Beyond ‘the boot’
Hotelier and TV presenter Alex Polizzi explores the Mediterranean islands — from Sicily to Sardinia and Capri — that remain ‘inescapably Italy’
IAM often asked just how Italian I feel. I am inescapably Italian. My heritage, my Roman Catholic upbringing, everything I cook and so many childhood memories underlie my British education, my London upbringing and most of my working life.
After the last series I did for TV, for which I travelled from north to south in mainland Italy, I felt it was time to turn to the islands — the subject of my current series.
Italy was united only in 1871. Each region still feels unique, keeping individual traditions, food specialities and dialects. Any Italian will even now say that they are Milanese, or Roman, or Venetian, rather than Italian. We are a people forged from our sense of place, and the intervening years of nationhood have done nothing to change that.
What is true on the mainland is exacerbated on the islands. The island character is a very special one. It takes great strength of mind and individualism to live on a rock, in the middle of the sea, cut off from mainland life whenever the weather takes against you.
I find islanders fascinating. My Polizzi grandmother was Sardinian. While I was growing up, my sister and I were never allowed to travel there because of the fears of kidnapping. This meant that I never saw her house in Genoni, a suburb of Cagliari, and I tried very hard to find out more about her and her family at the Cagliari Record Office.
The highlight of my days in Sardinia was my trip to the interior, to the wild and austere national park at Su Gorropu, part of the chain of mountains called the Supramonte. The park covers hectares of land and is infamous as the region where bandits kept their kidnap victims and evaded capture by the police.
I had no immediate affinity with the landscape. It is so different from the Italy that is usually celebrated — the Italy of olive groves and rolling hills, fortified towns, endless coastlines and staggering architectural beauty. Instead, there is a brutal and unforgiving lunarscape; much land and very few people.
I was treated to a lunch of suckling pig by Zio Cicciu, an 80-year-old who is the last remaining full-time shepherd in the park. His solitary life would be anathema to most of us but he overrides the objections of his family to continue living in the “old way”, milking his goats, with television his only concession to modern life.
Another clinging to the traditions of the past is Chiara, the last person to weave silk from the beard of the clam. She has to make about 100 dives to gather enough beard to make about 9m of clam silk. She spoke to me of a life of self-sacrifice and hardship, producing objects of shimmering beauty that she never sells, as that would be traducing the compact she has made with the spirits of the sea.
Sardinia is the site of a fascinating project, with a laboratory and researchers whom you might expect to be working on something of this importance in an American facility. In Lanusei, Progenia is tracking the genetic make-up of the largest group of centenarians in Europe by population; the former inaccessibility of the surrounding region means that most people are genetically related.
Three of my grandparents lived into their late 90s and my great-grandmother died at 104, so my memories of them are fairly recent and vivid. It was hard not to be emotional when I took part in one centenarian’s birthday party in Sardinia, surrounded by his myriad grandchildren and great-grandchildren, remembering similar celebrations in my past.
It takes great strength of mind to live on a rock, in the middle of the sea, cut off from mainland life
When I was a child, I often saw Capri from a distance, usually to the chorus of my aunts begging my grandfather to allow the captain of his boat to moor in the harbour for a night — rather than the quiet coves my grandfather preferred — so they could go out and enjoy the bella vita, the bars and nightclubs that Capri offered. My aunts were usually denied, as my grandfather’s idea of a perfect holiday did not include what was already, then, an expensive, showy mooring.
Capri was incredibly sexy in the ’50s and ’60s, with absolutely anybody who was anybody from intellectual life (Jean-Paul Sartre and Graham Greene), the film set (Greta Garbo, Elizabeth Taylor, Noël Coward), millionaires and the fashion crowd brushing shoulders. Every louche playboy and starlet in Europe landed, drank and partied there.
I can now boast that Jackie Onassis and I have shared one luxury. Like her, I had a pair of sandals made by Canfora, hers by the grandfather of the present owner.
These days, though, on the whole, the daytrippers make the experience of the main drag rather an unpleasant one. The inaccessibility of the narrow paths ensures that most tourists don’t go beyond the beaten tracks, however, so I was able to see a Capri that is usually only enjoyed by locals.
There is an admirable group, “Capri is mine too”, which has decided to take back the villas and vistas abandoned by the local government as revenues have fallen. Members dedicate their spare time to making the historic areas of Capri pristine again and have found an unexpected community spirit. I met them in Villa Lysis, the erstwhile home of Baron Fersen, who found acceptance for his homosexuality, and lived an excessive life on the island. Capri was a byword for inclusion before the term was even coined.
In the ’50s and ’60s, every louche playboy and starlet in Europe landed, drank and partied on Capri
In comparison, Ischia hides its light under a bushel. Oddly for an island, the regional speciality is rabbit. No one I spoke to could explain why. I ate the most astonishing meal at Il Focolare with the owner, Riccardo, who elucidated the particular methodology that dictated the serving of a portion of rabbit. After several glasses of wine, I was in no mood to take up cudgels on behalf of Ischian women, who traditionally got not even a morsel of the least favoured cut of the animal.
La Mortella is the life’s work of an Argentinian, Susana Walton, who created the garden to provide her husband, the composer William Walton, with an inspirational place to work. This was one of the moments on the trip that inspired me most. All these years travelling in Italy and I’d had no idea that this place even existed.
Here, I also found the European Institute of Restoration. The headquarters are in a medieval castle, which can be reached only across a castellated stone bridge from the mainland. The only access is via an antiquated lift. To add to its James Bond feel, the institute is entirely staffed by stunning young women, dressed in white lab coats and working in complete concentrated silence on their various projects. The men in my team were lost for words.
I have been in love with the Aeolian Islands ever since I was first taken to Filicudi by a boyfriend in the ’90s. When you approach Filicudi by sea, it takes the form of a heavily pregnant woman lying on her back. It is one of those special places we all have which resists too much analysis, and I dreaded returning and being disappointed.
Pecorini Mare and the restaurant there have assumed near mythical status in my memories. The restaurant has changed hands and bedrooms have been added, but I needn’t have worried. The house wine was still extraordinary and I had probably the best meal of my entire trip, raw tuna and fried baby squid, and relished the magical feeling that nothing important had changed since I had last been there almost two decades before.
I had no preconceptions of Salina, which I had never visited. It is an unusual success story. It produces the most exquisite sweet wine from the Malvasia grape, a grape that found great favour with the British troops stationed in Messina in the 1800s. The vines were reintroduced after a phylloxera epidemic but they are not the only green gold that the island produces.
I stayed at a luxury hotel, Signum, where the determination to use local produce found me trying caper ice cream — yuck! — and a caper face mask — yum!
I know Sicily better than I know almost any other region of Italy. Twice in my 20s I took road trips that included the coast, more obviously, and then the interior.
Palermo scares many a traveller. It is known as the seat of the Mafia and, rather like New York in the old days, we are warned about going off the beaten track and falling into the badlands. The reality is that Palermo is a decaying but incredibly vibrant city, with sublime street food, marvellous architecture and a generation of inhabitants who have refused to bow down to the Mafia, shocked into taking a stand by the murder of Giovanni Falcone, the anti-Mafia judge, in 1992.
The grassroots Addiopizzo movement is a welcome antidote, giving upright businesses and stalwart shoppers a way of refusing to contribute to the protection money the Mafia used to extract.
These days, Sicily is so much more than Mafia. The Baroque Palazzo Gangi is still in private hands, and has managed all its restorations over the years without a penny of government money. Behind an unassuming façade lies a Versailles on a domestic scale; there are only five private residences like this in Europe, where all the furniture and objects are perfectly preserved. Entering the ballroom setting for the filming of The Leopard, starring Claudia Cardinale, gave me my first experience of room envy.
Gangi is a hilltop town set amid the rolling wheat fields and wooded valleys of central Sicily, a tangle of ancient streets and narrow dwellings about an hour’s drive south of the picturesque holiday resort of Cefalù.
Gangi was unknown to the world until Mayor Giuseppe Ferrarello was elected, eight years ago. Ferrarello tackled this tiny town’s problems by promoting its natural and cultural beauty. He decided on an unusual route to tackle the depopulation Gangi was experiencing in its historical centre. He offered houses at à1 each to anyone who would commit to refurbishing them, and in doing so has transformed the town’s economies.
Of course, I had to visit the wellhead from which, allegedly, all Polizzis spring — Polizzi Generosa — despite my being unable to trace any direct antecedents in the town. I was lucky, because it gave me the opportunity of staying in an extraordinary guesthouse, owned by Australians, who have restored it in a labour of love.
A similar commitment ensures the survival of the carretto Siciliano — the Sicilian cart. I spent a mad, mad day on a cart, drawn by a befeathered, bejewelled and caparisoned horse, accompanied by a four-piece band and an overwhelming enthusiasm to keep the tradition alive. Once upon a time, the appearance of these colourful carts on the horizon, carrying goods from one rural location to another, would have been a break in the monotony of life and a cause for celebration.
This, ultimately, is the common theme of my discoveries: I found a thriving, thrusting modern Italy and ancient ways coexisting in harmony.
The highlights of my island journey were meeting the people who ensure the survival of ways of life and traditions that seem barely relevant to our society and how we live today. And I was amazed and grateful that, after so many years and so many visits, Italy still managed to beguile and surprise me as much as ever.