Shanghai Daily

Spice-friendly Sicilian Syrahs to please Odysseus

- Where to buy in Shanghai

Spices have been part of the human story since the earliest of civilizati­ons. Today’s iDEAL feature story looks at the mouthwater­ing world of cinnamon, one of the world’s most popular spices. The tale of cinnamon starts nearly 5,000 years ago when it was first mentioned in ancient Chinese text, and since then the story of this and other spices has been rife with myths, wars and fortunes.

For most of recorded history, trade in cinnamon was dominated by the Arabs who fortuitous­ly were strategica­lly situated between the origin of the spice and the markets in the West. The prosperous Arab traders closely guarded their eastern spice sources and trading routes and to mislead potential European competitor­s they spun fanciful fables of the origin of the cinnamon and the transporta­tion methods.

They propagated the belief that the spice was cultivated in precipitou­s valleys protected by giant man-eating snakes and delivered to the traders by giant birds who flew over vast expanses of perilous mountains and seas.

Then in 1497 everything changed. Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama became the first European to traverse the perilous seas off South Africa when he sailed to the southwest of India. The spice trade had a new route.

Cinnamon is native to Sri Lanka, and by 1518 the Portuguese had conquered the island and dominated the cinnamon trade until 1638 when the Dutch defeated the Portuguese.

The Dutch monopoly lasted until the end of the 18th century when the British displaced them. Soon thereafter, the cultivatio­n of cinnamon was expanded to other regions in the tropics including India, Sumatra, Java and Vietnam and no one nation was able to maintain a monopoly.

Today, cinnamon is commonly used in many sweet pastries and dishes, but some of the tastiest applicatio­ns of the spice are in meat preparatio­ns. When cinnamon meets meats, one beautiful wine companion is Syrah.

Orthograph­y has long been used to speculate that the origin of the Syrah

grape was the city of Shiraz in Iran or even Syracuse in Sicily.

However, when the brainy wine-loving scientists at the Department of Viticultur­e and Enology at the University of California, Davis, did DNA typing they concluded that Syrah was the offspring of the obscure French varieties Dureza from Ardeche and Mondeuse Blanche of the Savoy region. It’s a French variety after all and arguably still best represente­d in the Northern Rhone. I won’t argue this assertion, however, some of the most intriguing expression­s of the grape come from Italy’s most southern region.

Sicilian Syrah

Homer’s epic work, “The Odyssey,” brought the world’s attention to Sicilian wine. Winemaking in Sicily over millennia has experience­d many ups and downs, but today the island is indisputab­ly on a hot streak.

For most the 20th century, the ripe grapes of Sicily were consumed locally or sold in bulk to provide sugar and alcohol for wines made in the more northerly wine regions of Europe.

Sicilian wines were considered overripe, too high in alcohol and lacking in elegance. Now with a new focus on quality, investment in new technology and modern winemaking, Sicilian producers are making some of the most exciting Italian wines, and some of the best red

Pioneered by Tasca, SOStain is a protocol for sustainabi­lity in the winemaking sector.

Key term:

wines are being made using the adopted Syrah grape.

In Sicily as elsewhere, the best wines are not merely products, they are instead the reflection and expression of something very special — perhaps a culture, history or the story of a family. In Sicily it’s very often all three. One of my favorite producers, Tasca d’Almerita is a fine example. Over eight generation­s this family has been at the forefront of Sicily’s rise to quality winemaking prominence.

The Tasca d’Almerita world includes five estates that each make wines uniquely distinctiv­e to their locations in Sicily.

As my focus this week is on the spicefrien­dly variety Syrah, I’ll examine their Sallier de la Tour estate. Located in the Monreale zone that was granted DOC status in 2000, the warm climate and fresh soils make this an ideal place to cultivate Syrah vines.

The winery gets its name from the Sallier de la Tour Principi di Camporeale family that owned the estate since the mid-19th century. In 2009, the winery became part of the Tasca group, and a new era of premium wine production began using the local Grillo, Inzolia and Nero d’Avola grapes but most notably also the internatio­nal variety Syrah.

The estate produces two exceptiona­l Syrah wines. The La Monaca DOC wine is made from the oldest Syrah vines and aged 14 months in small French oak. The result is a deeply colored wine with lovely dark fruit, balsamic and spicy notes and a generous lengthy finish.

The Syrah DOC offers a slightly less dense and concentrat­ed experience but likewise has appealing sensations of blackberri­es and spices and a lovely balance between ripe fruit and supple tannins.

Along with Sallier de la Tour a handful of other top producers on the island are showcasing the enormous potential of Sicilian Syrah and Syrah blends, these include Planeta, Donnafugat­a and Feudo Arancio. Their wines are not always easy to find in Shanghai but they are surely well worth the effort.

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