H
food
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

CONTACT

EMAILmukum.sherma@gmail.com
© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Rustic no more: let’s drink to Sicilian wine

5 days ago
A picture


Now that the third season (OK, discourse treadmill) of The White Lotus is sinking into the horizon, and its many fans flock to Thailand in the hope of catching a whiff of Walton Goggins (who I’m in no doubt smells absolutely lovely), I’m grateful that Sicily, the location of season two, might finally be a little less busy.Not least because of its wines.The Guardian’s journalism is independent.We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link.Learn more.

Wine has been made on Sicily for thousands of years, and the island’s been colonised by just about every ancient civilisation before the Italians took over in the late 1800s.Mass emigration to the US coupled with the two world wars meant that the local wine industry suffered for much of the 20th century, and it’s only been in the past 30 years that it has moved away from an association with bulk cooperative production to prioritising excellence (a story shared with many wine regions internationally).To understand Sicilian wine, you need to get to grips with a handful of native grape varieties that are unique, and vital, to the region.Nero d’avola is the most widely planted red variety, and it produces an inky, dark-fruited wine with suggestions of something herbal such as liquorice and toasted tobacco.Its ready-to-drink iterations are endlessly reliable, but some of the best require time in the bottle.

Nerello mascalese and frappato, meanwhile, which I would say are the next two most popular red grape varieties, are sprightly and aromatic in comparison.Often used in blends, they also produce elegant, pretty and perfumed wines in their own right.In terms of whites, cataratto takes the title of the most-planted grape.Of the others, saline and mineral carricante and crisp, savoury grillo are both used to make marsala, the island’s famous fortified wine that hails from the coastal town of the same name.There are 22 other DOCs on Sicily, Marsala being probably the most famous, but there is also Faro out east, which is known for its supple, oak-aged reds made from nerello mascalese and nerello cappuccio.

Then there’s Etna with a terroir defined by millefeuille layers of soil and rock from centuries of volcanic eruptions, which create fertile and mineral-rich wines that brim with tension and excitement.Etna wine, in particular, has become much more coveted in recent years.Why? Because of The White Lotus, of course.“Apparently, the wine has, like, a bunch of volcanic minerals in it,” swoons Daphne in episode five of season two.“So, we can get drunk, and then tomorrow our skin and our hair and our nails will be glowing.

” Unfortunately, I am contractually obliged to inform you that drinking Sicilian wine is very unlikely to have this effect – you’re far more likely to wake up with sallow skin and several missing acrylic nails.Paolini Grillo Bio Terre Siciliane 2022 £12.50 Good Wine Good People, 12%.Vinified in stainless steel, this is all crystalline citrus with a tense, mineral finish.Costadune Mandrarossa Frappato 2024 £12.

25 The Wine Society, 13%.A tasty wee frappato that’s full of bright raspberry and fizzy lemon.Maremosso Catarratto 2022 £19.20 Parched, 13.5%.

A good entry-level orange wine,Dried herbs and preserved lemon,Martinez Marsala Superiore Garibaldi Dolce £9,50 (£9 on mix six) Majestic, 37,5%.

A velvety, sweet marsala from one of Sicily’s oldest producers.
cultureSee all
A picture

Each night, a 14-year-old tasks two actors with playing her parents. They haven’t seen the script

One evening in June last year, actor Ewen Leslie rocked up at Sydney’s Belvoir St theatre to find out what show he was performing that night and meet his fellow actors for the first time. All he had was an email telling him to prepare his best Werner Herzog impression, to wear comfortable clothes, and to expect content around “childhood, parenthood and mental health disorders”.A couple of hours later he was on stage, script in hand, being directed by a 13-year-old in front of an audience and struggling not to cry.The assignment was POV: a micro-budget, 70-minute show which follows a teenager named Bub, who is making a documentary about her parents. Each night, two adult actors who have not rehearsed or seen the script before step into the role of the parents, guided on stage by the young actor playing Bub

1 day ago
A picture

From Van Gogh to Superman: Keep cool with our guide to the summer’s best arts and entertainment

From a very hungry crocodile to some equally famished zombies, a superstar Compton rapper to a Smallville superhero: our critics choose the eye-opening arts events that will dazzle you over the next few monthsA Midsummer Night’s DreamBridge theatre, London, to 20 August Nicholas Hytner’s theatrical blockbuster returns to the Bridge theatre, which has developed a real knack for folding the audience into the action. This promenade version of Shakespeare’s romantic comedy was a smash hit six years ago and is light on its feet and effortlessly charming. The new cast includes Susannah Fielding as Titania and Emmanuel Akwafo as the hapless Bottom. Miriam GillinsonHow to Win Against HistoryBristol Old Vic, 19 June to 12 July Bristol Old Vic and Francesca Moody Productions revive this flamboyant musical based on the bonkers life of the 5th Marquess of Anglesey, who blew the family fortune on diamond dresses, lilac-dyed poodles and endless extravagances. When he died at 29, his outraged Edwardian family scrubbed him from the records

2 days ago
A picture

Demi Adejuyigbe: ‘Everything I do is because of my love for Ocean’s Eleven’

On 21 September each year between 2016 and 2021, you made a series of increasingly elaborate tributes to the Earth, Wind and Fire song September that were viewed millions of times. Do you hate that song now?I do feel stressed whenever I hear September but I try to ignore it. A few years ago, before the last video came out, I had a panic attack at a Home Depot simply by imagining that it came on. That’s when I was like, I gotta stop doing this – I don’t think I enjoy it any more. I made people think I really love that song

2 days ago
A picture

Can South by Southwest’s London debut recreate Austin’s star-making power?

South by Southwest London could become a launchpad for “music’s global superstars of the future”, according to the organisers of the event, which starts its inaugural edition on Monday.SXSW London’s director of programming, Katy Arnander, and the event’s managing director, Randel Bryan said that despite huge competition in the capital, the event, which has been billed as “Olympics of the mind” and is known as SXSW, could become a star-maker.“We had Amy Winehouse playing in tiny venues back in the day,” says Bryan, referring to the Austin event. “We’ve had Adele and Ed Sheeran, and we’re hoping that South by Southwest in London is the same platform to really launch the global superstars of the future.”The original event, which launched in the Texas capital of Austin in 1987, has grown to a London-wide festival that attracts hundreds of ­thousands of visitors to the city in March

3 days ago
A picture

My cultural awakening: A Timothée Chalamet drama made me leave my partner – and check him into rehab

It took a viewing of the 2018 film Beautiful Boy, about a father and his addict son, for me to see that my relationship had become damagingly codependentTwo summers ago, I met a man on a dating app who would become my boyfriend. The red flags were there from the start, but I ignored them all. When I stayed at his, he didn’t have a towel to offer me, and he never changed his sheets. It became obvious that he didn’t know how to look after himself. Even though, in reality, he could survive without me (similar to how a teenage boy would survive on his own, eating burgers in bed), I felt like, if I wasn’t there to buy groceries, cook and clean, he might die

3 days ago
A picture

Mountainhead to Nintendo Switch 2: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

The Ballad of Wallis IslandOut now Comedy drama co-starring and co-written by comedians Tim Key and Tom Basden. Key plays a lottery winner with some big ideas about what to do with his winnings: namely, pay his favourite musical act to reunite. Hey, it’s more interesting than buying a fancy car. Basden and Carey Mulligan play the folk duo McGwyer Mortimer.The Salt PathOut now Drama based on the true story of a 630-mile pilgrimage along the coast in Cornwall, Devon and Dorset

3 days ago
technologySee all
A picture

Starmer says Farage would spook the City and give us Truss 2 – he could be right

3 days ago
A picture

‘One day I overheard my boss saying: just put it in ChatGPT’: the workers who lost their jobs to AI

3 days ago
A picture

Trump praises Elon Musk for ‘colossal change’ as Doge adviser says farewell

3 days ago
A picture

Salutes, Maga hats and mass layoffs: Elon Musk at Doge – a timeline

4 days ago
A picture

Is every memecoin just a scam? Experts on whether Andrew Tate and Trump are fleecing their followers

4 days ago
A picture

The chaos Elon Musk and Doge are leaving behind in Washington

4 days ago