Wednesday, July 09, 2014
Chianti Classico
Today we bussed to the Chianti region after breakfast and
arrived around 10:30. We started our
ride at a castle (Castello di Brolio in Chianti) and quickly found that the
terrain is pretty different in Chianti.
It is largely forested with oak, as opposed to few trees and lots of
vineyards previously. We road to the
town of Radda in Chianti for lunch. This
was the toughest ride to lunch we’ve had with 1800 ft. of elevation gain in a
17 mile ride. Kelli, Katie and Maddie
all rode all the way, while Jessie got a “bump” up the final climb in the
shuttle. One of the other dads (Chris) and I
ate quickly, because there was an option to do a mini-pass after the afternoon
ride and we wanted to get it in. We took
off at 1:00 and rode the afternoon ride (13 miles, 1300 ft of elevation gain)
back to the hotel. We then set off on
the bonus ride. It was beautiful. There are no big mountains in Tuscany, but no
end of hills, and our ride took us up and down various hills and over one of
the higher saddles in the hills. It was
more forested than we had seen previously, and we covered the 25 miles and
2,600 ft of elevation gain in 2 hours.
It was a great ride – but we were pretty tired at the end. We enjoyed good weather all day.
Patty and the girls took more time in Radda and she bought
Chianti Classico jerseys for the two of us there. Patty rode back with Doug Klein and the girls
shuttled back.
At 6:15, there was a wine tasting in our hotel (arranged for
the Backroads adults) which was led by an Italian woman that was excellent at
describing various aspects of the wines she presented (at least for neophytes
like Patty and me). Much of the
discussion was around Chianti Classico which is obviously what the region is
known for. It wasn’t our favorite wine,
but it was fun to learn about it.
After the wine tasting, the adults shuttled to a restaurant (Il
Vescovino) in Panazano for dinner. It
was excellent (as was the case with most of the food we've eaten in Italy) and it was fun to
sit with just the adults and get to know some of them better.
While we were wine tasting and eating dinner, the kids all went
to a home where an older Italian couple taught them to make pizza (using a real wood oven) and biscotti. While the girls weren’t really looking
forward to it, they all really enjoyed it.
It was a great day of hard riding and great eating. J
