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Destination:
BENTO GONCALVES, Brazil
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Valley of the vineyards
Touring wineries in mountains of
southern Brazil
A
cool breeze brushes the valley and the hills riffle in silvers and
blues. Beneath the stars, beneath the rising moon, the field hands
are picking and plucking and harvesting the crop that is king of
these highlands: grapes.
Grapewise, things are looking
peachy this year in the Vale dos Vinhedos -- the Valley of the
Vineyards. A big reason is Mama Natureza, or Mother Nature. She was
good this year to this mountain region of southern Brazil: It didn't
rain too little, it wasn't sunny too much, and temperatures hung
steady all the grape-growing season.
You can sense the
excitement in town -- in the shops, in the squares, on the street.
Everyone's talking about the upcoming wine festivals. There will be
cheese and wine and pasta and loads of barefoot people stomping
grapes in cedar wine casks to the tune of an accordion player and
the rhythm of clapping hands.
You can feel the excitement in
the fields, too.
On a cobbled road along a ridge you can
look across the valley and see the pickers working into the dusk
like bees in a hive. Then you see the gray line of the treetops on
the far mountain, the spire of a lonely church silhouetted against
the trees. When you feel the lick of a fall wind on your brow and
smell the sharp, smoky scent from the wood stoves of the stone
cottages and hear the soft tinkling of cowbells in the fields, it
does something to you.
Finally, the sky fills with chips
that look sharp as diamonds and you start down the road on the way
to your hotel. Suddenly comes the clopping of hooves and around a
curve appears the silhouette of a large ox and a cart and the heads
of a man and a boy. They have in tow a stack of square bins covered
in a tarp.
"Hello!" the man shouts.
"Hello!"
The ox pulls up beside you, snorts and stops. The driver of
the cart has a wide set of shoulders and a wide forehead, a
handlebar mustache under a long nose, a square jaw ruddied by sun.
His arms and hands and shirt and trousers are stained, but his smile
is white as the moon.
"Going to Bento?"
"Yes."
"Got something for you." He swings around on his bench,
yanks the tarp off the top bin, reaches in and pulls out a handful
of grapes. They feel soft, warm in your hands.
"Well, aren't
you going to eat any?"
You think about the muddy hands of
the pickers, the less-than spotless bins and then you go ahead and
pop one of the grapes into your mouth anyway. It is juicy, plump,
rich.
"Wonderful."
"You won't get better than
those," he says. "Isn't that right, Mario?" The boy nods, smiles,
half embarrassed, and shrugs his shoulders.
"Staying long?"
"Just a night or two."
"You must stay longer for the
festivals. Lots of wine and lots of ladies." He laughs. "Well, we
have to get these back. I wish you a good stay. Good night!"
"Boa noite!"
You lose sight of the cart in the
velvety dusk, then it hits you that you failed to introduce yourself
or even ask the gentleman his name. Apparently there was no need.
Apparently, in Brazil's wine country, names come a distant third to
a friendly chat and a good grape.
* * *
It was
Italians who founded Bento Goncalves more than a century ago in the
spine of the Gaucho Range, a handsome, rugged sierra that runs
across the northern brow of Rio Grande do Sul, the southernmost
state in Brazil.
Lured by tales of cheap, fertile land,
waves of Italian immigrants began arriving here more than 126 years
ago, bringing with them their love of family, music, pasta, and --
naturally -- wine. They came on muleback, venturing some 70 miles
north and west of the state capital, Porto Alegre, often needing to
cut their own trails and build their own bridges as they ventured up
into the hills.
When they found land fit for a vineyard,
they put down stakes and erected houses of gray stone, mud, straw
and clay. The less-fortunate took shelter from the cold, wet weather
in alcoves dug underground and carved into the trunks and roots of
massive trees.
By the turn of the 20th century, the colony
was flourishing. Two-story houses, chapels, foundries, mills and
general stores went up and in 1908, the "Smoky Mary" -- a coal-fired
train -- began chugging wood-crafted products, clothing and farm
produce between Bento Goncalves, Garibaldi and Carlos Barbosa, busy
trading posts at the time.
The largest of the three towns,
Bento Goncalves, is now a tidy, charming city of 100,000
inhabitants, yet it remains true to its Italian roots. The city is
stuffed with wine stores, sweet shops, bakeries, pizzarias, beef and
pasta joints and furniture outlets.
Architecturally, the
city smartly blends the old with the new. On Marechal Deodoro, the
main boulevard downtown, a Gothic, creme-colored church built nearly
a century ago rises beside a new shopping mall with flying, white,
steel buttresses and high, glass walls.
Granite- and
marble-faced apartments rise between clumps of traditional homes and
churches. The latter are hardly in short supply. For those who enjoy
visits to Gothic churches, Bento Goncalves has the Igreja Matriz
Santo Antonio, the Igreja Nossa Senhora Lourdes, the Igreja Sao
Francisco, and, in the Square of Roses, the stunning Matriz Cristo
Rei -- a sharp, angular structure with long, pointed stained glass
and multiple spires. Crisp and sleek against a clear blue sky, it is
grander than any castle Disney can offer.
The Museu do
Imigrante -- Immigrant's Museum -- holds the town's past. Inside the
restored, two-story building on Herny Hugo Dreher Street is an
impressive montage of artwork, wagons, farm tools, photos and
samples of clothing worn by the Italian pioneers.
Then there
is the Colonia Sao Pedro.
There are 23 structures in the
colony, just a 20-minute drive east of Bento Goncalves through the
rolling, richly green hills. Along the Caminhos de Pedra, or "Paths
of Stone," there is a malt-whisky distillery, a couple of roadside
chapels, a flour mill, a blacksmith's shop, a hotel and a host of
Venetian-style, stone dwellings. A few of the basalt structures are
in need of repair. Many were restored, however, in the early '90s
and are in fine condition, most notably the House of Stone of the
Bertarello Family.
Built in 1877 and restored in 1994, the
Bertarello house offers a hearty, sumptuous Italian lunch, complete
with a starter of chicken-and-pasta Capelletti broth, homemade
bread, sliced radish-and-mayonnaise salad, freshly baked cheese
bread, spaghetti, barbecued chicken, boiled cabbage and a passion
fruit custard. (It's not Italian in origin, but no one I ate with
was complaining.)
To see the country, though, you don't need
a car.
The Smoky Mary train line was fixed up and in 1993
again began taking passengers between Bento Goncalves and Carlos
Barbosa. In the old days the benches were not padded with leather
and there weren't any trumpet, accordion or piccolo players to see
passengers off at the Bento Goncalves station. Champagne definitely
wasn't served to passengers at the Garibaldi stop. There were no
singers, comics or actors on board performing acts, and an Italian
chorale in traditional grab most certainly did not greet travelers
in Carlos Barbosa.
But no one these days minds a few perks.
Still, what mostly draws visitors to the wine country is,
well, the wine.
There are 23 family run vineyards to visit
in the Valley of the Vineyards. When you first drive through the
dipping, curving roads of the 110-acre region, the many shades of
green tend to take the breath away: Sea green, slate green, pine
green, olive green, grape green, green the color of emeralds.
All the vineyards welcome visitors with tours of the fields,
wineries and warehouses. Most of them offer restaurants and
accommodations. All are outfitted with dark, dank, brick-lined,
oaky, wine-casked watering holes, known as bodegas. It is in these
cool, shadowy cellars where a bonanza can be had: Visitors are
invited to sample as much red, white, rose, grappa, brandy and
bubbly as their bodies will allow.
Gratis.
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