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Italy
Italy
produces more wine, and makes it in greater variety, than any other nation.
From top to toe of the Italian boot - and from
Sicily, too - wine pours out as exuberantly as an
Italian tenor's aria.
Every Italian province produces its local wines, and every
one has its fiercely loyal partisans who argue - often with good reason - that
their wine can compete with the best around.
But perhaps because there are so many choices, a lot of
people in this country simply throw up their hands and stick with the old
standards.
Ask a friend to name an Italian wine and chances are he'll
come back with Lambrusco, the light, slightly sweet and fizzy red wine from the
region around Bologna. It is the
largest-selling imported wine in the United
States.
Another Italian wine stereotype is Chianti in wicker-wrapped
bottles.
Local wine fanciers get plenty of exposure to Soave,
Bardolino and Valpolicella from Bolla, a winery not far from
Venice, because Bolla's simple, decent but mildly
overpriced products are brought to the
U.S. by a
subsidiary of Louisville's
Brown-Forman Corp.
These are all good wines, but
Italy
offers so much more.
The Greeks brought wine to Italy long before Caesar's time,
and Italians have been making, consuming and exporting the stuff ever since.
Italian vino ranks among the world's best wines. And here is the happiest secret
of all about Italian wine: It is still a bargain.