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<channel><title><![CDATA[wines, vintners drink. - Pointless Blog]]></title><link><![CDATA[http://www.vinissimo.com/pointless-blog]]></link><description><![CDATA[Pointless Blog]]></description><pubDate>Mon, 01 Jul 2024 20:16:46 -0700</pubDate><generator>Weebly</generator><item><title><![CDATA[My very first taste of a great, rare, "pointless" Cesanese and how I met the man who made it.]]></title><link><![CDATA[http://www.vinissimo.com/pointless-blog/first-post]]></link><comments><![CDATA[http://www.vinissimo.com/pointless-blog/first-post#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Sat, 06 Nov 2010 08:45:55 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[cesanese]]></category><category><![CDATA[fernando proietti]]></category><category><![CDATA[vinissimo]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.vinissimo.com/pointless-blog/first-post</guid><description><![CDATA[Back&nbsp;in the&nbsp;80's,&nbsp;when you woke up in the morning and&nbsp;pretty much knew what the day would bring,&nbsp;Campanile's wine buyer&nbsp;(Manfred Krankl) inquired about a&nbsp;particular Cesanese from a&nbsp;particular&nbsp;producer in Lazio.&nbsp;There I was in the town of&nbsp;Frascati with two friends from California. I was supposed to visit Piglio the next day while they were going to get their first taste of Rome.&nbsp;That night, we&nbsp;we decided to check out a little restau [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div  class="paragraph editable-text" style=" text-align: left; "><SPAN><FONT size=3><FONT color=#000000><FONT face=Calibri>Back&nbsp;in the&nbsp;80's,&nbsp;when you woke up in the morning and&nbsp;pretty much knew what the day would bring,&nbsp;Campanile's wine buyer&nbsp;(Manfred Krankl) inquired about a&nbsp;particular Cesanese from a&nbsp;particular&nbsp;producer in Lazio.&nbsp;<br /><br />There I was in the town of&nbsp;Frascati with two friends from California. I was supposed to visit Piglio the next day while they were going to get their first taste of Rome.&nbsp;<br /><span></span><br /><span></span>That night, we&nbsp;we decided to check out a little restaurant in Frascati that had caught our eye a couple days before. <br /><br />"No, we don't have a wine list but let me bring you our terrific house wine," the owner told us proudly before&nbsp;starting to take our orders.&nbsp;<br /><span></span><br /><span></span>A&nbsp;big glass jug filled with the&nbsp;owner's homemade&nbsp;Frascati arrived. The color of the wine had changed to dark&nbsp;brown.&nbsp;<br /><span></span><br /><span></span>Generally,&nbsp;simple white wines, such as&nbsp;Frascati,&nbsp;start out&nbsp;clear/white&nbsp;in March/April and normally continue&nbsp;to progress to&nbsp;yellow-ish, then&nbsp;to a&nbsp;golden and amber&nbsp;color throughout the&nbsp;summer until they finally turn into the color of fall leaves: Dark brown.&nbsp;A pretty color for&nbsp;dying leaves but&nbsp;not for wine. This wine was dead on arrival.&nbsp;<br /><br />"Do you have any other wine, we could try?", we asked. <br /><br />"Yes, I do have ONE BOTTLE of red that I could bring you."<br /><br />Minutes later he arrived with a bottle of CESANESE in his hand. But it wasn't just someone's&nbsp;cesanese. It was a bottle of&nbsp;Cesanese&nbsp;made&nbsp;by the very producer I was going to visit the next day. The restaurant's&nbsp;only bottle! And it was the&nbsp;estate's&nbsp;top bottling, the rarest Cesanese produced in Lazio and the&nbsp;very&nbsp;Cesanese Campanile had asked me to look for.&nbsp;Isn't&nbsp;it&nbsp;amazing how life is full of&nbsp;surprises that just can't be&nbsp;explained.<br /><br />The&nbsp;wine was&nbsp;absolutely perfect! And so was the food and the evening.<br /><br />The next day I arrived in Piglio.&nbsp;<br /><span></span><br />The&nbsp;winemaker had told me that his&nbsp;phone had stopped working. So I asked several people in the town for directions.&nbsp;I&nbsp;got many&nbsp;but never a right one. <br /><span></span><br /><span></span>By 6:00 PM I&nbsp;had&nbsp;toured&nbsp;the whole village but still had no clue how to find my way&nbsp;to the Cesanese producer. The two maps I had bought didn't show his location.&nbsp;I gave the long dirt road down at the bottom of the village a second try.&nbsp;It started to get dark. No&nbsp;wineries, no people, no street lights. I&nbsp;turned around again when&nbsp;all of a sudden I saw a man in rubber boots carrying a bucket&nbsp;walking&nbsp;in the direction I had just&nbsp;come from.&nbsp;I stopped.&nbsp;He was my man!<br /><br />I made my third u-turn on that dirt road that day. He jumped into the car and we drove 'home' where I met his daughter and her fianc&eacute;e who was studying&nbsp;foreign languages at the Vatican. <br /><span></span><br /><span></span>We tasted and talked&nbsp;sitting around a table&nbsp;outside in the garden until very late into the night. <br /><span></span><br /><span></span>One of life's&nbsp;great moments.<br /><br />Over the past 20 years I have been back to&nbsp;Cesanese country (Piglio, Olevano and Affile) many&nbsp;times to&nbsp;taste&nbsp;all sorts of Cesaneses and&nbsp;talked with producers, enologists, and restaurant owners&nbsp;throughout&nbsp;the Cesanese zone to learn as much as possible&nbsp;about&nbsp;true, authentic, top-quality&nbsp;Cesanese.&nbsp;&nbsp;<br /><span></span><br /><span></span>And that's how I came across Fernando Proietti, owner of Az. Agr. Proietti,&nbsp;THE rising Cesanese&nbsp;star. <br /><span></span><br /><span></span>But that's another 'pointless' story.<br /><span></span><br /><FONT size=6><STRONG><EM><FONT size=5>james</FONT><br /></EM></STRONG></FONT><A title="" href="mailto:info@vinissimo.com">info@vinissimo.com</A></FONT></FONT></FONT></SPAN></div><div ><div style="height: 20px; overflow: hidden; width: 100%;"></div><hr style="background-color:#777777; border:0pt none; color:#777777; height:1px; margin:0 auto; text-align: center; width:100%;"></hr><div style="height: 20px; overflow: hidden; width: 100%;"></div></div>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>