Wednesday, January 23, 2019

Forza Italia!



On May 11, 1860, Giuseppe Garibaldi and I Mille (‘The Thousand’) landed at the port of Marsala, in western Sicily and took the town without a shot being fired. This was a key moment in the Risorgimento. Garibaldi’s march through Sicily and on to Naples eventually led to the unification of Italy and the creation of the modern Italian nation.


British warships protected the harbor at the time of Garibaldi’s landing. The Bourbon occupiers didn’t fire on Garibaldi and his troops for fear of hitting the British. The British sailors were probably enjoying the wine for which this town is most famous: Marsala. Marsala is an amber-colored, rich, and most usually fortified dessert wine.

When you think about it, it’s a style of wine that doesn’t seem to fit with the life and food in western Sicily. It’s hard to imagine drinking Marsala with a plate of grilled swordfish, another local specialty of the area. The wine doesn’t fit with its zone of production. And yet, the Marsala wine industry has since the 18th century been a fundamental and important part of the local economy.

Marsala – The Victory Wine

Like other great fortified wines such as sherry and port, Marsala developed historically not as a drink of the local people, but as a wine primarily intended for export to London and the British Empire.
An Englishman, John Woodehouse, is credited with its invention. The local wines of this southern area were no doubt already high in alcohol due to the elevated sugar levels and were deemed robust enough to transport to England.

Following the custom of the time, Woodehouse boosted the strength of the wines with the addition of grape brandy to fortify them and help them to withstand the long sea voyage. The first documented shipment of Marsala left the port of Trapani in 1773.

On arrival, it seems that Marsala was an immediate success in London. Admiral Nelson confirmed its popularity by ordering a large consignment for his sailors. After the Battle of Trafalgar, the wine was given the title Marsala Victory Wine.

Following Woodehouse’s success, other Englishmen, as well as Sicilians, dedicated themselves to the production and supply of Marsala, notably Benjamin Ingham and Vicenzo Florio. Marsala was soon being enjoyed throughout Britain, elsewhere in Europe, as well as in the United States, South America and Australia.

Methods of Production

Throughout western Sicily, and around Marsala, there are fields of vineyards to supply the raw material to produce Marsala. Traditional grapes include Catarratto, Inzolia and Grillo.

Grillo has been cultivated around Marsala since Phoenician times and has the potential to make great wines. Traditionally Marsala is a fortified wine to which is added either mistela which is a mixture of naturally sweet grape must with the addition of brandy (this is the best and most expensive method), mosto cotto (cooked grape must) and/or sifone (concentrated grape must). Must is freshly crushed fruit juice (usually grape juice) that contains the skins, seeds, and stems of the fruit.

These additions can contribute both sweetness and color, and result in a range of different styles and types, ranging from light gold to walnut brown, and from virtually bone-dry to very sweet.
Marsala wines are further distinguished by the duration of the minimum ageing process (Fine, one year; Superiore, two years; Superiore Riserva, four years; Vergine and/or Solera, five years; Vergine and/or Solera Stravecchio or Solera Riserva, ten years).

Marsala - Lost and Found

Marsala is clearly a traditional wine. However, somewhere along the way, many Marsala producers wanted to concentrate not on the production of quality wine but on a range of industrially produced and manufactured wines such as Marsala all’uovo (made with the addition of egg) and, even worse, aromatized versions flavored with the essences of almond and even banana. Marsala was no longer a wine to be taken seriously but destined only for cooking.

Some producers over the last decades worked tirelessly to produce quality Marsala and have begun to restore its reputation. The work begins in the vineyard with lower yielding varieties of Grillo and Inzolia and continues throughout the production and ageing processes.

Genuine Marsala doesn’t necessarily need to be fortified or sweetened with inexpensive concentrated grape must. In its purest form, it’s a wine produced by the solera system of ageing whereby older reserve wines are drawn off, the barrels then topped up with the addition of younger wines, up the scale from the oldest to the youngest barrels.

It’s a natural wine that ages in old soleras up to twenty years and gains complexity and richness. The result is a glorious Vino da Meditazione that’s meant to be sipped on its own or with a handful of nuts.

A Taste of History

When Garibaldi and ‘The Thousand’ took the town of Marsala without a shot being fired, it’s likely that in celebration and anticipation of the rigors that lay ahead, his band of patriots rewarded themselves with the liberal consumption of Marsala. 

Though today Marsala isn’t a wine that is regularly encountered, it is most definitely part of the history of the country. So, find a bottle, pour yourself a glass, and raise a toast to Giuseppe Garibaldi and to Italy!






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