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The Vancouver International Wine Festival is returning Feburary 24th with Italy as its focus. In its 45th year Canada’s premiere wine trade show and the largest consumer wine show in the Americas, it’s a highlight for many who love wine.
Join Gismondi on Wine Editor-in-Chief Anthony Gismondi and find out what to expect at the festival from VIWF’s Executive Director Harry Hertscheg, including the number of wines, events and countries this year and where to get your tickets. Wine writer and educator, and the 2024 VIWF Keynote Speaker, Filippo Bartolotta, joins us from his home in Italy to explain what makes the current Italian wine industry so interesting and exciting, unlike ever before.
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Hello, Gismondi on Wine? Uh, subscribers,  newsletter subscribers. Thanks for joining   us today, uh, to preview the 45th International  Wine Festival in Vancouver. Joining us is Filippo   Bartolotta. He’s the he’s a writer, educator and  will be the keynote speaker in Vancouver during  

The festival. And also Harry Hertscheg,  the executive director of the uh 45th,   which is impressive. Vancouver International  Wine Festival. Harry, welcome back. Uh,   we’re back in Vancouver. We’re back in VCC East. Uh, we’re back in February. Uh, we’re back to  

Normal. We’re back. It’s our third festival since. the pandemic, our 45th since we started this whole   journey way back in 1979. We’re back in  the convention center, the West building,   with all the great windows, with 149  wineries, 42 events. Italy is going to  

Be the star at the end of February. Let’s go. Yeah. So well let’s talk about those numbers.   So 12 countries are coming. How many wineries and  wines are going to be in the room do you think? 

Well the way I look at it is how how exciting  is it to be able to have 71 Italian wineries,   the most we’ve ever had, plus 29 from British  Columbia. What a great opportunity to compare   Okanagan, Cowichan and Fraser Valley and  Italy, and then another 49 wineries from  

Ten other countries. It’s going to be an amazing  experience in the tasting room. Of the 42 events,   more than half are focused on Italy. 12  dinners, a Gala dinner with all Italian wines,   four seminars including with Filippo  Bartolotta, lunches, seminars, parties.  It’s going to be an Italian  celebration at the end of February. 

Get some sleep folks. There’s always a huge buzz  in the room. But Filippo, it’s my impression that   that Italy is having a moment internationally.  What, what what’s your feeling about what’s   going on in Italy at the moment with wine? Well, it’s a great moment. Um, and I’m totally  

Excited because this is the BC-Italian Wine  Festival. Uh, it’s going to be my third time   round coming over to to British Columbia and  I, And I’m loving it. I really can’t wait. Uh,   Italy is in, um, how should I put it in a sort of  a, uh, very contemporary Renaissance, uh, moment,  

Like, uh, Italy has been making wine for 3000  years. Uh, there was a moment, uh, after the war,   where everything started off again  about quantity, quantity, quantity.  Then there was a switch towards quality in  the 80s, just a few very famous wineries. Uh,  

Then the big, bold, uh, super attractive,  uh, bit of a Robert Parker rides, style   wines, uh, kind of standardization in the early  2000. And now is the full swing of indigenous   varieties. Uh, uh, tiny vignerons on that get  together with the the big established brands,  

Uh, uh, all the regions of Italy from Sicily,  uh, which is basically Africa is closer to the   rest of Italy, all the way up to Alto Adige,  which is a mountain region close to Austria,   is just, uh, like, uh, 20 different languages. And as a result, you have 400 different grape  

Varieties. Italy is hell and Paradise at once.  It’s hell if you want to learn all about it,   quickly it’s Paradise if you have, you know,  a life journey ahead of you and you want to   enjoy it. Yeah. 

Uh, well, I was thinking about the room with the  71 wineries. Now, of course, we always hear about   Tuscany and Piedmont, but what would be some  of the other regions you would push people to,   to just think about when they’re there, and maybe  some of the grapes that that are grown there? 

Yeah. As I mentioned, you know, uh, Italy has got  80% of the Italian appellations are made with 80   different grape varieties. There are thousands,  but there’s 80 major varieties. Sangiovese is the   king variety. Nebbiolo, of course, in, uh, in  Piemonte. But then you come across varieties,  

Even for somebody for a senior, uh,  wine taster or journalist like myself,   I’ve been I taste 5000 once a year, and  I’ve been doing that for the past 25 years.  And still I go to, I was in Abruzzo recently.  We’re going to taste some fantastic wines from  

Abruzzo, a region that is protected by the  Apennine mountain range. Looking at the sea,   um, and there is varieties like Mantonico  or, uh, Pecorino, Passerina, and not just the   Montepulciano or Trebbiano. And so this is what  Italy is about right now. It’s about contemporary  

Style winemaking, which means that all the  new generations are most of these winemakers   are actually, uh, professional winemakers. They’re going through university to get to that   point, but they have the experience of the, uh,  you know, family behind them, and they are sharing  

More best practices, practices that they’ve ever  done in the past. So kind of like, uh, Yeah,   it’s an interesting moment because there is more  cultural identity shown in the wines, less as over   extractive styles, less internationally  made wines. Um, but at the same time,  

It’s the moment when it’s easier to read Sicily,  uh, versus Campania or Abruzzo or Alto Adige.  And within each region there is a more  specific dialect, uh, that for any wine   lover is going to be easier to identify. Of  course, it’s a large, uh, country. I mean,  

It’s in terms of wine, it’s it’s bonkers. But  that’s what we’re going to do in Vancouver.   We’re gonna we’re gonna demystify Italy. Yeah. We love Bonkers in Vancouver. So, Filippo,   there’s some interesting underlying themes that  you’re thinking about. I know that you’re doing,  

Uh, a few talks and seminars. Tell us about  these themes that you’re thinking about.  Well, in a nutshell, the the most important, uh,  theme would be the contrast between the lighter   style wines that are produced in Italy in the  past. There was a moment about all the wines  

Needed to be big and bold and, you know,  uh, bodybuilders. But the idea that we’re   going to bring with the lightness is the fact  that there is strength and, uh, uh, depth in   light wines from, uh, you know, think about,  uh, each swallow, for instance, from Abruzzo  

Or from Alto Adige or even a light Sangiovese  or a beautiful, uh, Corvina from Valpolicella.  So that is the idea. And then when you go, of  course, the contrast is how are the Titans,   the Super Tuscans, the Amarone, the barrel and the  Brunello doing right now? Are they still like the  

Supercharged wines, or is there a more trace of  elegance that is actually coming into these wines   as well? And so the reinterpretation of Italy will  be all along. Wines like uh, Sorbara, Lambrusco   di Sorbara, which is a super light Japanese  Katana, super refreshing, uh, sparkling wine. 

A lot of people know the Lambrusco, the  the saturated, super dark Lambrusco. So   we’re going to show our, uh, British  Columbia guests our different sides   of Italy. So that’s why I’m actually very  excited myself. I can’t wait to be there. 

And it’s going to be fun to try some BC wines. Uh,  you know, we have some Sangiovese here. We have we   have some similar styles. It’d be fun to contrast  them with everything that’s coming in from Italy.  Yeah, absolutely. I’ve, uh, I had the opportunity  to visit last October. Uh, British Columbia,  

The Okanagan Valley. I went on a canoe. Uh, you  know, like bareback horse riding and then tried   everything. You know, I’ve seen it all. It’s  so beautiful. And I tried a lot of the Italian   wines. I love the wild and free attitude that  there is in that region. And so I can’t wait  

To do a compare and contrast tasting, uh, uh,  matching food and wine, uh, with a very brand   new country like British Columbia and a very  old one like Italy is going to be exciting.  Harry, how about a couple of tips for the  people that are getting into the room,  

Some of the things that are set up. What about  this Italian booth? How is that going to work?  That’s a great place to start because  that’s where our swamis and porters   are going to be pouring a selection of  Italian wines. But more importantly,  

They’re going to know what’s at the 71 table.  So you can use that. Italy’s tasting station as   a launching pad to the different regions, the  different grapes they can steer you to table   36 or number 47 or 68 or number four. And then  when you go to those 71 Italian tables, that’s,  

That’s like over 250, about 250 to 300 wines. Every one of those wines that are poured, every   wine that you can taste is available for sale.  You can buy it at the onsite BC liquor store.  And get it shipped to your close  to your house so you don’t have to  

Carry it home. It’s a very simple process. Oh, I love that. Hands free at the end of   the night, go to the restaurants, have the wines  shipped free of charge anywhere in the province,   and if you are somewhere else in the province,  stay Vancouver Hotels.com. Book your hotel  

And get a free ticket to those 71 wineries. Yeah, okay, but you got to have a ticket to   get in. Harry, how is that all going and where  can people go right now to get make sure that   they can get somehow get into this festival. Vanwinefest.ca Tasting room tickets are on sale  

Now. Special events are on sale in January. Get  organized. Talk about it with your friends and   family, and we’ll see you at the end of February. Okay. Well thanks, Harry. Thanks, Filippo. And,   uh, to our, uh, thank you, viewers. Uh, we’ve got  a lot of Italian content planned in February. Uh,  

That will be running in Gismondi on Wine. And,  of course, uh, like Filippo, we’re tasting   wines every day and posting notes up through the  festival. There’ll be a lot of Italian content   available for you. What to taste, where to go, and  who to meet inside the room. Thanks for joining  

Us, gentlemen, and we’ll see you inside the room  at the 45th Vancouver International Wine Festival.  Arrivederci. Arrivederci. Ciao

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