Sapori e Saperi Adventures Flavours and Knowledge of Italian Artisans
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A Thread to Hang It On

10/3/2021

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This blog was originally published on Slow Travel Tours on 29 December 2013

Sapori e Saperi means ‘flavours and knowledge’, and on my tours guests enter a pleasant and gentle ‘school’ of artisan food. I’m always searching for new producers of the best of Tuscan produce. The results of my detective work are often surprising. Sometimes I go looking for cheese and I find wool.
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Gemma makes pecorino with the milk of…
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…her Garfagnina Bianca sheep, part of a project to preserve the ancient breed.
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Her daughter Ombretta learned to dye their wool with natural dyestuffs…
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…to produce these subtle colours.
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She found skilled local weavers and sells their work.
More about a day on the Cavani farm.
Or it’s squashes I’m after and I come up with hemp (yes, cannabis, but not the smoking kind).
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Squash display at Sagra della Zucca (squash festival)
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I found Romeo at his textile stall and later in his attic where he showed me antique hemp…
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…which he weaves on his century-old floor-loom into…
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…household linens that his wife Nada finishes.
Read more about Romeo and Nada here: Weaving a Life of Happiness
And there was the day I was sitting innocently enjoying lunch at Il Vecchio Mulino…
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Owner Andrea is happy that I’m enjoying my lunch.
when the owner introduced me to two brothers who run a scarf mill where they weave silk and cashmere scarves on traditional Garfagnana floor-looms for international fashion houses. They begged me to bring my clients to see how they had rescued a dying craft and made it relevant to the modern world.
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Artes weavers warping a loom.
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Handwoven cashmere scarf
My weaver friend from Cambridge came to visit and was inspired by Stefania who rears silkworms and runs silk workshops for schoolchildren, because her grandmother and grandmother-in-law raised silkworms and she wants today’s children to know about their past.
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Sapori e Saperi guests help feed Stefania’s ravenous silkworms.
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Silkworm spinning its coccoon
Several of my tours include a lesson with Paolo the village baker (more about Paolo) in a village that hosts a farro festival where we get to eat all the traditional dishes made with that primitive wheat. There on his dad’s front patio I met Teresa Bertei and her friends spinning and knitting.
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Baking bread with Paolo
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Teresa and friends probably wishing they were helping us eat the farro.
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Now Teresa teaches my guests the art of spinning with a drop spindle.
Soon I had a network of textile artisans to interweave with my food producers. My guests on each tour give me more suggestions of other things they would have liked to have done if only there had been time. Finally the fabric was stretched to its limit, and I’ve added an extra day this year. After all, we still need time to relax at a cafe and enjoy a gelato.
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Sitting in the sun enjoying Paolo’s artisan gelato
This element of the serendipity is a feature of Slow Travel. If you stay in one place long enough, you find all sorts of things you weren’t looking for (read more about how I research my tours), and this explains why I offer ‘Tastes & Textiles’ tours among my culinary adventures. The next ‘Tastes & Textiles’ tours will take place in September 2021 and May, June and September 2022. Full details here. 

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    Erica Jarman

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  • Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Resources
  • Tours
    • Small Group Tours >
      • Celebrating Sardinia
      • Tuscan Heritage
      • Giants of Sardinia
      • Autumn in Tuscany
      • Tastes & Textiles: Woad & Wool
      • Tastes & Textiles: Hanging by a Thread
      • Tastes & Textiles: Carpet Weavers of Sardinia
      • Tastes & Textiles: Wine to Dye For
      • Tastes & Textiles: Sea Silk in Sardinia
    • Tastes and Textiles
    • Sardinian Tours
    • Day Adventures
  • Courses
    • Advanced Salumi Course Tuscany
    • Advanced Salumi Course Bologna-Parma
    • Simply Salami
    • Art & Science of Gelato
    • Artisan Bread Course Tuscany
    • Theory & Practice of Italian Cheese
    • Mozzarella & its Cousins
    • Mozzarella Consultancy
    • Olive Oil Tree to Table
    • Truffle Course
  • Booking
    • Enquiry
    • Booking Conditions
    • Fill Booking Form
  • What people say
  • Blogs
  • Contact