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The Chiorri Winemakers Company is a vineyard under family management, which with special care from their very own vines, produces D.O.C. Colli Perugini and IGT dell'Umbria white, red and rosè wines. The family, together with the help of experienced workers,...
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Farmhouse San Rocco, country holiday home in Umbria, Todi Summer holidays in Umbria, in Todi at Tenuta San Rocco Tenuta San Rocco has the pleasure to offer special conditions for accomodations in his flats or " casolari" You may test the tipical foods...
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The first traces of Bisol family in the heart of the Prosecco D.O.C area date to the 16th century and are contained in a census carried out for fiscal reasons by the aristocratic Venetian family Da Pola, who were landowners of the leading the very prestigious...
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In 1964, Alibrando Dei, Maria Caterina's grandfather, bought the first part of the entire estate : Bossona. This vineyard is gorgeous for exposition and kind of soil, a sort of amphitheater always where the wind blows with a certain constancy. And her...
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Poggio al Casone is a charming resort located in a private wine farm surrounded by 40 hectares of organic vineyards. An ancient villa and two independent cottages have been meticulously renovated offering now self-catering apartments available for holidays....
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Formaggio di fossa di Sogliano al Rubicone e Talamello DOP
"Formaggio di fossa" (literally "pit cheese") is a typical Italian cheese produced in the area between Emilia-Romagna and Marche regions (specifically the entire territory of the following provinces: Forlì-Cesena, Rimini, Ravenna, Pesaro-Urbino, Ancona, Macerata, Ascoli-Piceno; and part of the province of Bologna), obtained by the fermentation of sheep (or partially mixed with cow milk) cheese in natural underground pits.
The pits were carved out of the tufa rock, depth about 3 meters. Few days before, straw is burned to reduce the accumulated humidity; the various forms of cheese, wrapped in cotton cloth, are placed in the straw lined holes, next to each other, reaching the mouth of the pit. Finally it is closed with wooden planks and sand.
The storing in a pit of the forms of cheese takes place in August, and they will be there until November 25th (coinciding with the feast of St. Catherine). During the fermentation, the cheese takes a particular aroma of wood, truffle and musk and a unique sweet/spicy flavor. It has a golden hue and a crumbly texture.
The formaggio di fossa of Sogliano al Rubicone and Talamello got the PDO (Protected Designation of Origin) in 2009.
The custom to hid the forms of cheese in underground pits dates back to the Middle Ages, when local peasants had to save their food supplies from thieves and soldiers.