From the Dust Heap of Time
Hemmed
in by the silence of old walls, we wove our way north
from the steps of the Rialto Bridge through early morning streets searching for
Venice’s Fondamente Nove. The Fondamente
is the location of a major waterbus station, but unlike many of the others that
service Venice’s commuters, it is the main gateway to the northern islands of
the lagoon. Still cool, it was another
beautiful morning in the water city that made towing our wheeled suitcase almost
an afterthought. The occasional bridge
across intervening canals was the only impediment to the clickity-click of our
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Bridge Along Our Route |
luggage. Luckily, there were only four we needed to
negotiate. Our route wasn’t straight “as the
bird flies” but wended its way generally in the right direction,
northward. Thankfully, it was
rather well marked with signs. When
occasionally I could have used some sort of route marker, but one wasn’t
visible, it was easy to maintain course by simply asking a passing fellow
traveler or shop owner. I recall poking
my head into a flower shop at one point for guidance. Its exterior reminded me of a scene from a
favorite movie of ours, Pane e Tulipani (Bread and Tulips). Unfortunately, the man who appeared wasn’t
the Italian actor Felice Andreasi, who’d played the garlic chewing anarchist
florist, Fermo. In a lava flow of words,
he explained that the shop wasn’t the one in the movie either. I guess it was too much to hope for. All in all, our voyage through this rich cultural world of liquid
streets proved to be a straightforward trek and we soon emerged onto the
northern watery boundary of the city of Venice.
Built in the sixteenth century, they still refer
to the Fondamente as “nove”, their dialect for new. It extended about a kilometer and was the
port of call to many ferries. Four
waterbus platforms, one separated by a rather long bridge from the others,
stretched along the Fondamente. Pontoon floats served as
cushioning buffers between the Fondamente and the shuttling
ferries. Next, we had to figure out
which of the cluster of pontoons serviced the ferry that would take us to our
destination, the island of Mazzorbo, just a footbridge away from the
neighboring island of Burano. The woman
in the ticket sales booth quickly resolved the issue when we purchased our
tickets. It would be Vaporetto #12, and
as fate would have it, its platform to await the water bug of a ferry was
across the bridge. A short haul later
we’d arrived. This time, with Lady Luck
on our side, minutes later we were aboard #12 and underway. Andiamo!
It proved to be a smooth forty-minute journey as we navigated between the
bricole
that rose from the water to mark the channel to either side of us, like wickets
in a lawn game. The only interruption
was a brief hesitation of a stop at Murano, the famous island of glass. The hawsers hadn’t settled before they were
undone, and we were off again. It was a
similar operation when we slid alongside
Fondamente di Santa Caterina and were deposited at our
destination, Isola Mazzorbo. From there it was a very short walk down the fondamente
to our accommodations at the Venissa Wine Resort.
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Venissa Wine Resort |
The Venissa Wine Resort was a refreshing change from our
hectic days in Venice. Our reception,
even though we’d arrived hours before normal check-in, reminded us of our
arrival at the Castiglion
Del Bosco
Resort
in
Tuscany years
earlier. I recall the hot towels and
cool lemon water drinks we were greeted with on our arrival there. Our welcome to the Venissa five-room boutique
hotel was equally professional and was topped off with the announcement that
our room was waiting for us. After
depositing our belongings, a mandatory check of the bathroom, a must, and
checking the air conditioning, a double must, we were off to lunch. We could have tried the Michelin star-rated
restaurant on site but the place we’d passed only steps away from the ferry
stop,
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Our Venissa Resort Room |
looked more appealing. Others may
have thought so too or already knew how good it was because the tables on the
veranda at Trattoria alla Maddenenna were all taken, and we had to wait for
a table to free-up. The wait proved
worthwhile. I’d describe the Maddenenna as
timeless. Timeless in the sense that it
had an atmosphere that had awaited us since 1954 when it first swung open its
doors. That was well before Maria Elena
and I had opportunity to enjoy long lazy lunches like
|
Trattoria alla Maddenenna |
the one we delighted in
that day. No, about then Mare and I were
reveling in bag lunches in grammar school to the interruption of a back to
class alarm bell. Low and behold, we’d
stumbled upon the number one restaurant on Mazzorbo. The fact that there are only three all
together on the island didn’t diminish our enjoyment. Our only bias was our hunger, but offers of sea
bream, fried sardines, squid, prawns … all to perfection, and the best tiramisu since we
got to make our own at Ristorante
Silarus in the lofty Quaglietta
Borgo with Chef Marko, but that’s altogether another story.
We began by
sharing a half-liter of white wine
along with a bottle of
frizzante (effervescent) water in the shade of an
umbrella canopy bordered by green hedges fronting the
Maddenenna.
There was a wide selection of items offered for the various courses
available. Comfortably relaxed, we
sipped wine as we sifted through the myriad of options and went over lunchtime possibilities. It wasn’t long before we’d decided and I was
tucking into
Cozze e Vongole Saltate in Padella (pan sautéed mussels and clams) as
|
Sea Bass Ravioli |
a starter, followed by elegant Ravioli di Branzino Ripieni (stuffed
sea bass ravioli). I had the surrounding
sea on my plate! These creations from
the sea were fabulous. The half-dollar
size clams and mussels the size of tongues were a sort of sea-based appetizer
followed by the ravioli as my primo main course. The stuffed ravioli pillows filled with
ricotta, parmesan, garlic, parsley and accented with white wine had a delicate
taste and enhanced the natural flavor of the sea bass. Meanwhile, Maria Elena began by enjoying a red and white shuffle of tomatoes and mozzarella slices dripping with oil, a classic Insalata Caprese (Caprese Salad). She followed this
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Tagliata di Manza |
with
her mainstay, Tagliata di Manza con Rocket e Grana Padano (steak sliced
on the bias with peppery arugula, here known as rocket, and shaved
Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese). Mare
especially likes it hot off the grill, pink to red on the inside. It proved to be a shared surf and turf
meal. Yum. The aroma may elude us now, but I can still
see our repast arrayed before us. And to think, this pleasurable Venetian
lagoon experience for our pallets was only lunch.
We decided to wait out the afternoon heat before exploring
Burano. In the meantime, we took a tour
of the Venissa vineyard. This is a
vineyard whose golden Dorona grapes have withstood salt
and floodwaters for centuries. To
unfold this unlikely story of a white grape treated as a red was our young
sommelier, Matteo, Italian for Mathew.
His was the story of a wine that Venetian royalty drank over 500 years
ago and where today the elite of Venice can drink a half-liter for the
stratospheric price of 1000€. Definitely not your
average table wine!
The re-emergence
of this wine teetered
on a chance encounter back in 2001. As the story was unfolded to us, Matteo’s
father, Gianluca Bisol, was visiting the nearby
Basilica of Santa Maria Assunta, which dates from 639 AD, on the nearby island
of Torcello, the most northerly island in the Venetian Lagoon. As he was exiting the church, he noticed
something peculiar in a garden, something that looked out of place among the
other plants, a grapevine. At the time,
Nicoletta Emmer was watering the garden.
Noticing him by the fence and suspecting his interest in her garden, she
invited him in. She told him that the
garden held numerous international varietals that her father had planted. She went on to relate that it also held an
ancient grape varietal, Dorona, which she proceeded to show him. He was both surprised and unfamiliar with
this type of grape. Yes, there was
something definitely different here. The
leaves, for one, were rather unique. Intrigued
by this discovery, he contacted a friend, Venetian historian Carla Coco, to
research the state archives to see what they might contain about this mysterious
find. Now began a research phase to
determine just
|
Dorona Grapes on the Vine |
what he had. Was it
indeed among the ancient vines of the Lagoon?
To verify what he’d stumbled
upon, samples of the vine were sent for DNA testing which eventually
authenticated their identity. In
the meantime, Carla uncovered the startling fact that in times past, the lagoon,
even Venice itself, hosted many Dorona vineyards. With so much water and so little soil, it’s
hard to believe that the Venice lagoon had for the past 2,500 years been a
region of vineyards. In 1100, in what is
today Saint Mark’s Square, she was surprised to learn there once was a huge
garden and vineyard. Over time, however,
this grape gradually disappeared as its cultivation dwindled. The blame lay with the insidious combined
effects of real estate demand and mother nature. Land being so valuable saw vineyards gradually
replaced with buildings, churches, and palaces.
Interest in viticulture also gradually ceased to exist due to recurring
floods that killed the vines from the salinization of the soil. It was the great flood of 1966, the worst
flood in Venice’s history, that put an end to grape horticulture. While recurring floods were part of Venice’s
long history, this flood was different. That
year the tide rose well above the barriers protecting the lagoon’s
islands. Massive waves caused by a violent storm swept away many a
vineyard. Venetians soon found
themselves under three feet of water. And
unlike other years, the tide didn’t recede as quickly as it normally had. As a result, the ground was covered in
saltwater for more than two days. This
long-term salty saturation of the soil destroyed all the vineyards in the
lagoon, much like salting icy roads kill bordering trees. This event was thought to have meant the death-knoll
of the Dorona grape, that not a single vine had survived. In way of compensation to offset this
setback, other industries were emerging which offered steady work verses the
fickle ways of nature, while burgeoning trade links made other wines available. A grape once so prized that Dodges and wealthy Venetians placed
them on their tables to signify their status as a family of means, had disappeared.
Ever so slowly, the Dorona grape was forgotten
and relegated to dusty archives.
Fortunately, this garden’s three plant mini vineyard was not all that
remained. A search of the
lagoon
uncovered 85 additional plants. Gianluca
had something different here but to grow them in salty soil
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The Ancient Monastery Campenilla |
remained a threat. He searched for a place to host his new
vineyard and settled on an abandoned estate enclosed by medieval walls on Mazzorbo
, once a Benedictine
monastery whose fourteenth-century bell tower is all that remains.
The team’s agronomist advised against planting the vineyard in the old
monastery surrounded as it was by water on three of its four sides and given
the high sodium content in the soil. Despite
this, Bisol decides to replant the ancient vines there, thanks to the history
of the estate that had been home to vines since the 1300s and from the 1800s
was a winery that continued to produce until the historic flood of 1966
. His was
a risky strategy. Some
would say that as a minimum he was overpromising on results and in the worst case,
risking the few vines that remained.
I don’t know
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Medieval Wall Around Venissa Estate |
if he prayed a lot or lit candles in
that nearby Basilica of Santa Maria Assunta but his faith in the vitality
of these vines was more real than the
reality of the high sodium content of the soil and the high water
phenomenon that could destroy the vineyard
again. In any case, Gianluca decided to return the ancient vines in their
home soil where the roots of the vines grow so deep that they touch the salty
groundwater that lies only 1.2 meters beneath the surface. He then proceeded to transform these
two-hectares into the present day
Venissa Wine Resort structured around the resilient
Dorona grape. Like a high-stakes gambler, hoping for a wild card, he was all-in.
Research revealed that this native vine had over the centuries adapted to the salinity
conditions typical of the lagoon. As a result,
Dorona is unique for the salt that gives the grapes a particular flavor and a
distinctive salty aroma. When a wine
label says “contains sulfates”, in the case of Dorona, you can be certain it
does. As we enhance the flavor of food
with a dash of salt, so the presence of natural salt in the soil adds a special
personality and elegance to this wine.
The result is described as a wine that has the robustness and longevity of
a red wine and the classiness and freshness of a white. The taste of the wine eventually made from
this grape was like none other. This one-of-a-kind characteristic is found nowhere
else in the world. Here was a
white grape that somehow had adapted to the Venetian climate and was able to
thrive.
In a survival of the fittest mode they had somehow made peace with soil
that is constantly threatened by salt and water. Gianluca’s gambit had proven correct.
To transform the grapes into wine, traditional
methods for making white wine are employed. Like a red, however, long maceration of the golden-colored skins gives added life to this wine, contributing the added richness of
tannins and greater longevity. The skins remain in the must for approximately
30 days to develop the wine’s color. It is this extended
maceration that results in a white wine with the body and structure of a
red. When
bottled, the wine is allowed to ferment in their beautifully designed bottles
for two years before release.
Italians are all about style. To properly dress-up this special wine, in
way of homage to the history and iconic stature of this golden wine,
they introduced a
unique, and to be honest, a costly method of presentation. A special bottle for a special wine was crafted. Matteo explained that
in order to put the vineyard into a glass, Gianluca chose bottles created by the most
celebrated glassmaker in Murano, Carlo Moretti.
But there is more to the story than just these exclusive 500-
milliliter bottles. Under the direction of this most
celebrated glassmaker, the winery developed an elegant yet simple labeling and
bottling strategy to hallmark this rare and historic vintage. What better way to present the juice of these
golden-colored grapes that once only royalty consumed than with gold, to be
exact, gold leaf. Goldsmithing is
another Venetian tradition that goes back centuries in Venice, yet there is
only one person left who practices the craft today. It was obvious then. To fashion the bottle’s gold-leaf labels,
they chose Berta Battiloro. The Battiloro
family has worked with gold for over 1,000 years in Venice’s Cannaregio
district, a picturesque
area of canals and atmospheric corners that runs from the Santa Lucia railway
station, east to the Rialto Bridge.
Venice once hosted over 300 goldsmiths. Yet in all of Europe only one family remains
that produces these almost weightless golden leaves, once used to adorn
monuments. The pure gold leaf labels are
fused onto the bottles using ovens and then each bottle, just below the label,
is hand-etched with a unique number.
Each year a new label is designed, some only slightly different from an
earlier year. Clearly, even
these bottles tell a story of Venice’s past.
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Slight Changes in Labels Differentiate Vintages |
It was in 2010 that the Bisol family made the first Venissa
Dorona wine.
From its five-acre vineyard, the winery produced 4,880 half-bottles that
year. Since that first harvest,
production has stabilized at approximately 4,000 bottles annually. Such a low yield of an already scarce
commodity, not consumed in Venice for decades, only adds to its rarity.
More of its past lay
only a picturesque footbridge away connecting Mazzorbo island with the colorful
fishermen’s village of Burano. In
addition to staying at the resort, another reason for visiting the archipelago
was to experience Burano by night. We’d
been there briefly before and its charm had intrigued
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Mazzorbo - Burano Footbridge |
us enough to look forward
to a return. Late that afternoon, we
walked the lane beside the lagoon leading across the timber bridge on into
Burano. Passing through a shaded
park-like area, we meandered through side streets of colorfully painted homes,
no destination in mind, past gated yards, gardens, and front doors where locals
sat about, some talking, some sewing, one group sharing photos from a recent
wedding. At one point we happened upon
Matteo talking with a friend, and later, an old man relaxed in a chair proudly
proclaimed having achieved the stately age of 94. Island life apparently agreed with him. The tourist crowds long dissipated, stores
were taking in their displays of needle-made lace clothing. As evening shaded to night, to our
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Pathway to Footbridge |
surprise,
the few cafes and restaurants there were, began to close and those individuals still
about gradually dwindled to nothing. We
had to finish our drinks quickly as our glasses along with
tables
and chairs were either stacked or collected in an apparent hasty conclusion of
another day. In the remains of the day,
there wouldn’t be time for dinner unless somehow, we could pop over and join
the crowds in Venice. Too long a swim
made that impossible. How different life
was only a few miles of water away where the evening's dinner crowds were only
beginning to appear. Maybe Burano still clung
to its fishing heritage and an “early to bed, early to rise” lifestyle.
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Burano Evening Get Together |
I learned a new
word in the process of visiting Mazzorbo
. It is “terroir”. No, it’s not a misspelling of those wiry little
dogs, though both spellings are derived from the Latin for terra, meaning
earth or soil. At its most basic level
lies the belief that a wine’s features, taste for instance, are affected by the
aspect of the land where the grapes are grown, the soil, a region’s climate, sunlight,
and let’s not forget winemaking traditions.
Together they impart unique characteristics to the grapes
that could not
be passed on by any other
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Golden Wine for a Golden Wine |
region. The
signature of the wine, like our DNA, is therefore unique.
A wine’s color, longevity, aroma, and the many
flavors, in a stratosphere beyond which my taste buds are incapable of discerning,
ranging from chocolate to walnuts and everything in between, are
determined by
the terrior. It essentially
determines a wine’s greatness. As Venice and life on the nearby islands seem
to persevere in
a contemporary blend with the ancient world
, now so does the ongoing history of the Dorona
grape. The Bisol family had succeeded in resurrecting a piece of Venetian history, an echo of its long past. But there is also “terrior” in life across this scattering of lagoon islands, where a water-bound land, time-honored traditions and a doggedness in the face of a harsh environment, taken together in a mesh of norms, have
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Lagoon Life |
imparted a unique
character of place to its inhabitants, here
again like nowhere else in the world. We were fortunate to get a glimpse of life on
the lagoon islands which like the Dorona grape is unique. Like
wines vary, so life differs here.
I can only describe the experience as peaceful, serene, far removed from
the hectic fuss of the Venice scene and relaxing beyond every-day
experience. And the wine? Well, to sip this time-honored ambrosia is
like enjoying fine art … Da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, Michelangelo’s David, Bernini’s
“Ecstasy of Saint Theresa”. In this case, your feelings take on a new
dimension, for you not only see this art and grasp its history but
can taste and consume it as well, a sensation produced by an altogether
different palette.
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Mazzorbo - Peaceful, Serene and Far Removed
from Hectic Venice
|
Written on the Road …
From That Rogue Tourist
Paolo
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