Wine Writer Information Blog

5:31 AM

Monday January 19, 2009 - Bronco Wine

Today's Bronco Wine Article

I Love Italian Wine and Food - The Fruili-Venezia Giuli Region



If you are looking for fine Italian wine and food, consider the Friuli-Venezia Giuli region of northern Italy. You may find a bargain, and I hope that you'll have fun on this fact-filled wine education tour.


Friuli-Venezia Giuli is a mountainous area tucked away in the northeast corner Italy, bordering on Austria and Slovenia. Experts believe that Friuli-Venezia Giuli was first inhabited twenty thousand years ago. Like most regions of Italy, it has belonged to many nations over the years. Unlike most regions of Italy, it remains multicultural, an exceptional mixture of Italian, Austrian, and Slavic influences. To make this article easier to read, we will replace the region's full name by its first part, Friuli. The total population is less than 1.2 million.


While Friuli is home to a wide variety of agricultural products, most farmers don't get rich. The farms tend to be small and much of the land is unfertile, suitable only for grazing and grapes. Unfortunately the Adriatic sea is in poor condition and fishing is on the decline. However, a wide variety of seafood is available. Friuli's best-known food is San Daniele prosciutto, an uncooked ham aged in sea salt for over a year. Gourmets debate whether this ham or its cousin prosciutto di Parma from the Emilia-Romagna region in northwestern Italy is the best ham in the world.


Friuli's administrative center is Trieste, which only became part of Italy in 1954. This city was once the principle port of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Like Vienna, Austria, Trieste is filled with caf?s. It is also home to the famous International Center for Theoretical Physics.


Friuli devotes about one hundred fifty thousand acres to grapevines, it ranks 14th among the 20 Italian regions. Its total annual wine production is about 27 million gallons, giving it a 13th place. Approximately 48% of its wine production is red or ros? (only a little ros?), leaving 52% for white. The region produces 9 DOC wines. DOC stands for Denominazione di Origine Controllata, which may be translated as Denomination of Controlled Origin, presumably a high-quality wine and 1 DOCG white dessert wine, Ramandolo. The G in DOCG stands for Garantita, but there is in fact no guarantee that such wines are truly superior. Over 60% of Friuli wine carries the DOC or DOCG designation. Friuli is home to almost four dozen major and secondary grape varieties, about half white and half red.


Widely grown international white grape varieties include Pinot Grigio, often called Pinot Gris outside of Italy, Pinot Bianco, often called Pinot Blanc outside of Italy, Chardonnay, and Sauvignon Blanc. The best known strictly Italian white varieties are Tocai Friulano and Verduzzo Fruilano, exemplified in the DOCG wine, Ramandolo.


Widely grown international red grape varieties include Merlot, grown in Fruili for well over one hundred years, Cabernet Franc, and Cabernet Sauvignon. The best-known strictly Italian red variety is Refosco. Fruili's candidate for grape variety with the most unusual name is Tazzelenghe, which means tongue cutter in the local dialect. While I have never tasted any wines based on this grape, I can guess that they won't be delicate.


Before we reviewing the Friuli 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 Cjalzons con Ripieno di Cioccolata e Spinaci, Chocolate and Spinach Filled Pasta with Smoked Ricotta.
Then try Capesante alla Triestina, Broiled Scallops and Oysters with Watercress. And for dessert, indulge yourself with Strucolo di Ricotta, Ricotta Strudel. If you are like me, you think of Austria or Hungary, when you hear the word Strudel.


OUR WINE REVIEW POLICY While we have communicated with well over a thousand Italian wine producers and merchants to help prepare these articles, our policy is clear. All wines that we taste and review are purchased at the full retail price.


Wine Reviewed
Pighin Pinot Grigio 2005 Grave del Fruili 12.5% alcohol about $13.50


I'll start by quoting the marketing materials. "Toast, white flowers and mineral on the involved nose, this light-bodied white is all about zing, verve, and refreshing citrus flavors. Some notes of pit fruit, but mainly built to match up to seafood. Try with friends and grilled scampi drizzled with lemon juice."


I first tasted this wine with sesame seed covered filo dough stuffed with hamburger meat and accompanied by zucchini in a tomato sauce. It was pleasantly acidic and fruity providing lemon and other citrus flavors. I liked it with a chocolate cake labeled strudel which intensified the wine's acidity. I don't think that any Friuli residents would have called that cake strudel, but this review is about the wine, and not the cake.


My next food pairing was with whole-wheat pasta in a spicy meat sauce. The wine stepped up to the plate and handled the spice very well. It was nice and round. I finished this meal with out of season strawberries, in whose presence the wine became almost sweet.


With filet of sole poached in onions, a side of brown rice, and okra in a tomato sauce, the wine became more acidic and rounder. It was quite refreshing. It was a sweet, acidic companion to fresh pomegranates. It took on a nice acidity with pecan and caramel chocolate candy.


Montasio is a cooked, full-fat, semi-hard cheese made from cow's milk and aged for several months. It has a pungent smell and a strong, pasty taste. The Pinot Grigio was not outmatched by this powerful cheese. Strictly speaking, Asiago cheese does not come from the Friuli region, but its neighbors Trentino-Alto Adige and Veneto. Once again, the wine changed its character to match this softer cheese.


This wasn't a great wine, but it did go well with everything. I would most likely buy it again.



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 .




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 .

Bronco Wine and More

I Love Italian Wine and Food - The Fruili-Venezia Giuli Region


If you are looking for fine Italian wine and food, consider the Friuli-Venezia Giuli region of northern Italy. You may find a bargain, and I hope that...


Click Here to Read More About Wine ...

Bronco Wine Products we recommend

Wine Tasting Spittoon


Wine Tasting Spittoon the tasting room essential. Professionally designed and durably crafted of plastic. 8 ¼'H.


Price: 24.95 USD



Bronco Wine in the news

Executive Q (The Oklahoman)

Sat, 17 Jan 2009 22:01:09 -0800
It’s a little after nine on Wednesday morning and Phil Lancaster rings his secretary for "a cuppa.” A few minutes later, Nancy arrives with a cup of hot tea — Bushells Australian with a little milk in a certain white porcelain cup. The cuppa, which Lancaster has four to five times daily, is just one of the many idiosyncrasies the Australian native and permanent American resident brings to his ...

Erin Wasson; Fashion’s Darling is our Favorite Designer

Sat, 17 Jan 2009 21:25:12 -0800
Accidental model Erin Wasson has moved on to life’s second act—as a designer, a surfer, and much more than a pretty face. Despite being almost alarmingly tall, lean and beautiful, Erin Wasson is the opposite of what one expects a supermodel to be. Seated at a picnic table in the garden of Roberta’s, a homey Italian restaurant in Bushwick (Brooklyn’s newest hipster destination neighborhood), she’s clad in cut-off shorts, a vintage blazer, and boots. Her long, sun-kissed tresses are un-coiffed

Dinner at the Old Deanery, Ripon

Wed, 14 Jan 2009 16:08:42 -0800
Fantasic food, fine wine and great service! Its one of my regular haunts for a superb dinner in Ripon. I’ve had dinner with lots of people there from Patrick from Blogstorm, great Bronco staff nights out, Adam from Fresh Egg, various good old SEO chums like Gimpy, Doug, NFFC, Thomas, Callum, and many clients over ...]

From sequels to prequels, an epic year of film to come (Poly Post)

Mon, 12 Jan 2009 22:02:36 -0800
With a hoard of impressive looking blockbusters on the way, the impressive 2008 movie season may have met its match.

GLOBAL DEMAND FOR CAL ALMONDS FALLS (CalTrade Report)

Sun, 11 Jan 2009 14:53:49 -0800
SACRAMENTO – 01/12/09 – A decrease in international demand and an almond crop much larger than originally forecasted and have combined to reduce by half the price almond growers are receiving for this season's crop, according to the California Almond Board.


Iron Wine
|

Labels:

BlinkBitsBlinkList Add To BlogmarksCiteULike
diigo furl Google  LinkaGoGo
HOLM ma.gnolianetvouzrawsugar
reddit Mojo this page at Rojo Scuttle Smarking
spurl Squidoo StumbleUpon Tailrank
TechnoratiAddThis Social Bookmark Button
&type=page">Add to any serviceSocial Bookmark
onlywire Socializersocialize it

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home