Celebrating Venice’s ancestral crafts – winemaking included
From glassblowing to goldbeating, Nina Caplan explores the historic crafts to survive across Venice’s network of islands – including winemaking at Venissa, a walled vineyard where the city’s indigenous Dorona grape is enjoying a revival
In early April, as spring coyly peeked over the snowcapped Alps, I passed through Venice en route to Italy’s Prosecco region (to research a story that’s in the current issue of Club Oenologique magazine). On my way back I paused, because if Venice is, historically, a gateway – its immense power and wealth built on its position between East and West – it is also a marvel. Everybody stops here, as they always did, but now they come to gawk instead of trade.
This isn’t really progress. In the 16th century, Jan Morris’ superb book Venice tells us, when the Serene Republic was at war with the Turks, another brand-new fully-fledged warship left the city every morning for 100 days. But I was here to think not about war, nor about tourism, but about wine.
The main entrance to the JW Marriot Hotel in Venice is only accessible via boat
I had an invitation to stay at the JW Marriott, a hotel that takes up an entire small (16 hectare) island: it was once a hospital for respiratory diseases which, in the shadow of Covid, seemed appropriate. I could have just stayed put: there were olive trees and bicycles, an excellent spa and a friendly barman who made me a vast drink with rose gin from an elegant alembic, the glass sprinkled with rose petals. ‘I don’t know,’ I said, when he suggested it: ‘rose gin?’ I hate sweet cocktails. But he was right, there wasn’t a trace of sweetness.
He also assured me, despite being Venetian himself (‘200%!’), that Naples makes the best pizza in the world because of the minerals from Vesuvius in the flour. Maybe he was right about that, too. The hotel’s fine-dining restaurant wasn’t open, but the rooftop bistro had views towards the main island, a 20-minute boat ride away, and its sommelier Simone took me on a vinous tour of Italy, including Nova Serra, a sage and apricot Greco di Tufo by Mastroberardino, in Campania – so, quite possibly, a recipient of the same mineral benefits as Naples’ pizza.
The rooftop bistro at JW Marriott, boasting pristine views across the water
Caplan tries her hand at the ancient art of glassblowing in Massimiliano Schiavon's studio
He is clearly making a fortune – Jeff Bezos apparently bought a table football set from him, entirely in glass – and his skill and dedication are undeniable: there he was, on a Sunday, swinging that pipe, conjuring brightly coloured vases out of what is, essentially, melted sand.
I loved his story about getting into trouble as a teenager for sneaking into the family studio without permission: he was betrayed by the oils his fingers had left on his eagle-eyed father’s scissors. It’s good to recall, in our Covid era, that even the vessels that hold our wine were once given form by human breath. But his showroom, with its vastly expensive tchotchkes, made me sad. The most beautiful items in it were a delicate set of Art Deco glasses, made long ago by Massimiliano’s father. They weren’t for sale.
'For Venice to produce something worth drinking would seem nearly as great a feat as building the city in the first place'
The tiny island cemetery of San Michele, which produces wine against the odds
Mazzorbo, where the Bisol family - also known for producing Prosecco since the 1500s - has plantings of Venice's native grape, Dorona
The vines of Venissa, a wine hotel and vineyard with a Michelin-starred restaurant to boot
Venissa Bianco, which according to Caplan is 'perfumed, with the slightly funky note of an orange wine'
Dogfish, caught locally from the lagoon, and prepared by chef Federico Colombini
Are these wines more than curios – another tourist’s delight, mined from past glories like gold hammered into a pretty label? I think they are. What could possibly speak more of regeneration than vines thriving in salty soil, reaching skywards in imitation of Venice’s second-oldest church tower, still standing beside them? Perhaps other wines and other possibilities will blossom in their wake. Far stranger things have occurred here, and the city itself is proof.
Nina Caplan is the Lifestyle and Travel columnist for Club Oenologique online and wine columnist for The New Statesman and The Times’s Luxx magazine. Her award-winning book, The Wandering Vine: Wine, The Romans and Me, came out in 2018.
Nina Caplan was a guest of JW Marriott Venice
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