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	<title>Comments for Sardinia : Live like a Local</title>
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	<description>Live like a Local</description>
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		<title>Comment on Sardinian Wines by James</title>
		<link>http://sardinialocal.wordpress.com/2008/06/24/sardinian-wines/#comment-51</link>
		<dc:creator>James</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Sep 2008 03:21:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sardinialocal.wordpress.com/?p=10#comment-51</guid>
		<description>Sardinia and wine are inextricably linked. Prehistoric vases and other equipment related to wine have been found in Sardinia. Grapes were probably imported by the Phoenicians, grape seeds have been discovered dating back 3000 years. The Carthaginians produced wine but following the Punic invasion all fruit trees, including vines, were ordered to be cut down, but vineyards began to bloom again during the Roman Age. Proof of the Sardinians love of wine can be found in the statues of Bacchus-Dionysus discovered in Cagliari.

For a long time, wine remained one of the most important resources of Sardinia’s economy. The Carta de Logu, the first Sardinian law text, protected vineyards with very strict rules, and corporal punishment, which included hand cutting, was set for law-breakers. In the 19th century, wine was sold to France and was used to enrich the local tasteless wines, it was during this period that the Royal Oenological School in Cagliari was created, and marked a turning point in local oenology, providing a stimulus to wine activities.

Between 1883 and 1912, more than 42,000 hectares of vineyards were destroyed following the outbreak of Phylloxera (vine pest). The Cattedre Ambulanti di Agricoltura and the Anti-Phylloxera Co-operative helped reconstruction by introducing a technique where Sardinian species of vine were grafted on American vine shoots, which were Phylloxera resistant. In post-war years, a considerable revival took place but Sardinian wine continued to be a blending wine, used to enrich European and national wines, this meant not only were the wines not very valuable but they gave the farmers little money. The European Community promoted incentives for vineyard explant, the product system collapsed, a recovery resulted, and from the 1970’s the main effort has been to improve the quality of the most famous wines. Today Sardinian wine is an important reality.

Species of vine: 
Nuragus is the oldest species, possibly introduced by the Phoenicians. 
Nasco &amp; Vernaccia is of Roman origin. 
Malvasia &amp; Moscato were introduced by the Byzantine and the Catalan. 
Several species of Spanish vine were brought by the Argonese, including Torbato, Bovale, Monica and Carignano. 
This influx saw Vermentino, probably from Corsica, enter during the 18th century along with Nebbiolo by the Piedmontese. 
Pascale, Trebbiano and Sangiovese were introduced during the early part of the 20th century by the Tuscans. 
The last wines to be brought in from the Peninsula were Chardonnay and Cabernet Sauvignon. 
Most of the imported species of vine have become truly Sardinian and acquired their own peculiar characteristics. 

There are no available products under this category.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sardinia and wine are inextricably linked. Prehistoric vases and other equipment related to wine have been found in Sardinia. Grapes were probably imported by the Phoenicians, grape seeds have been discovered dating back 3000 years. The Carthaginians produced wine but following the Punic invasion all fruit trees, including vines, were ordered to be cut down, but vineyards began to bloom again during the Roman Age. Proof of the Sardinians love of wine can be found in the statues of Bacchus-Dionysus discovered in Cagliari.</p>
<p>For a long time, wine remained one of the most important resources of Sardinia’s economy. The Carta de Logu, the first Sardinian law text, protected vineyards with very strict rules, and corporal punishment, which included hand cutting, was set for law-breakers. In the 19th century, wine was sold to France and was used to enrich the local tasteless wines, it was during this period that the Royal Oenological School in Cagliari was created, and marked a turning point in local oenology, providing a stimulus to wine activities.</p>
<p>Between 1883 and 1912, more than 42,000 hectares of vineyards were destroyed following the outbreak of Phylloxera (vine pest). The Cattedre Ambulanti di Agricoltura and the Anti-Phylloxera Co-operative helped reconstruction by introducing a technique where Sardinian species of vine were grafted on American vine shoots, which were Phylloxera resistant. In post-war years, a considerable revival took place but Sardinian wine continued to be a blending wine, used to enrich European and national wines, this meant not only were the wines not very valuable but they gave the farmers little money. The European Community promoted incentives for vineyard explant, the product system collapsed, a recovery resulted, and from the 1970’s the main effort has been to improve the quality of the most famous wines. Today Sardinian wine is an important reality.</p>
<p>Species of vine:<br />
Nuragus is the oldest species, possibly introduced by the Phoenicians.<br />
Nasco &amp; Vernaccia is of Roman origin.<br />
Malvasia &amp; Moscato were introduced by the Byzantine and the Catalan.<br />
Several species of Spanish vine were brought by the Argonese, including Torbato, Bovale, Monica and Carignano.<br />
This influx saw Vermentino, probably from Corsica, enter during the 18th century along with Nebbiolo by the Piedmontese.<br />
Pascale, Trebbiano and Sangiovese were introduced during the early part of the 20th century by the Tuscans.<br />
The last wines to be brought in from the Peninsula were Chardonnay and Cabernet Sauvignon.<br />
Most of the imported species of vine have become truly Sardinian and acquired their own peculiar characteristics. </p>
<p>There are no available products under this category.</p>
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		<title>Comment on Discover Alghero by Ian Jones</title>
		<link>http://sardinialocal.wordpress.com/2008/08/01/discover-alghero/#comment-46</link>
		<dc:creator>Ian Jones</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 18 Aug 2008 21:20:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sardinialocal.wordpress.com/?p=64#comment-46</guid>
		<description>This is a fantastic site for the region - well done!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This is a fantastic site for the region &#8211; well done!</p>
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		<title>Comment on Cagliari &#8211; The capital of Sardinia by Tim Ramsey</title>
		<link>http://sardinialocal.wordpress.com/2008/07/22/cagliari-the-capital-city-neighbourhoods/#comment-35</link>
		<dc:creator>Tim Ramsey</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 22 Jul 2008 15:51:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sardinialocal.wordpress.com/?p=27#comment-35</guid>
		<description>I recently came accross your blog and have been reading along.  I thought I would leave my first comment.  I dont know what to say except that I have enjoyed reading.  Nice blog.

Tim Ramsey</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I recently came accross your blog and have been reading along.  I thought I would leave my first comment.  I dont know what to say except that I have enjoyed reading.  Nice blog.</p>
<p>Tim Ramsey</p>
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		<title>Comment on Escaping the Crowds by M.C by Mehmet Yanki Yonel</title>
		<link>http://sardinialocal.wordpress.com/2008/07/20/escaping-the-crowds-by-mc/#comment-30</link>
		<dc:creator>Mehmet Yanki Yonel</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jul 2008 18:48:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sardinialocal.wordpress.com/?p=21#comment-30</guid>
		<description>Thx for nice article.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Thx for nice article.</p>
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		<title>Comment on Sardinian Wines by Andrew Catchpole</title>
		<link>http://sardinialocal.wordpress.com/2008/06/24/sardinian-wines/#comment-10</link>
		<dc:creator>Andrew Catchpole</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Jun 2008 11:46:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sardinialocal.wordpress.com/?p=10#comment-10</guid>
		<description>Italy&#039;s last wine frontier - II

The Producers
Any tour of Sardinia&#039;s wineries (and the DOC Wine Consortium produces a very thorough book in English on several wine routes, gastronomy and local points of interest) takes time as the island is surprisingly big and the wineries far flung. I headed to the south and then zig-zagged my way up the country to take in as much as I could.

Santadi
First stop was Santadi in the south-west, a typical cooperative where 75% of the 230 members collective 600ha is planted to Carignano (Carignan). The loss of the French bulk market at the beginning of the 1980&#039;s drove the decision to begin bottling and selling Santadi-labelled wines with the blessing of roving consultant Giacomo Tachis who identified the potential for quality from pre-phyloxera vines in the these sandy soils. Best of the wines is the intense, tobacco and spice ripe flagship Terre Brune Carignano del Sulcis DOC which blends a dash of Boval with Carignano, plus the pure berry and herb fruit of the entry level Grotta Rossa showing the appeal of 100% local Carignano.
Pala
The real star of the south is Pala, a 54ha family-owned winery begun in the 1950&#039;s but which started bottling under its own label as recently as 1998, again representing the very recent swing to quality estate bottled wine in much of Sardinia. White Vermentino and Nuragus (for which Sardinia&#039;s second white DOC. Nuragus di Cagliari was created), plus Carignano and the indigenous Monica are the backbone of the wines here. The snappy, modern-designed labels are reflected in the crisp, aromatic styles of Vermentino, with added richness and complexity found in the Entemari, which blends in Chardonnay and Malvasia for extra depth. Cannonau and Bovale make an appearance as excellent single varietal red wines respectively in the Triente and Essentija, while the brooding single vineyard S&#039;Arai shows all the concentration of low cropped Cannonau, Carignano and Bovale in a balanced and concentrated wine.
  	



  	
Dolianova
A third visit in the south took me to Dolianova, another coop making strides with zesty Vermentino and bright, juicy Cannonau wines. Best in show here, though, was the Terresicci (left), an intense cherry-ish blend of Barbera Sardo, Syrah and Montepulciano, again revealing Sardinia&#039;s broad viticultural heritage.
Gostolai
A long drive north followed into the mountainous interior around Oliena, known locally for Godello and where rocky soils and cold nights can conspire to produce intense, minerally wines. Jesuits first produced wine here in the C15, but the most prominent modern winery is the fledgling Gostolai set up a mere 10 years ago. Cannonau and Vermentino are Gostalai&#039;s mainstays, making leaner, tighter wines than their southern counterparts, and there is still some way to go in the vineyards and winery to fully realise the potential here. Bu potential there is, best shown in the Nepente di Oliena VQPRD Cannonau, revealing a mineral-lined complexity with hints of tea and spice on a long finish. 
Contini
Backtracking to the Sinis peninsula in the west, on of the islands oldest wineries is Contini with its 110-year legacy of producing wine under its own labels. The usual grape suspects crop up here, along with Nieddera, a local variety that produces a dark-cherry concentrate of a wine, plus a deeply traditional version of Vernaccia aged in a solera system. These wines were a real eye opener, with tangy, nutty, dried fruit characteristics, capped by a stunning number called Flor 22, its solera dating back to 1898 and resembling an old Madeira in taste. Right: Flor growing on the Flor 22.
  	

Gallura
The north-eastern province of Gallura is dubbed &#039;the land of Vermentino&#039;, boasting as separate DOCG for the variety, guaranteeing higher alcohol and, in theory, protecting more of a minerally concentration typically found in the wines. The hulking cooperative of the cantina Gallura at first looked an unprepossessing sort of place but did deliver with wines such as the floral, minerally Genesi which captured the best of this variety. Another surprise find here was a superb Nebbiolo called Dolmen, displaying a perfumed intensity and cherry-edged minerally length.
Sella &amp; Mosca

  	My final port of call was to Sardinia&#039;s best-known estate, the rather grand Sella &amp; Mosca winery just outside the charming Catalan town of Alghero. With 550ha under vine and over 100 years history of exporting Sella &amp; Mosca are by far Sardinia&#039;s most prominent and internationally recognised winery with a portfolio of accomplished, international-meets-indigenous wines to match. Encouragingly, varieties such as Torbato, making aromatic floral and creamy fresh white, plus Cannonau are the mainstay of the single varietal and blended wines, while a range of varieties from white Nuragus to Sangiovese and Carignano, plus Cabernet Sauvignon (planted here for over 100 years) complete the picture. The Torbatos are good, not least with the local seafood, and make very pleasant sparkling wine to boot, while the Cabernet-Cannonau Tanca Farra and 100% Cabernet Marchese di Villamarina are outstanding. 

As a flagship for Sardinian wine Sella &amp; Mosca can hold its head high. It clearly points the way for the potential of future Sardinian wines, a potential that is increasingly being recognised as other producers raise the quality bar. And, in a world awash with identikit international varieties and styles, Sardinia has much to offer that is individual, indigenous and far from run of the mill. Let&#039;s hope we will see more of these wines beyond the emerald shore

by Andrew Catchpole, 2008</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Italy&#8217;s last wine frontier &#8211; II</p>
<p>The Producers<br />
Any tour of Sardinia&#8217;s wineries (and the DOC Wine Consortium produces a very thorough book in English on several wine routes, gastronomy and local points of interest) takes time as the island is surprisingly big and the wineries far flung. I headed to the south and then zig-zagged my way up the country to take in as much as I could.</p>
<p>Santadi<br />
First stop was Santadi in the south-west, a typical cooperative where 75% of the 230 members collective 600ha is planted to Carignano (Carignan). The loss of the French bulk market at the beginning of the 1980&#8217;s drove the decision to begin bottling and selling Santadi-labelled wines with the blessing of roving consultant Giacomo Tachis who identified the potential for quality from pre-phyloxera vines in the these sandy soils. Best of the wines is the intense, tobacco and spice ripe flagship Terre Brune Carignano del Sulcis DOC which blends a dash of Boval with Carignano, plus the pure berry and herb fruit of the entry level Grotta Rossa showing the appeal of 100% local Carignano.<br />
Pala<br />
The real star of the south is Pala, a 54ha family-owned winery begun in the 1950&#8217;s but which started bottling under its own label as recently as 1998, again representing the very recent swing to quality estate bottled wine in much of Sardinia. White Vermentino and Nuragus (for which Sardinia&#8217;s second white DOC. Nuragus di Cagliari was created), plus Carignano and the indigenous Monica are the backbone of the wines here. The snappy, modern-designed labels are reflected in the crisp, aromatic styles of Vermentino, with added richness and complexity found in the Entemari, which blends in Chardonnay and Malvasia for extra depth. Cannonau and Bovale make an appearance as excellent single varietal red wines respectively in the Triente and Essentija, while the brooding single vineyard S&#8217;Arai shows all the concentration of low cropped Cannonau, Carignano and Bovale in a balanced and concentrated wine.</p>
<p>Dolianova<br />
A third visit in the south took me to Dolianova, another coop making strides with zesty Vermentino and bright, juicy Cannonau wines. Best in show here, though, was the Terresicci (left), an intense cherry-ish blend of Barbera Sardo, Syrah and Montepulciano, again revealing Sardinia&#8217;s broad viticultural heritage.<br />
Gostolai<br />
A long drive north followed into the mountainous interior around Oliena, known locally for Godello and where rocky soils and cold nights can conspire to produce intense, minerally wines. Jesuits first produced wine here in the C15, but the most prominent modern winery is the fledgling Gostolai set up a mere 10 years ago. Cannonau and Vermentino are Gostalai&#8217;s mainstays, making leaner, tighter wines than their southern counterparts, and there is still some way to go in the vineyards and winery to fully realise the potential here. Bu potential there is, best shown in the Nepente di Oliena VQPRD Cannonau, revealing a mineral-lined complexity with hints of tea and spice on a long finish.<br />
Contini<br />
Backtracking to the Sinis peninsula in the west, on of the islands oldest wineries is Contini with its 110-year legacy of producing wine under its own labels. The usual grape suspects crop up here, along with Nieddera, a local variety that produces a dark-cherry concentrate of a wine, plus a deeply traditional version of Vernaccia aged in a solera system. These wines were a real eye opener, with tangy, nutty, dried fruit characteristics, capped by a stunning number called Flor 22, its solera dating back to 1898 and resembling an old Madeira in taste. Right: Flor growing on the Flor 22.</p>
<p>Gallura<br />
The north-eastern province of Gallura is dubbed &#8216;the land of Vermentino&#8217;, boasting as separate DOCG for the variety, guaranteeing higher alcohol and, in theory, protecting more of a minerally concentration typically found in the wines. The hulking cooperative of the cantina Gallura at first looked an unprepossessing sort of place but did deliver with wines such as the floral, minerally Genesi which captured the best of this variety. Another surprise find here was a superb Nebbiolo called Dolmen, displaying a perfumed intensity and cherry-edged minerally length.<br />
Sella &amp; Mosca</p>
<p>  	My final port of call was to Sardinia&#8217;s best-known estate, the rather grand Sella &amp; Mosca winery just outside the charming Catalan town of Alghero. With 550ha under vine and over 100 years history of exporting Sella &amp; Mosca are by far Sardinia&#8217;s most prominent and internationally recognised winery with a portfolio of accomplished, international-meets-indigenous wines to match. Encouragingly, varieties such as Torbato, making aromatic floral and creamy fresh white, plus Cannonau are the mainstay of the single varietal and blended wines, while a range of varieties from white Nuragus to Sangiovese and Carignano, plus Cabernet Sauvignon (planted here for over 100 years) complete the picture. The Torbatos are good, not least with the local seafood, and make very pleasant sparkling wine to boot, while the Cabernet-Cannonau Tanca Farra and 100% Cabernet Marchese di Villamarina are outstanding. </p>
<p>As a flagship for Sardinian wine Sella &amp; Mosca can hold its head high. It clearly points the way for the potential of future Sardinian wines, a potential that is increasingly being recognised as other producers raise the quality bar. And, in a world awash with identikit international varieties and styles, Sardinia has much to offer that is individual, indigenous and far from run of the mill. Let&#8217;s hope we will see more of these wines beyond the emerald shore</p>
<p>by Andrew Catchpole, 2008</p>
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		<title>Comment on Trains and Buses in Sardinia by ATL_Hat</title>
		<link>http://sardinialocal.wordpress.com/2008/06/18/trains-and-buses-in-sardinia/#comment-2</link>
		<dc:creator>ATL_Hat</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Jun 2008 05:01:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://sardinialocal.wordpress.com/?p=4#comment-2</guid>
		<description>Bus--We took the bus to and from the airport. It was cheap and easy and only took about 20 minutes to the Centro Storico. The bus no longer meets every flight, but instead it leaves every hour on the hour. If you take the bus, be sure to get a ticket inside the airport—several ticketless people were left standing on the curb.

Bikes—We rented mountain bikes for one day from cicloexpress. They were very easy to deal with and the bikes were quite good.

Car—We rented a car for one day from Thrifty, simply because they had by far the best deal we found. We just took the bus to/from the airport for the pick-up and drop-off. We parked the car overnight at the harbor for free.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Bus&#8211;We took the bus to and from the airport. It was cheap and easy and only took about 20 minutes to the Centro Storico. The bus no longer meets every flight, but instead it leaves every hour on the hour. If you take the bus, be sure to get a ticket inside the airport—several ticketless people were left standing on the curb.</p>
<p>Bikes—We rented mountain bikes for one day from cicloexpress. They were very easy to deal with and the bikes were quite good.</p>
<p>Car—We rented a car for one day from Thrifty, simply because they had by far the best deal we found. We just took the bus to/from the airport for the pick-up and drop-off. We parked the car overnight at the harbor for free.</p>
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