The Submerged Cellars: A Quiet Chronicle of Puglia's Ancient Primitivo Traditions The world of wine is a map of voices—each region speaking in its own dialect of soil, sun, and history. On the southern fringe of Italy, where the Adriatic bows to the Ionian Sea, Puglia keeps a patient diary of grape and time. Among its pages, Primitivo—often misread as a mere precursor to Zinfandel—reconciles bold fruit with a lineage that stretches back to the earliest vineyards of the Mediterranean. This is a tale of submerged cellars and sunlit terraces, of patience and festival, of a grape that wears its history in its color and its aroma. A breeze through Apulia: terroir and grape Primitivo thrives in soils that vary from chalky calcareous earth to red earth streaked with clay. The climate is nulla-velvet—a hot sun tempered by coastal winds and the shade of ancient olive trees. The grape itself ripens with a depth of ripeness that translates to wines of dark ruby, lush tannins, and notes tha...
Whispers from the Vine: A Tour Through the Oldest Boundaries of Burgundy's History Beneath the canopy of green leaves and the patient, sun-warmed stones of Burgundy, a conversation unfolds between soil, grape, and time. On Wine in the World, we trace the tremors of terroir—how place, privilege, climate, and culture converge to craft wines that speak with precision and memory. Today, we wander the cradle of some of the world’s most revered wines, stepping into the fragrances of Chardonnay and Pinot Noir, and listening for the whispers that travel from century to century. In Burgundy, the land itself is an archive. The chalky soils of the Côte d’Or, with their pale mineral backbone, cradle wines that glow with clarity and age at a pace that seems almost contrived by nature. The famous climats—La Romanée, Chambertin, Corton—are not mere plots of land; they are defined relationships between sun, slope, and tradition. The vineyard is a living manuscript, and each vintage adds annotati...