Also interesting is Camuto, who can claim Sicilian roots, but was born in New York, has lived in Texas, and now resides with his wife in southern France (his book on French wine country, Corkscrewed: Adventures in the New French Wine Country, is next on my list). Sometime mid-tasting, Camuto wandered over to my end of the counter and was generously forgiving in his evaluation of the amateur explanation of wine regions and their varietals that I was imparting upon my beer-centric countermate. We had a lovely conversation, at the end of which I found myself with my very owned signed copy of Palmento (which I purchased, of course).
The next day, on the plane to California, I found out just how fortunate I'd been. If Camuto is pleasant in conversation, his writing is twice as captivating. This is not a stuffy wine book, but rather wine lit, a foodie read, and travel writing all in one. Camuto's descriptions of food are like poetry. His accounts of the countryside, the wine, the weather, the people - are all shockingly vivid. The end result is a tome that will make you want to immediately travel to Sicily, or at least to wine country, and that really makes that wine information stick. How can you forget the details of making fine Marsala once you've read about its modern caretaker? I read the whole book over the weekend. My only regret? That I wasn't able to read it before the tasting, so that I could have appreciated the experience all the more.
Well written. I've not read, but you've convinced me to put it on my list!
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