Holidays

Pasta Making Party at Via Umbria

With the arrival of our liquor license, we can now host events in our upstairs labratorio and Galleria! So we kicked off our events schedule with an pasta making party to remember.

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Spritzes in hand, our group had a riotous time learning how to make pasta from scratch, including squid ink pasta and ravioli.

Chef Rissa Miller offers pasta making tips
Chef Rissa Miller offers pasta making tips
Squid Ink Pasta
Squid Ink Pasta
Guests get their hands dirty!
Guests get their hands dirty!

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After learning the techniques, they moved to the Galleria for a leisurely, family-style meal featuring a pasta bar of their own creations and wonderful Umbrian wines.

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If you are interested in hosting a party at Via Umbria in the future, please contact events@viaumbria.com or call 202.333.3904 – we would love to have you!

 

Ci Vediamo!

 

– Via Umbria

Celebrating our Liquor License! Read more

With the arrival of our liquor license, we can now host events in our upstairs labratorio and Galleria! So we kicked off our events ...

Cocktail Corner: Plum and Brandy Shot

What have you been doing this long weekend? Here at Via Umbria we are celebrating this Federal Holiday with one of the stone fruits of the summer, the plum.

We have been wanting to create something with Pisaroni’s Plum Nectar for a while. This Nectar is all natural and made from the simple ingredients of fresh plums, sugar, water, and a touch of lemon juice. With no artificial colors or flavors, this delicious nectar is the perfect cocktail mixer. For generations, the Pisaroni family has been harvesting their own crops using environmentally sustainable methods.

We take this delicious mixer and add a little brandy.

INGREDIENTS:

• one part plum purée

•two parts French Brandy (we know)

 

Plum Whisky shot

 

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Combine both in a grappa glass, garnish with fruit, and enjoy! It’s that simple!

 

Cheers! Ci Vediamo!

 

— Via Umbria

It's about time to start drinking summer cocktails! Read more

What have you been doing this long weekend? Here at Via Umbria we are celebrating this Federal Holiday with one of the ...

Cocktail Corner: Drinking Guide for the long week-end

Cocktail Hour Italian Style

Ah, the Fourth of July. This year we are lucky enough to have it land on a Saturday, so most of us have Friday off. Which means a long week-end, with a lot of long drinks. Here is Via Umbria’s drink-a-day guide for this celebratory weekend.

Birra Perugia

Birra Perugia Beer

THURSDAY 

Tonight, after our final day of work, we are heading over the celebrate the weekend with a Sagra at i Ricchi! We are drinking Birra Perguia beer, of course, as we munch on quality Italian food and a whole lot of pork. The Golden Ale, in particular, is a nice dinner time drink – light and flavorful, it tells our tastebuds the weekend is here.

 

FRIDAY 

For our first full day off, we are firing up the grill (see our guide to the Perfect Umbria BBQ for inspiration), stirring up this Fernet and Ginger Beer. It is perfect for a sunny afternoon (and can we say the ginger is a bit healthy)? We always reach for J. Gasco’s ginger beer for a drink with no artificial colors or preservatives.

For a delicious pairing with your fizzy drink, munch on some toasted bread with mild spreadable cheese and our organic apricot jam. The weekend is already here!

Aperol Bellini

SATURDAY – THE FOURTH 

Oh the fourth. What are your plans? Are you on a hunt for fireworks, a la the Menards? Watching a parade? Or kicking back around the pool with friends?

While the rest of your friends may be holding Budweisers, reach for something much more classy. A Negroni is surely the most color appropriate cocktail for the day. Of course we love the classic, but the Negroni Sbagliato from Punch Drink is just as tasty, and adds a dash of prosecco to get you in that festive mood. Cheers to America, Italian style!

 

SUN

Good morning, July 5th! A few years ago, the Menards decided to throw a fully American breakfast in Italy. We love the idea of keeping the Fourth of July fun continuing after the fireworks have gone off.

Need a little something to nurse that headache (from the fireworks, of course!)? Stumptown coffee has just rolled out cold brew tonic, which we are pumped to try in the morning…a little spiked.

To funky for you? You can always make the Bitter Peach Bellini that we sipped on last week.

Shop all of our cocktail items here, and a happy Fourth from the team at Via Umbria!

— Ci Vediamo

Thank us later! Read more

Ah, the Fourth of July. This year we are lucky enough to have it land on a Saturday, so most of us ...

Culture: What is a Sagra?

We will be tasting Birra Perugia Beers at our Sagra on the 3rd.
We will be tasting Birra Perugia Beers at our Sagra on the 3rd.

Summer has us feeling very grateful for the outpouring of wonderful flavors that come with a ripe harvest. Everything seems to taste better, and it should be a cause for celebration. In Italy, recognizing the foods and traditions surrounding them is cause for a party, a fest, a sagra. We can certainly get behind that idea.

“A sagra (the word is related to ”sacro,” which means sacred) traditionally celebrated a town’s patron saint, but in the last few decades, this type of festival has changed into a food-centric free-for-all. On deeper levels, of course, a sagra is about community, too.” (Source: When It’s Sagra Time, Everybody is Italian, The New York Times).

The power of food to bring together a community is a concept we deeply believe in at Via Umbria, which is why we are hosting our on Sagra di Porchetta this Thursday. Right in Dupont Circle, we will be celebrating outdoors the delight we experience feasting in the summer. We want to take the joy we have experienced in Italy, the joy of sharing the best food communally, and bring it to Washington, DC.

“All across Italy, sagras — celebrations hinging on harvests or regional foods — are a way of life. They may be as modest as a single tent in a piazza where farmers grill local radicchio (in Treviso), or as expansive as a town full of wide-open front doors, where families hand out samples of their olive oil (in Spello). They are the effusive Italian equivalents of small-town American food festivals, and they are a whole lot of fun.” (From, When It’s Sagra Time, Everybody is Italian)

Established food culture runs deep in Italy, but is relatively new to the United States (after all, we are a fairly young country). We hope to give you a taste of the food party that is a sagra this Thursday at i Ricchi. So sip some tasty some beer, eat some pig, nibble some Ligurian products from the olive harvest, and toast to a celebration of summer, flavor, and place.

Ci Vediamo!

 

— Via Umbria

It's a way of life Read more

Summer has us feeling very grateful for the outpouring of wonderful flavors that come with a ripe harvest. Everything seems to taste ...

The Easter Treats are Here

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The snow has finally melted, the sun is out until 7PM…and our Easter treats are here!

 

Our scheduled shipment from the famed pastry company Loison occurred on a particular Thursday when the federal government was shut down due to snow (yes, this always seems to happen).  When the shipment landed on our doorstep on Monday, the it seemed much more appropriate. As the sun streamed through our window we unwrapped the beautiful cakes and chocolate eggs from our friends across the ocean.

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Loison is a third generation company, which over 75 years of experience and progress. They use DOC ingredients including fresh eggs from safe farms, milk, butter and cream produced in the mountains of Italy, superfine flour, and top-grade Italian sugar. We also favor them for the sophisticated way they package their products, which evokes the style of old Italian pastry shops where no detail is too small.

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The Colombe, or traditional Easter cake, is a spongy vanilla cake with candied citrus peel, in the shape of a dove. This cake brings legendary stories…

The oldest tells of Alboin, King of the Lombards. Upon his victorious entry in Pavia in 572, on Easter Sunday, he was given a sweet bread in the shape of a dove as a tribute to peace. Another legend tells that, at the time of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, two doves rested upon the banners of the Lombard warriors infusing them with a noble spirit. But it is definitely during the time of the Spanish ruling in Milan that the dove became the Easter dessert par excellence. In 1552, a dove appeared, accompanied by an angel, over the Church of Santa Maria delle Grazie (Holy Mary of Grace)  to stop its demolition, which had been ordered by Ferrante Gonzaga for military purposes. Since then, the city’s gratitude is remembered through this delicious dove-shaped sweet bread.

 

Ah yes, Milano has remembered the wonderful dove since 1552… yet I found another story, from renowned travel guide Burt Wolf.

The Colomba is said to have originated as a result of the Battle of Legnano, which took place just after Easter in 1176.  Things were not going well for the Milanese as they defended their city against an attack by Barbarosa… until  three doves flew out of a nearby church.  The birds appear to have flown an air-support mission that dropped bad luck on Barbarosa and delivered victory to the Milanese.  The cake reminds Milan of this triumph.

 

Another triumph for Milan? The mechanization of cake production. I dug a little further and learned of Angelo Motta, a baker from Milan who wanted to make and sell panettone all year round…and thus, the dove cake.

 

But no matter what the history, the doves or the entrepreneurial baker, there is no doubt that these cakes are a delight and make a fabulous present.

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The Italian treat I remember from my youth, however, is the giant Easter egg. My Italian Grandmother sent my family one when I was in elementary school. My brother and I unwrapped it from the box and placed it, eyes bulging in awe, on the mantlepiece. Off which my mother grabbed it – and ran shrieking down the hallway! The playful chase, and game of catch, that ensued lasted in my memory far longer than the chocolate of the egg (which, to be fair, lasted a long time as well).

 

Italians traditionally do not have easter egg hunts, and so the giant easter egg is the centerpiece. Sometimes, they get quite extravagant, as this report from NPR details.

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At Via Umbria, we have them in milk chocolate and dark chocolate, with beautiful wrapping, of course. They have a prize inside as well — but you have to buy one to find out what it is!

 

So when you see the little blue Ape in the window in Georgetown, brimming with our new treats, make a stop. Come sample these springtime cakes, and share your Easter and spring traditions with us.

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— Elsa Bruno at Via Umbria

Don't forget to grab yours! Read more

The snow has finally melted, the sun is out until 7PM…and our Easter treats are here!   Our scheduled shipment from the famed pastry ...

Happy Slow Year

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As we crack open a bottle of champagne for the New Year (or for a more Umbrian twist, how about some Scacciadiavoli Brut Rose instead?), we can’t help but think about the New Years resolutions we should and could be making…and then breaking.

An old Italian tradition, practiced more in the South than the North, is to throw your old unwanted dishes and any other small items out of the window on New Years.  Out with the old!  Better to break a dish than a resolution.  (Yes, we realize we may be a bit self interested in perpetuating this tradition given that we sell ceramics, but hey, tradition is tradition.)

But kidding aside, it can be helpful to give some thought about what we want to metaphorically toss out the window, to shed in the new year. It’s a whole lot easier to get rid of something than to resolve to add something new to our already too busy lives. Instead of focusing on what we want to improve upon in the New Year (go on a diet, go to the gym, get up earlier, drink less!), perhaps it would be more helpful to recognize what is weighing us down, holding us back or cluttering up our life.   And resolve this year to slow down a little.

Perhaps by sweeping away just a little of the bad, the old or the unnecessary we make room for just a little bit more of the good in our lives.  As this New Year arrives, we are busily setting out plans for the ambitious 2015 that lies ahead of us.  It promises to be every bit as busy, complex and financially risky as this year was – even more so. But part of our ambition is to make 2015 and the next phase of Via Umbria enjoyable – for all of us as well as our customers.

So while we can’t promise to exactly live the slow life in 2015, you should expect us to stay focused on the truly big things, the things that really matter and not to “sweat the small stuff.”  And while you won’t find us throwing Geribi dishes out the window on New Year’s eve, we will be resolving how we can slow down and smell the espresso more in 2015 than we did in 2014.

We hope you’ll join us.

Buon anno!

Bill and Suzy

New Years Resolutions Read more

As we crack open a bottle of champagne for the New Year (or for a more Umbrian twist, how about some Scacciadiavoli ...

Happiest Holidays

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One of the nicest things about the holidays – other than having an excuse to get together with family – is having an excuse to reflect on what you are thankful for.  And as the holiday rush – with its hordes of customers, non-stop gift wrapping, packing for UPS, restocking the shelves and starting all over again every morning – comes to an end, we have so much to be grateful for.

Here are a few of the things we want to give thanks for:

* For really being able to do it.  The idea of Via Umbria has been in our minds for a year or more.  To be able to purchase a building, move in, receive inventory from storage, from Italy, from who knows where, to unbox it, add it into inventory, get labels on it, arrange it on shelves and be able to sell it with out any (a slight exaggeration) kinks along the way.  Remarkable.

* For getting licensed to open our doors, to allow the public inside, to operate a business.  There is a feeling that DC is not a friendly place in which to do business.  That has not been our experience.  Challenging for sure, but eminently possible if one has a great deal of determination and is transparent and up front with people .

* For the opportunity to host three wonderful Food and Wine Tours in Umbria just a week after opening our doors in Georgetown.  Perhaps not the most prudent use of time, but our month in Italy was a great reminder of why we do what we do and why we’re doing it in Georgetown.  Our slogan – Discover | Savor | Share – is more than just words to us and returning to Italy often reminds us of just what is worth discovering, savoring and sharing.

* For our team of paid and unpaid staff who share our vision, our love of all things Italian.  They are the ones that toiled with the price tags, figured out the balky POS system, who arranged and re-arranged merchandise endlessly, carried boxes from trucks, trudging through the snow.  Who set up display after display only to tear it down, move it and begin again.

* For our neighbors in Georgetown who have not only passed through our doors in an endless stream since we opened them at the end of September, but who have told us just how much they appreciate having us in the neighborhood.  Not just with words but with monetary support and by spreading the word to their friends and neighbors.  Via Umbria is about savoring the connections that common interests can engender and it is clear that we and our neighbors share a lot of common interests.

* For DC ABRA and the ANC and CAG and OGB and CFA all giving us fair hearings and approving our concepts, ideas and validating our existence.  And especially for granting us a license to sell the most incredible, undiscovered and under appreciated wines produced in Italy.  Be sure to stop by to learn a bit about our selection of hand selected and imported Umbrian wines.

* And for Suzy and me, thanks for our wonderful, supportive children who lined up shoulder to shoulder with us to get this store open, to celebrate its rebirth and to keep it on course during the busy holiday season and who bore with us when we came home late at night and left early in the morning.  Merry Christmas to Austin, Lindsey, Davis and Teddy.

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There are so many things we are thankful for as Christmas day approaches and we’ll take another stab at completing the Thank You cards before New Year’s.  But as you and we turn our attention to family and sharing the joy of the holiday season together we also want to reflect briefly on our ambitions and vision for Via Umbria.  It is easy to get wrapped up in the logistics of running a small business (sometimes quite literally in a ream of price tag stickers).  But at Christmas, we’d like to look forward and share with you what we really aim for with this store in the coming year.

What we have discovered in Italy and through Italy, the essence that we believe is the crown jewel worth sharing with all of you isn’t a thing at all.  What we truly cherish and find over and over again in Italy is a sense of connectivity.  Connectivity with  place, with people, with time and history.  And that connection is inspired by, catalyzed by and engendered by experiences that often take place around objects and food.  Our ceramic plates are without doubt works of art.  Our olive oils are without equal.  Our kitchen appliances provoke the mind.  But these things are just things, no matter how beautiful they are.  Their iconic status, their spirit comes from knowing who made that bowl, and loving that story.

In Italy, you know the shopkeeper who sells you a kitchen towel, and the man at the bar who serves you your espresso, and the woman who you always check out with at the grocery store. And although we cannot replicate exactly that closeness of an Italian community, we hope that a visit to Via Umbria will mean more than just finding a beautiful object. We want to stop and talk with our customers, explain where we found the objects that we stock and why they are special to us. We hope that Via Umbria will be a place that people come visit because that yearning for connectedness is satisfied here.  We think we’re off to a good start.

Because as beautiful and interesting as our merchandise is here at Via Umbria, perhaps we should all take inspiration from one of this season’s own iconic characters – the Grinch.  For in our opinion he put his long, gnarled finger right on what makes Via Umbria Via Umbria when he came to his epiphany:

And the Grinch, with his Grinch-feet ice cold in the snow,
stood puzzling and puzzling, how could it be so? It came without ribbons. It came without tags. It came without packages, boxes or bags. And he puzzled and puzzled ’till his puzzler was sore. Then the Grinch thought of something he hadn’t before. What if Christmas, he thought, doesn’t come from a store. What if Christmas, perhaps, means a little bit more.

Well said, Grinch.  Well said.  Merry Christmas to all.  And to all a good night.

Ci vediamo!
Bill and Suzy

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A year full of thankful memories Read more

One of the nicest things about the holidays - other than having an excuse to get together with family - is having ...

December Delights

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We waited in anticipation for our shipment of cakes, candies, and chocolates from Italy to be cleared at customs. Would it arrive on Thanksgiving, making us skip the big meal?  Or Black Friday, causing chaos and clutter?

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But our boxes and boxes and boxes of joy would come through during the first snow of the season in Georgetown, and just as Teddy and Davis, my sons, flew in from sunny Los Angeles to help. A flurry of activity, and huge, fat flurries from the sky.

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As we tore into the boxes and unpacked, the scents of Italian Christmas wafted out of the containers.  Panettone smells like Christmas. Gianduia smells like mid afternoons in December. And torrone smells like a diet in the New Year.

 

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As we unpacked box after box of panettone, we remembered that this we have a good handful of flavors in stock, including chocolate, candied chestnut, and prosecco. New as well is the ability to order them though our website here. Loison makes their panettone with only real ingredients and no preservatives in the same way they have produced them for centuries, by hand in Venice. Their panettone does not taste like sugary bread, they way some American products do, but instead a rich and soft holiday treat.

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But what I always fall for are the torrone. Years ago I toured the Sorelle Nurzia factory (you can find the old blog post hereand became obsessed.

To see exactly how they handcraft the torrone we have stocked in store see this excellent video (it is in Italian but stick through it for the “sensual” ending).

Though the unpacking was wet and cold, the reminders of beautiful Italian holidays past made opening up every cardboard box akin to tearing through gifts on Christmas Day. And what better gift then being able to bring a little bit of and Italian Natale to DC.

Unpacking the boxes of joy Read more

  We waited in anticipation for our shipment of cakes, candies, and chocolates from Italy to be cleared at customs. Would it arrive ...

Batter Up

How do you follow up a quintessentially American experience like the Fourth of July here in Italy? Invite a bunch of your Italian friends over for American breakfast.

American Breakfast 013That’s how we started our day on the morning after the Fourth of July. The previous evening, la Festa dell’Indipendenza, had seen us manufacture an American-style fireworks show, complete with Whitney Houston belting out our national anthem. So the following morning our plans called for serving an American breakfast to an assortment of our friends and neighbors. What we hadn’t planned for was the pounding headache that resulted from the previous evening’s celebration. Nonetheless, when the alarm rang at 7:30 there was no delaying the inevitable. An hour and a half later our guests would be arriving and there was much to prepare.

American Breakfast 016The first order of business was to whip up a batch of batter for waffles. Waffles, pancakes and the like are pretty much unheard of in Italy but fortunately for us, Marco and Chiara happen to own a waffle iron, perhaps the only one in Umbria. Marco had dropped it off the previous day and when I took a look at it it was a bit of a shock. I am used to a large Proctor Silex model with a large griddle that makes four waffles. This round waffle maker made six or so triangular or heart shaped waffles, each about the size of the thin wafers you serve with ice cream. Nonetheless, I mixed up a quadruple portion of batter, starting with Italian flour that we buy in industrial sized portions for pizza night and the like. And fortunately we had planned ahead for cooking American recipes and had on hand U.S. measuring cups and spoons. Converting ounces to grams and teaspoons to kilometers on the fly is a recipe. For disaster.

American Breakfast 015The batter was well under way when Lodovico and Anna arrived, a basket of eggs and some fresh pancetta in tow. The eggs were from Lodovico’s chickens and he proudly told us how fresh they were, “straight from the chicken’s . . .” Lodovico broke the ten eggs (maybe it was eight eggs I et?) and watched as I scrambled them, moving confidently around the kitchen and explaining to the awed Lodovico that it is a birthright of American men, particularly fathers, to be able to make breakfast. We may not be able to do many things right, but breakfast is something most of us have mastered.

A few minutes later Jennifer, an American expat who lives in Cannara arrived with her two children, the lure of American breakfast and the villa’s swimming pool being an irresistible draw. Colin and Yoko, our first two villa guests of the week were already lounging in the backyard with their two children. Outside, the sun was brightly shining and a cool breeze made the day American Breakfast 004postcard perfect. I fried up dozens of strips of pancetta, the uncured cousin to American bacon, and broader strips of guanciale or barbozza that give bacon a run for its money. In typical Italian fashion Lodovico asked if I put olive oil in the pan before cooking the bacon. Only in Italy.

So, even though I was moving slowly as a result of the previous evening, breakfast was coming together smoothly. After a few minutes it was done and moved to one of the outdoor tables by the pool. Our guests gathered around and started passing the platters, the Italians not quite sure what to eat or how, glancing around at the Americans to get a cue and a clue. Maple syrup was the most exotic and, it turned out, most appreciated new experience, with Lodovico at first dispensing it on his waffle drop by drop. I convinced him to drown his waffle in syrup (bagnato) and he quickly adapted to American ways.

American Breakfast 008It’s nice to extend a hand of friendship between people of different cultures. When that hand is sticky with maple syrup it’s even nicer.

Ci vediamo!
Bill and Suzy

 

 

Americans in Italy Read more

How do you follow up a quintessentially American experience like the Fourth of July here in Italy? Invite a bunch of your ...

Go Fourth

Until we started spending our Julys in Italy several years ago, the Fourth of July was always a big deal in our family. For years we would spend our summers together with the rest of my family on a mountaintop in western North Carolina and the Fourth always seemed to be important. There were pig pickings, local fireworks shows, picnics by the pond. And my brothers were always into doing their own fireworks display for the family, the two of them stopping independently in South Carolina on the drive up from Florida, stocking up on entire trunksful of explosives which they would choreograph for the family and a small group of friends and neighbors on a spot lower down on our property where the chance of setting the woods ablaze with an errant spark was smaller.

Fourth of July 009The Menard boys’ fireworks show was always a highlight of the summer for our children and for Suzy and me. The sight of my older brothers running around with Bic lighters setting of twenty foot strings of firecrackers that exploded non stop for two or three minutes (covering the grass in tons of shredded paper), choreographing multiple bottle rocket launches and, in later years, launching individual mortars from giant tubes, appealed to our inner pyromaniac. A few beers were usually drunk as well. There’s a reason it’s called the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.

Fourth of July 003The Fourth of July is not, unsurprisingly, a major holiday in Italy. We try, however, to celebrate it and do our part of supporting the tradition, even if the Italians fail to put on a fireworks show for us. They seem to know that we celebrate something on July 4, but more often ask us if it is la Festa del Ringraziamento – Thanksgiving. They seem convinced that we eat turkey on the Fourth and seem confused when we tell them that we eat wurstel (hot dogs) instead.

Fourth of July 010Until this year we have never really done much in the way of fireworks on the Fourth but yesterday when we were out running some errands with Marco he told us of a large store that sells fuochi artificiali – fireworks – and so we decided to check it out. When we arrived at Zeus the special fireworks annex next door to the main store was closed for lunch. Imagine, a fireworks store closed on the Fourth of July! A sign announced, however that from the day after Christmas until New Years day it was open 24 hours a day. New Years is the Italians’ biggest opportunity to get in touch with their inner pyromaniac and according to Marco they do just that, lining up for their opportunity to buy packs of ordinance to impress the neighbors and scare their dogs. You know something is very, very important to Italians if they will actually get in a line and wait for it.

So we called the number on Zeus’ door (or more precisely Marco did) and asked them when they would be reopening, explaining that his American friends were desperate to celebrate the Fourth of July. And as good pyromaniacs, they broke from their lunch break and opened up the store for us. And if this candy store for explosive lovers won’t draw my brothers over to Italy for a visit, nothing will. On the plain metal shelves behind the plain counter behind the plain plate glass window were all sorts of boxes of exploding things, with crazy labels showing sexy women and exotic venues and showers of sparks. There were standard fireworks, such as bottle rockets and mortars, but the specialty is the single package box. Place on the ground, light once, get the hell away and watch for one, two, five minutes, the length of the show depending upon the size of the box and the cost. And the cost is not cheap, as you can watch €100 go up in smoke, literally, for a 45 second show. We opted for three different boxes, one for our Fourth of July conflagration, one for a pizza dinner we are doing later in the week and the biggest for our July 14 Cucinapalooza dinner, which we will be hosting for 20-30 guests.

We loaded the explosives in the trunk of our car and drove piano, piano, ever so gently back toward Cannara, stopping in Santa Maria degli Angeli for lunch, our car parked just out in front and in plain view so we could see if it got rear ended and went up in flames. There would be a lot of explaining to do in that instance, especially in the post 9/11 and post Iraq war world. Fortunately our IEDmobile stayed in one piece and after lunch we loaded a half dozen Benedictine beers in the trunk along with our mobile armory. There’s a reason they call it the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.

And so after dinner on July 4, 2013, a dinner not of hot dogs but of bistecca alla fiorentina grilled to perfection in our outdoor barbequeue and washed down not with Budweiser but with Montefalco Sagrantino, we set up our small fireworks show for our small group of 4. I captured the entire thing on videotape, including the stirring soundtrack of Whitney Houston belting out the Star Spangled Banner, a recording of her classic rendition of the National Anthem at the Superbowl a lifetime ago. Although there is a lot of dark footage, I urge you to watch through until the end (it’s only three and a half minutes) and challenge you to not come away feeling proud to be an American. I know we went to bed that night, which was technically the Fifth of July, feeling just a little more patriotic and good about our country.

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Click here to play video of the most awesomest fireworks show in Italy.

 

God bless America!

Ci vediamo!
Bill and Suzy

Let the Celebrations Begin! Read more

Until we started spending our Julys in Italy several years ago, the Fourth of July was always a big deal in our ...

Easter Bombies

2012-0408-038A quick post from the train as we make our way from Florence to Venice.

It’s Easter – buona Pasqua, tutti – and if it’s Easter and we’re in Florence, then I must be writing about the Scoppio del Carro.  I am. Continue reading Easter Bombies

Easter in Florence Read more

A quick post from the train as we make our way from Florence to Venice. It’s Easter – buona Pasqua, tutti – and ...