Le Marche another Italy
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Le Marche encompasses everything one would want from Italy. Incredible countryside from the Sibillini mountains to the glorious coastline, classic landscapes, castellated hilltops towns, culture, art, music, indoor, outdoor and watersports, wonderful wildlife, fun, delicious food and wines, quality fashions and footwear, museums, churches, culture, history – so much to do and see. Experience life to its fullest – experience Le Marche!
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Natural Organic Bread Making in the Sibillini Mountains

Natural Organic Bread Making in the Sibillini Mountains | Le Marche another Italy | Scoop.it
A morning demonstration of bread making using natural yeast in the Sibillini mountains.
The demonstration took place at a wonderful organic farm in the Sibillni mountains: Azienda Agricola Michele. They grow their own organic wheat, using old methods, then take their flour to a very old mill in Umbria that uses only river water to power the stone grinding wheels.
These mills are very rare today but this milling method retains all of the nutrients in the wheat so he thinks it’s worth the travel and hassle of bringing his wheat there.
This azienda only makes a wheat classified as #2, a light whole grain which has all of the germ and most of the bran left in. No white flour here. They grow 2 types of flour, a soft wheat for bread, (I forgot the name, but it’s an old variety) and an old variety of hard wheat to make pasta called “Senatore Cappelli”
The pasta is actually made in an old fashioned pasta making place near Tivoli, outside of Rome. Once again, the travel and hassle is worth it to Michele because they do such a superior job turning the flour into pasta.
Not all pasta is equal…how it’s made, which flour, which water, what temperatures, etc etc. make one pasta different from another. It’s an art form.
The bread is made with a natural yeast starter.
The azienda also makes and sells cookies, traditional cookies made with flour, olive oil and vino cotto. No rising agents, no salt, no butter. He mixes the dough, then lets it sit overnight, then in the morning the dough is shaped by hand into little wreaths. We all had a go at this. It’s harder than it looks because each little chunk of dough needs to be warmed in your hands by kneading it until it becomes pliable enough to shape. Good thing there were a lot of us.
Bread made with natural wheat flour and yeast tastes of wheat, has slight sour flavor (not at all like commercial sour doughs) and keeps at least a week, unlike modern Italian bakery bread that becomes hard and crumbly after less than a day. It’s easy to digest, is full of nutrients and best of all has that lovely greyish color, hard crust and springy texture of the breads I so fondly remember from my youth, when most of the bread in Italy was made from these unrefined flours and baked in wood ovens.
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Hats Off to the Artisans in Marche

Hats Off to the Artisans in Marche | Le Marche another Italy | Scoop.it

The ever growing fashion trend of that popular accessory
Lately designers are paying more attention to that great fashion accessory – the Hat. When the Italian newspapers showed photos of The Duchess of Cambridge, (Kate Middleton) wearing a ‘Made in Italy’ work of art, a dainty red hat, we traced it’s origins here to our region of Le Marche.
From the world of hip-hop to Hollywood, the fashionable crowd are again sporting headgear. Casual caps, simple pork pies and fascinators… think Brad Pitt, Kate Moss, Lady Gaga, they all know how to wear a hat for true a style statement.
Most Italian hats are made in the little town of Montappone in Le Marche region, and the 6 villages surrounding it. It’s as if the people grow up here with hat-making in their DNA. A 19th century fresco of the town has the figures painted with golden ribbons of straw streaming out from their hands – they used to plait straw as they walked to church. The straw hat festival continues every year, Il Cappello di Paglia, in July. Historical and cultural memory of this ancient art is on show at the Hat Museum, which houses historical artifacts, and proudly treasures the last hat worn by the director Federico Fellini. If you are stuck for ideas for that next wedding or Ascot horserace meeting the Museum has a display of ‘Mad Hats’ Cappellaio Pazzo.
Today the hats are fashionable, sexy and make a statement about you. It’s possible to find any kind of hat in these factories, from baseball caps to high fashion catwalk creations. The Italian design is very creative. Many of the factories have their own designers and others work for the big name Italian fashion designers, either to detailed specification or just by adding logos to their own production.

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