My First Glass of Good Chianti
Friday, September 18th, 2009I was flying from Norway to Malta via Pisa, Italy, with just a backpack and a safari vest to give myself the mobility and freedom I needed to finally start appreciating the process of travelling. With four hours on my hands between the planes, I figured I would have at least two hours to spend in Pisa and even pre-booked the five-minute train ride from Trenitalia’s website, to spare the time needed to figure out the ticketing machines. Pisa is small, and thus better explored by foot. I hoped to get to see the Falling Tower instead of sitting at the airport doing nothing.
The reality proved to be even better than the expectations. The plane wasn’t late, despite a 20-minute delay on departure, it must have taken me a quarter of an hour to get to the train and within a few minutes there I was – walking the streets of Galileo’s hometown.
Just following the signs, I walked and I walked, expecting noisy screaming Italy with disorderly traffic and cramped streets with battered pavement seemingly dating back to Roman times. Pisa met me with a lazy mid-day softness and the smell of ozone. Nobody screamed and the only people rushing were the tourists. The cars waited for you to pass, the people were quiet and polite and the regular refugees were selling fakes along the street leading up from the station.
The Duomo and the Falling Tower seem strangely non-photogenic when I reach them. It is the angle of the tower than is disconcerting. Either I get the tower straight and everything else is bending to the left – or I get the tower straight and everything else is bending to the right. The few shots where the alignment of the Duomo and the tourists is correct do not do justice to the tower, because I can’t find the right angle to shoot from, and its top gets cut off.
I rush back after a while because I still have to grab a bite before leaving for the airport. As usual, I pass by the better cafes to find an even better one only to realise there are none. I end up almost near the station too tired to go back to find those really good ones again, and decide to turn onto a side street. Two pizza joints seem completely out of the question, while the third one, an empty cafe with plastic tables and chairs and paper table cloths in white and red seems to be just the right thing.
The man behind the counter greets me warmly – me or the obviously well-known customer who walks in with me? I order an omelet with zucchini, the first thing I see really, and try to order water and wine from the lady in charge, but water proves to be complicated enough, as she doesn’t speak any English. Raising her hands, she begs me to stop at once. Her daughter, the polyglot, will deal with me in English, I am told. Sit, sit.
I sit at the wall, facing the TV, somewhat intimidated by the home-stay feel of this cafe. When you don’t belong, privacy becomes a necessity. The customers who came in every five minutes were all greeted with equal warmth reserved for long-time acquaintances. It made the language barrier and my strangeness all the more noticeable.
When I had eaten, the polyglot daughter, a girl of about twenty, came to ask me whether I wanted anything else, fruit or coffee. Yes, coffee – and red wine. Somehow ordering two things didn’t quite work that day, but the wine request got through. Red wine? Italian? Yes, yes, please. She left with my dishes and came back with a huge glass, like the ones made for serving aged wines, on the bottom of which the 125ml of red looked like a tiny mouthful. Chianti, she announced, proudly placing the glass on the table and bowing her head slightly, with the air of an embassy reception hostess. The wine, nearly hot, exuded a warm mellow aroma, reminiscent of the earth and the flowers on a hot sunny day. It had the unmistakable flavour of Chianti, the warmth, the aftertaste…
As I was leaving, the owner, her husband and the polyglot daughter were all saying good-bye to me, with the warmth reserved for a long-term acquaintance.