Showing posts with label Nascondiglio di Bacco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nascondiglio di Bacco. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

WIN BIG PRIZES! Design our 1st ever artist's wine label for the reserve wine

14 June, 2011
We are sending out a challenge to all artists to design our first ever reserve wine artist label alla Ch. Mouton or Kenwood.  Here are the rules: you may use any media: oil, watercolor, mixed media, photo, sculpture?, woodblock print, etc.  The winner gets a case of the reserve wine and a week stay at Nascondiglio di Bacco for as many as 4 people in one regular room or the apartment,  international fame, prestige, power, a chance to run for President of Italy etc.  (For those who prefer, we will give a cash prize of 200 euro instead of the B&B stay).  We get to keep the original and shamelessly market and sell any posters, t shirts, aprons, socks and underwear.  The only iron fast rule is we need to see some representation of Bacco in the artwork.  Deadline will be All Saint's Day, 2011 or November 1 as all good things in Italy must occur on a saint day and then we will utilize scientific analysis, Bacco's nose and a high degree of subjective preference to pick the winner.  For those who are like me and are artistically challenged, please pass this on to all the artists you know and thanks to all for participating!
To get you started, here are some photos of Bacco from today and days past; scroll back in the blog as far as 2008 to see many more.  The label will be used for either our bordeaux blend or our Offida Rosso which is a blend of Montepulciano and Cabernet Sauvignon and feel free to use your imagination.  There is no need to confine yourself to any particular theme, just let Bacco make an appearance somewhere inside the work. Good luck! 



Saturday, June 11, 2011

Climbing the Sibillini mountains, how to choose

11 June, 2011
If you have just one day to climb a mountain in the Sibillini chain, which should you choose?  I have climbed a representative sample, so let me help you decide.  1st question: do you like to climb the highest mt. in a certain region? A: Mt. Vettore which is a nice climb with about 950 meters to go up and then down and views of the coast, parts of distant Umbria and Abruzzo, Lazio and the Marche.  2nd: Would you rather have a beautiful hike?  Try Cima del Lago with the same starting point as Vettore at Forca di Presta, but amazing views of the Lago di Pilato and the altopiano (plateau) of Castelluccio.  If you want to bag 3 peaks continue on to Mt. Redentore and Pizzo del Diavolo, all listed at above 2400 meters.  3. If you want a safe, short period with a rope to assist you and views of the Gola dell'Infernaccio from above, try Mt. Sibilla and you can easily add the next peak Cima Vallelunga and descend via an unused road.  Here are some photos of all of them with my favorite being the 2nd option.
Looking back at Cima del Lago from Redentore, this is the ridge you walk along.

One of the views of Lago di Pilato from Cima del Lago

From Cima del Lago, the tallest mountain in the Marche, Mt. Vettore with Lago di Pilato which you can not see from Vettore in the lower left.

Altopiano of Castelluccio where the famous lentils grow and the parasailers glide over the fields of mustard, poppies and lentils.  This view is from near the top of Mt. Redentore.


Looking down on the eastern most part of the plateau of Castelluccio and into Lazio in the distance.

Bacco is looking at Lago di Pilato while above his head you see the top of Mt. Redentore and the prominence to the far right is Pizzo del Diavolo.

On top of Pizzo del Diavolo looking back at Redentore to the right and the crest you walk across to get to Cima del Lago to the left.

The crest from Redentore behind me to Pizzo to Bacco's left in the near distance.

A view from Pizzo del Diavolo to the Z-shaped scar of the road on Mt. Sibilla with Cima della Vallelunga to its left. Below right, you see the town of Foce where you can start the hike for Lago di Pilato.

Bacco, happy as a clam on a little snow remnant.
 Last look at Lago di Pilato before descending.
I have a pace which is close to 1.5 mph going up steep inclines, so I took 1 hour and 15 minutes to arrive at the refuge where you choose whether to hike right up Vettore or left up Cima del Lago.  To arrive at the latter was another 30 minutes and to continue on to Redentore and Pizzo del Diavolo was an hour.  the return took me about an hour and a half.  I figure the hike I took was between 7.5 and 8 miles round trip.  Happy climbing!

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Valle del Fiastrone hike, Gualdo cheese festival

26 Maggio, 2011
Hike one in the Gillian Price book, "Italy's Sibillini National Park-Walking and Trekking Guide' is the Valley of Fiastrone which is a hike through a canyon carved by the Fiastrone river which has been tamed somewhat by an upstream hydroelectric dam which has formed Lake Fiastra.  This hike also can include a jaunt over to a grotto used by hermit monks some centuries ago.  You find the trail head just down hill from the town of Monastero, park by the cemetery and begin in a pleasant meadow surrounded by wild roses and a view to the east of the end of the canyon as the river flows into  a valley leading past to the Adriatic Sea.

 Now, I don't know how many people are like me and like the tough part of the trail at the start of the hike, but this trail is contrary.  You begin with a descent of 70-80 meters to reach the little stream called Fosse, then up 20 meters before descending another 140-150 meters.  All I could think of while descending was I was going to have to regain all those meters on my return, when theoretically I would be a bit more tired.  The trail is well marked to the river Fiastrone where you can take a right and climb up to the hermit's cave with its chapel inside, a relatively easy 20-30 minute climb.

There I met a group of about 30 teenagers hiking with their adult supervisors and a forestry service guide (more about him later).  They and soon Bacco were enjoying their lunch break.  On the return, I, who have been hiking all my life lost the trail (and 30 minutes) 3 times because the friendly wild boars had formed their own pathways especially at the switchbacks which led me straight into the woods.  At the first intersection the sign posts which are easily visible when you ascend are well above eye level and behind a tree as you return which led me to a parking lot.  Pay attention on this part and don't make my mistakes.
The next part was especially made for Bacco and included 7 stream crossings, which in springtime means if you are not an olympic long jumper or circus acrobat you are going to get wet.  The water level lowers later in summer revealing rocks you can use to cross relatively dryly.

 I was standing on a rock ledge at the first crossing with a stream 7 feet across and a foot deep or so and trying to remember my junior high standing long jump skills (always my weakest task in the physical education tests).  Anyway, after  my first failure it became more fun, because it is not possible to get your boots and lower pants more wet than soaked. In one place the trail became a tunnel where small trees had fallen along 10 meters of the trail and I had to crawl through on all 4's.  Bacco and I continued to trails end and then walked into the "gola" or throat of the canyon past the trail's end to enjoy our snack lunch in complete solitude with the sound of birds, stream and falling water as our musical accompaniment.




We then returned down stream with our 9 stream crossings (we did 2 more than required going in) and ran into the forestry fellow who had cut all those pesky downed saplings away, so no tunnel to crawl through on the way back. He didn't want the poor kids to exert themselves.

 Then we climbed up the two major hills, which weren't all that difficult, as this trail overall is pretty easy and we drove our wet selves on to the Gualdo cheese festival.
Gualdo is a nice little hill town above Sarnano and has this nice cheese fest every year and amazingly brought in some really fine producers from as far away as the Piedmont and the Veneto with their alps cheeses.
practically all regions offer Mozarella by now, but the original is from Campania and can't be beat!

most of our local shepherds are from Sardegna, the masters of Pecorino cheesemaking

Fontagrana, our local maestro was also there along with an artisanal beer maker from Padova, Slow food's contingent from Campania with Caciocavallo cheese (photos below, they hang one of the cheeses over hot coals to make it spreadable and give out samples on rustic bread)

Cacio Cavalli from Campania

, a wine tasting area with Marche wines, and lots of other goodies like wild boar sausage from Norcia.
I bought the best and stinkiest cheeses I could find, my favorites being one from Fontagrana of Belmonte Piceno, Marche and the other 2 from the alps and some desserts called Baba' for our wine label designers who were visiting from Verona to go over the final touches on our first 2 labels.
We have bottling of the first 2 wines scheduled for June 6 and I am still uncertain when the winery construction will be completed.  As you remember, it was scheduled for completion last christmas
easter, mid-May.

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Chalet Don Diego, my friend and gracious host Peppe and his little Grottammare paradise

12 Maggio, 2011
When I first arrived in Offida, I met the nicest lady who also seemed to me the most talented artisan with the special lace making of this little commune called Merletti al Tombolo.  I would recommend her to all my guests and take my friends to see her.  She always asked me "When are you going to visit my sons' restaurant at Grottammare.  Finally I made it down to Chalet no. 25 on the lungomare of that town and found Peppe the elder son and proprietario of Chalet Don Diego.  I have not eaten better seafood at any restaurant in Italy.  Some have been equally as fine but 50% more expensive and Pepe has a little garden outside which is immaculate.  I just have returned from London where I dined at the 2nd restaurant of a chef whose flagship restaurant was voted in the top 50 in the world and all I can say is his chef needs to make a visit to Don Diego and learn how to prepare shrimp!  Look at these beautiful plates, all antipasti (one is missing, because I tore into the crabs and shrimp before I remembered to take the picture and no one likes to see pix of dismembered crustaceans.)   If you come to visit me at Nascondiglio di Bacco and ask for a seafood restaurant, this will by my first suggestion.  Enjoy the photos, you will be hungry after.  Excuse my camera's lack of expertise with its autofocus setting. hehe









Friday, January 30, 2009

Visso, Castelluccio, Pettacci, reading labels






30 Gennaio, 2009
Auguri a Luigi Lepore e Buon Compleanno.
We took off for the mountains so I could get my fix and visited the usual places: Castelluccio, Visso and our friends at Pettaci and Norcia.
The mountains are beautiful this year and I really had a yen to go skiing as their is an adequate base of snow this year. Bacco treats the snow just like sand and takes a bit of a snowbath every chance he gets.
We picked up some Ciauscolo (a wonderful fresh salami renowned from the Marche) of various types at Visso along with a cool Pecorino cheese aged in fossa (holes in the ground or caves) which gives it more of a granular texture and a spicier taste. 3 sandwiches of their prosciutto for lunch, a guanciale (aged and season pig cheek-great for pasta carbonara) for the house and we were on our way to Norcia via the back roads for a picnic lunch. There, we stopped in to see our friend at Beccofino, one of the finest restaurants within an hour of Nascondiglio di Bacco, shared a coffee and came on back to the Marche.
I am still trying to get my car insurance situation cleared up. I found a company that will insure the z4, thus enabling me to drive it to the licensing bureau, but needed information from State Farm describing my risk status. My Lenexa and COR friends Mel and Alice Hawk sent me along a letter saying I was, of course, the best driver they had ever insured and I took the liberty of including a scale of my own for the italian firm. Their system starts when you get your first driver's license and you are given a rating of 18. Every year that passes without a claim you descend the stairway, until you arrive at 0. Of course, I am in the negative numbers, by now, but I am not sure my homemade rating scale will past muster in Milan. Obviously, it costs a fortune here to insure a car with horsepower and model and risk rating weighing heavily on the final cost. Thus far, I have seen quotes ranging from 860 euros to over 2000 euros and todays dollar is at about 1.32 to the euro.
We are still living in a mud zone, but finally, there is sun again today. I arose before dawn to go the bank and the immigration office in Ascoli to finish the insurance stuff and initiate the process of my new visa procuration. We finally got through to the italian consulate in Chicago, which made a mistake with my visa last year. Hopefully with another go, I can secure the self-employed visa this time around. I let the better italian speaker here at Nascondiglio go through all our questions to become perfectly clear as to their requirements and the lady on the phone was actually pleasant. Crossing our fingers, I am scheduled to try again in late March.
Finally, for those of you who are not label readers, take a look at this article from men's health and take those readers to the store with you from now on! http://health.msn.com/nutrition/articlepage.aspx?cp-documentid=100229943>1=31036
The pictures are of Bacco in the snow at Forca di Presta, the italian flag in trees contrasting with the snow and a photo of the mountain peaks of the Sibillini mts near Castelluccio and the offerings of Pettaci.
dds