OK! So we've been in Italy for almost a year and I'm now just getting to my first Taste This! blog. Suffice to say I've had my fair share of: wine, risotto, bruschetta, pizza, parmigiano, mozzarella, speck, soppressa veneto, balsamic, and soups...which I will post about later.
My first blog begins now...
The other day I duped Shelly into a trip to a small shop in our town. It is very small and non-descript...with the exception of what appeared to be a large jug I've seen locals fill with wine. Lots and Lots of wine. I've been trying to get Shelly into one of these stores...called an Enoteca for awhile now. (FYI, you can also buy fresh milk this way too!) Today was my lucky day. We walked into the enoteca and it was decked out with old fashion radios, wine, olive oil, balsamic oils, and even some beer. (Of course I bought that too!) Along the side wall were four giant tanks. They kind of looked like old gas pumps. Then the mecca! The back wall had 40-50 taps. The tanks and taps all had different types of local/regional wines. YEP! This place is like Costco, except they only sell wine in bulk. Here's the kicker! IT IS SUPER GOOD & CHEAP! You pick the wine you like, and give the owner the vessel of you choice. No lie, someone brought in a water bottle and filled it up! You can buy as little as a water bottle up to 50 liters. We opted for the 5 liter option. (Roughly 1.3 gallons.) Of course the fun didn't stop there. We then had to buy bottles and lids...and as you can tell, drink a few glasses before we made the transfer to small 1 liter sized bottles. The price per liter for this wine is about $6. If were to buy this wine in a bottle at a regular store the price would be around $12. Shelly and I have been drinking this wine all weekend. It is sooo good in fact, I was suppose to go TDY for an overnight trip, but stayed home and drank this wine instead. Of course I had to get up super early the next morning for my news story coverage.
The fun in the store didn't stop there! The owner was very hip and happy to speak English to us. Our Italian is waay bad still. He told us he loves to drink and eat. Shelly and I thought to ourselves..."We Do TOO!" He said, he only likes to eat and drink the best, so that is why he has this store full of only the best. He brought us over to the olive oils. There were three different levels available. Light (leggero), Medium (medio), and Intense (intenso). Normally, we pay about $4-6 for a large bottle of olive oil. The oils here ranged from $15-50. Thankfully, there was a sample pack. We spent the majority of Sunday eating bread with these oils and drinking our new wine. It was a good Sunday!
There was also a nice selection of balsamic vinegars. Some aged up to 30-years. The owner was very nice to us and gave us two samples of 30-year vinegar. We've not tried it yet. We also bought a case of some Italian beer that has won several gold/silver medals in world-wide best beer contests. More to come on the beer!
4 comments:
Next time we're in Vicenza, I fully expect a stop and full introduction to this store. I think our container of choice will be a wine pipeline direct to Germany...
Is that a bottle of vino or oil on the table? I'd love to have either! ~Prima
Lea...I'm sure by the time you and Chuck make it down here again, I'll be best friends with the store owner.
Prima...the big bottle is wine. FYI almost gone!
I am soooo jealous! Did 4 years in Italy, and miss the good fresh food! Never had french fry pizza, but got hooked on a white sauce/asparagus pizza, and a seafood pizza. And the coffee, gelato, and the croissants with the chocolate in the middle! Needless to say, my weight gain is traced back to my years there, lol!
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