
BY: Beppe Severgnini
My youth was aperitif-free. It was the 1970s and we concentrated on discos, warm beer on the beach, pizza, sleepless nights with friends and a bottle — or more — of cheap wine. We weren’t fussy. Aperitivi — a ritual pre-dinner drink to begin the evening’s imbibing — was for old people: my parents, uncles and aunts, and on holidays, mostly.
But when we had guests, our dining room would miraculously fill with bottles full of brightly colored liquid with funny names: Aperol, Campari, Negroni, Carpano, Fernet Branca. In a television commercial for Cynar, which was artichoke flavored, an actor sipped his aperitif sitting in the middle of a busy roundabout, toasting: “Protects against the wear and tear of modern life!”
SOURCE: https://www.nytimes.com/
Disaronno International LLC has opened its 6,480 sq. ft. office at the Rye Street Market o...
A “new-age infused” limoncello has scooped its producer, Chelly, a double gold award at th...
Piemonte, like many other regions of Italy, is a place where nature and culture intertwine...
Because Thanksgiving is a holiday completely dedicated to the act of eating a gigantic mea...
Best-case scenario, your summer plans include a trip to Tuscany or the Amalfi Coast. If an...
We don’t need to tell you that Italian cuisine is so much more than just pizza and pasta....
On Tuesday, June 21 from 1-3PM, Scott Rosenbaum - spirits strategist and Grappa expert - b...
Whether it’s a Spritz, Negroni or Limoncello Collins, these four partners produce Californ...