www射-国产免费一级-欧美福利-亚洲成人福利-成人一区在线观看-亚州成人

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文

Wine, olive oil and the good life

By Danielle Pergament ( Agencies ) Updated: 2015-02-28 09:19:31

Wine, olive oil and the good life

Bernardo Marzuca, the owner of El Legado winery, walks through his property in the Carmelo area, a region in the southwest part of Uruguay, near Argentina, that has been producing wine for generations. Matilde Campodonico / Agencies

This locus of Uruguayan wine country, though not the largest in this small nation, has been producing wine for generations-but has only recently gained attention as much for its wine as for being an awfully nice place to visit. It's centered around the dusty old town of Carmelo, about 150 miles northwest of the capital of Montevideo and just across the Río de la Plata from Argentina. It's a place of grassy roads, fields of grazing cattle, and hillsides of pale green vineyards. Wildflowers carpet the land and rosemary and lavender plants grow to be the size of small Fiats. It's Tuscany in miniature.

The eight vineyards around Carmelo comprise about 1,000 acres, making the area slightly smaller than Uruguay's biggest wine regions, which are outside Montevideo and Canelones. "Uruguay produces less than 100 million liters of wine every year, which means our entire country produces as much as one large winery in Argentina," said Juan Andres Marichal, vice-president of the National Wine Institute of Uruguay. "Our wineries aren't big corporations. They are small and run by families." If Argentina is the continent's wine Goliath, Uruguay may be on its way to being its David-a formidable opponent. And a huge part of its appeal and success may be that it's small and accessible.

We started early the next day. I met my friends (Lisa, who traveled with me from the States, and Astrid and Matias, who joined up with us in Argentina) on the terrace of CampoTinto for a breakfast of cheese, ham, toast and yerba mate, or simply mate (pronounced MAH-tay), which tastes like green tea if you added bitterness and removed joy. Calling it an acquired taste is generous, and yet it's as popular in Uruguay and Argentina as steak. Mate is served in cups that look like hollowed-out gourds lined with silver, and Astrid and Matias drank theirs through a stainless steel pipe slash straw contraption. It is a beautiful, methodical, centuries-old tradition, and after one sip, I wanted no part of it.

Half an hour later, it was time to borrow bikes from the hotel and get our bearings.

Just down a dusty clay path from CampoTinto is Cordano Almacén de la Capilla, one of the oldest vineyards in Uruguay. "My great-great-grandfather came here in 1870 from Genoa," said Ana Paula Cordano, as we stood in her wine shop and general store, which seem to be lifted from an earlier century.

We had ditched our bikes outside and were perusing jars of dulce de leche and baskets of homemade caramels made from wine. Antique glass bottles and scales lined the shelves, and dings from the ancient cash register added to the feeling that we had stepped into a saloon in the old west.

"He brought with him the Italian tradition of planting grapes," Cordano said, referring to the vineyard's founder. "We had to modernize, but we try to preserve tradition." That tradition was on display in the field just behind the Cordano store-an antique wine press, old hazelnut trees, and just beyond the yard, cows and horses grazing in the pasture as they have for generations.

Only a few miles from CampoTinto-everything is only a bike ride away in Carmelo-is El Legado winery, one of the smaller, more elegant wineries in the area. "What we have in Carmelo is a microclimate," said Bernardo Marzuca, the tan, crisply dressed owner of the winery, which he opened in 2007 (he released his first vintage in 2011). It was the following evening, and we were sitting at the heavy wooden table in his tasting room, surrounded by wine-stained oak barrels, platters of salami, olives and breadsticks, and antique revolvers hanging from the door frame. "The harvest in the rest of Uruguay is in March, but here in Carmelo, the grapes mature faster, so the harvest is two weeks earlier." He stood up, and walked over to one of the formidable oak barrels next to us.

Editor's Picks
Hot words

Most Popular
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 欧美午夜网站 | 一级做a爱片久久毛片 | avhd101天天看新片 | 亚洲第一页视频 | 免费男女乱淫真视频播放 | cao美女 | 免费一级毛片视频 | 小明台湾成人永久免费看看 | 国产一区二区免费在线观看 | 日本视频在线免费观看 | 毛片在线网站 | 中文字幕成人免费高清在线 | youjizzxxxx18欧美 youjizz日韩 | 日本不卡在线一区二区三区视频 | 欧美一级高清片在线 | 波多野结衣视频免费观看 | 亚洲天堂毛片 | 成人中文字幕在线 | 日本成人免费在线视频 | 手机在线播放视频 | 97超级碰碰碰碰在线视频 | 亚洲爱爱天堂 | 久久精品免费视频观看 | 成人午夜毛片在线看 | 步兵社区在线观看 | 日韩精品一区二区三区四区 | 欧美一级片在线播放 | 免费永久国产在线视频 | 兔子先生节目在线观看免费 | 国产欧美日韩综合一区二区三区 | 小屁孩和大人啪啪 | 亚洲第一免费 | 一级特级毛片免费 | 综合久久久久久 | 性欧美17一18sex性高清播放 | 精品国产美女福利到在线不卡 | 欧美一级视频免费看 | 日韩专区亚洲综合久久 | 亚洲第一免费播放区 | 日韩一区二区精品久久高清 | 美女很黄很黄是免费的·无遮挡网站 |