The Italian Wine Girl
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Laura Donadoni is The Italian wine girl on a mission spreading wine education and wine culture. She founded LA COM Wine Agency, a strategic P.R. and communications firm focused on wine and food industry.
The Italian Wine Girl
11M ago
Press tour discovering chateaux, new AOC, Crémants and rare varieties
Chateaux, expanses of green riverside meadows, medieval towns and an incredible variety of wines: traveling in the Loire Valley is an ongoing discovery. In this article I have chosen to summarize in seven words what struck me during a press trip to discover the 2022 vintage organized by Interloire, the association that groups the producers and negociants of 31 appellations in the area.
The purpose of this post is not educational: if you want to delve deeper and study the various wine areas of the Loire I recommend the ..read more
The Italian Wine Girl
1y ago
Ines Berezina de Moschetti is a melting pot, she was born in Odessa, Ukraine, from an international family of Jewish, Georgian, Italian, Polish, Russian and Ukrainian roots.
“This is a pretty common historical and cultural family scenario for our city” she explains me.
Born in 1990, she was raised in Odessa, she studied at the German Gymnasium and got a degree in Diplomacy at the National University. But the bond with Italy has always been very strong.
“There is no wonder actually that I was bound in a certain way to Italy – Ines tells me -. Odessa’s first governor was from N ..read more
The Italian Wine Girl
1y ago
In the US, only 2% of professionals are black and mentorship programs flourish.
In Italy? The question is not being asked.
The word “diversity” in wine in Italy is widely used, but almost always referring to grape varieties or appellations: we are a bio-diverse country, we know, but are we also an inclusive country? What do we mean by inclusivity? The fact that there is not even the specific word in Italian tells us a lot about the question.
As an American and an Italian citizen, I observe these two worlds carefully: on the one hand, there are many things I would import from Italy to the U.S ..read more
The Italian Wine Girl
1y ago
Visit to Bodegas Tradicion, Jerez de la Frontera
You cannot visit Andalusia without stopping in the Sherry Triangle, homeland of the fortified wine whose history is deeply linked to the culture of this land.
In addition to architectural wonders that incredibly blend Western and Arab culture into symbols of extraordinary beauty, in Andalusia you will encounter the tradition of sharing small snacks of local products (tapas) accompanied by a glass of sherry, often tapped straight from the barrel in what they call tabancos in Jerez, the equivalent of European taverns, which were born in the ..read more
The Italian Wine Girl
1y ago
I have been a professional journalist for almost 15 years, I started from local newspapers reporting on city councils, then I landed in crime reporting, judicial reporting, and politics for radio and TV. I always wanted to be a journalist, as a child my eyes lit up at the first notes of the Tg1 theme song (the main news program on Italian national tv), and as a pre-teen I dreamed of wearing a veil like Lilli Gruber (the TG1 correspondent ) and reporting on war from places that seemed so far away that they could not exist. Of the journalism profession, two things fascinated me: the telling of f ..read more
The Italian Wine Girl
1y ago
From Portugal’s forests to the wine bottle
When we uncork a bottle of wine, of the cork we generally care about two things: that it does not break and that it has not contributed to impair strange odors to the wine, in short, that it has held up preserving the wine without carrying the famous TCA, the trichloroanisole molecule responsible for the “corky” smell. Which then is actually a musty smell, but often times all the blame is placed on the cork, which especially if it is natural cork, is the first scapegoat.
We pull it out, smell it (some people even smell plastic ones, never mind), and s ..read more
The Italian Wine Girl
1y ago
From Portugal’s forests to the bottle
When we uncork a bottle of wine, of the cork we generally care about two things: that it does not break and that it has not contributed to impair strange odors to the wine, in short, that it has held up preserving the wine without carrying the famous TCA, the trichloroanisole molecule responsible for the “corky” smell. Which then is actually a musty smell, but often times all the blame is placed on the cork, which especially if it is natural cork, is the first scapegoat.
We pull it out, smell it (some people even smell plastic ones, never mind), and second ..read more
The Italian Wine Girl
1y ago
The story of Musivum, the cru selection that values teamwork
The small single tile in a mosaic may seem insignificant, not indispensable, when considered on its own. Yet if this principle were applied to all the small tiles, the whole mosaic would not exist, there would be no art, nor beauty to admire. So how much does a tile, an element, a detail matter?
Small is beautiful, big is commercial?
Musivum, a tribute to the mosaic vineyard tiles
Mirta and its centuries-old Teroldego vineyard
Local communities custodians of a sense of belonging
Interview with oenologist director Fabio Tosca ..read more
The Italian Wine Girl
1y ago
The Trentino wine consortium is the first Italian regional territorial organization to adopt an official annual sustainability report. It is not just about paperwork and bureaucracy, it is about a valuable change of approach in the management of wine assets, shifting the focus from economic profitability to environmental cost, it is about reversing the logic from producing more to producing less and better.
The sustainability report has been published after years of commitment in this regard: in fact, since 2016 the consortium member wineries have begun a process for certification under ..read more
The Italian Wine Girl
1y ago
I publish below something that apparently has little to do with wine: the story you are about to read came out of a collaboration with the company Passoni Sedie in San Giovanni al Natisone, in the province of Udine, in the heart of the ancient chair craft district.
It was reading Custodi del Vino, my second book, that inspired Tommaso Passoni, now head of the company, to ask me to try my hand at telling the story of the wood supply chain behind their designer chairs in my own style. So I went in person to visit that triangle of hills and vineyards on the border with Slovenia to observe, to kno ..read more