow food,
tuscany,
vegetables,
villa pool umbria,
villa tuscany
Tuesday, 4 December 2012
An Italian Wine To Discover: Brunello Di Montalcino
Article first published as An Italian Wine To Discover: Brunello Di Montalcino on Technorati.
When asked to name Italian wines, people might come up
with the full-bodied Tuscan Chianti, the light and fruity Pinot Grigio originating
from the Tre Venezie or the sparkling Asti from the Piedmont region. But would
they know about the Tuscan Brunello Di Montalcino?
The Brunello is a wine produced solely from the
Sangiovese Grosso, a larger-berried variety of the Sangiovese grape. These
round and juicy bunches grow exclusively around Montalcino, a beautiful hilltop
town in the Siena area, which boasts a fortress that was never conquered.
Thanks to being exposed to one of the warmest and driest climates in Tuscany,
the Sangiovese grapes often matures up to a week earlier than their fruit
counterparts used in the production of Chianti and Montepulciano.
Although the first mentions of the Brunello can be
traced back to the 14th century, the wine became well known much later, largely
because of the Biondi-Santi family. In the 1870s, Clemente Sianti was already producing
the beverage we know today. His grandson Ferruccio Biondi-Santi then took up
the challenge of managing the family estate after coming home from the
Garibaldi campaigns. He is the one responsible for developing new winemaking
methods, and for taking the Brunello to its more accomplished form. The
Biondi-Santi family was still the sole Brunello producer when World War II
ended. Today, however, there are over 200 wine producers, mainly small farms
and estates, who proudly have their names attached to one of the first-class
wine names in Italy.
The Brunello has been traditionally matured over a
long period in large oaks barrels, thus creating a very intricate flavour. More
modern methods now call for smaller recipients and a reduced aging time, resulting
in a less tannic and more velvety body. Aromas such as blackberry, chocolate,
black cherry and violet are often associated with the Brunello. A French
"equivalent" would be found in the Burgundy region, namely the Pinot
noir varieties. The strong character of the Brunello makes it the perfect
accompaniment for meat and game.
The Brunello wine even recently made the news in a
spotlight fashion when freshly re-elected President Obama offered a bottle ofthis fine Tuscan beverage to House Speaker John Boehner as a birthday gift.
Much has been said about whether or not this present, which can be found and
bought for around $125 in Washington DC shops, breaks the White House ban on
gifts over $50 to members of Congress. As an exception for gifts from friends
exists, the 1997 Altero Brunello di Montalcino bottle may however well belong
to this category.
Labels:
Brunello,
Firenze,
Florence,
Italian red wine,
lavacchio,
Montalcino,
Sangiovese,
siena,
tuscany,
villa tuscany,
villas in tuscany,
villas in umbria,
villas with pool in Italy,
vino,
winery tuscany
Friday, 16 November 2012
Villa Elba Island
Finally!
A villa, a superb one, on the Elba Island:
You have a infinity pool and a direct access to the sea.
Madonna delle Grazie
A villa, a superb one, on the Elba Island:
You have a infinity pool and a direct access to the sea.
Madonna delle Grazie
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