Discovering Grappa

The Nardini bodega in Bassano del Grappa.
Robin Saikia, author of Blue Guide Italy Food Companion, gets to grips with Grappa in its Veneto heartland.

Bassano del Grappa is a city in the Veneto, some fifty miles out of Venice and home to two of Italy's finest Grappa distilleries, Poli and Nardini. Grappa is an acquired taste and this is probably one of the best places in the world to set about acquiring it. A day trip to Bassano yields cultural as well as alcoholic rewards (it was the birthplace of the artist Jacopo Bassano) and is easily reached from Charming Hotels locations in the region, the Hotel Excelsior, the Hotel Villa Franceschi, the Hotel Villa Cipriani and the Hotel Villa Michelangelo.

Grappa is a spirit distilled from pomace, the pressed skins and seeds of grapes left over after wine making. Like wine and oil, it exists in countless regional variants, all of them distinctive. There is a broad spectrum of quality too. Many wineries simply deliver their pomace to a central distillery and receive grappa in return, unimpeachably processed but often unremarkable in taste. A few manufacturers follow traditional artisanal methods, producing grappa that is accorded the same status as single-malt whiskies are in Britain, the USA and Japan. There is much gimmickry – oddly-shaped bottles, exotic flavours – but there is, nevertheless, excellent grappa to be discovered throughout Italy. A selection of different grappas is best tasted with an accompaniment of salted pistachio nuts and rusks spread with acacia-blossom honey, ideally topped with a flake of mature Montasio or Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese. These restore and stimulate the palate in preparation for each new taste. A bussul (boo-sool) is the traditional shot-glass used for quaffing grappa, the quartino (kwar-tee-noh) the jug or flask ordered in the old days in rural osterie by thirsty carters, lumberjacks, blacksmiths and farmhands.

Hotel Pierre Milano - Milan

The Hotel Pierre Milano is intimate and elegant, very well placed on the Via Edmondo de Amicis, a short walk from the cathedral of Sant'Ambrogio and very convenient for La Scala. The hotel has built up a quiet but enduring reputation as a well-appointed retreat for discerning travellers. Among these are a cosmopolitan selection of lovers from all over Europe and the USA and an elegant scattering of high-end fashionistas from elsewhere in Italy.  Each of the 51 rooms is individually decorated with luxurious tapestries and uplifting works of art. The hotel is conveniently close to the Metro.

Hotel D'Inghilterra welcomes new General Manager

Charming Hotels extends a warm welcome to Giampaolo Padula who joins the Hotel D'Inghilterra after a distinguished fifteen-year career in the luxury hospitality industry.  He was previously general manager at the Hotel Caesar Augustus on Capri where his imaginative and stylish leadership saw the hotel listed for three consecutive years by Condé Nast Traveler as one of the top 100 hotel resorts in southern Europe. Giampolo graduated at the Istituto Antonio Maniere in Rome before training at the Ecole Hôteliere de Lausanne in Switzerland. He is a keen soccer and tennis player and lists magic tricks and music among his many interests.

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