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Puglia
Originally founded by Greece as part of Magna Graecia, Puglia can boast more archaeological finds than
most other regions of Italy. Their original village of Taras produced much of Greece’s pottery. The region
became part of the Roman Empire and was the subject of many different invasions after the Empire fell.
Strangely enough, after the Norman conquest of Sicilia, the Norman seat of power was located in Puglia.
Puglia is simultaneously rural, breathtaking and traditional. Many of the villages that dot the landscape
are small, walled and sit atop hills. The main cities of Puglia, Bari and Brindisi, are more cosmopolitan than
the smaller towns around the region, but they still retain a certain quaintness and charm. As the region
is normally hot during the day, the cooler evening hours see small congregations of people in the city
centers and piazzas. Food is a mainstay of the Pugliese culture, and most families have at least a small
vineyard and collection of olive trees.
As a region, Puglia is known for a decidedly more rustic style of wine, which can be experienced with its
four DOCG wines. These DOCGs are all relatively new and still unknown. Primitivo di Manduria DOC and
Salice Salentino DOC are the wines that define the region. The former is a wine made from Primitivo, the
Italian cousin to Zinfandel, which results in a high-alcohol, spicy version of the popular American wine.
Salice Salentino on the other hand, is made from the deep, dark, intense Negroamaro grape, which
results in wines with intense aromas of blackberries, black currants and baking spices.
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WINES OF SOUTHERN ITALY