|
Agriturismo
Or did. The carabiniere corps known as NAS (Nucleo Antisofisticazione) is in charge of quality control of products meant for human consumption. They are the ones that check the chemicals in food, the purity of drinking water, the hygienic conditions in slaughterhouses, etc. In places that take guests, NAS also checks the hygienic and safety conditions. NAS has just issued a report on the state of agriturismo in Italy. The news is not good. Of the 617 establishments checked, 184 of them had violations, some of them serious enough to warrant punitive legal action. Violations were disproportionately high in southern Italy—Campania, Abruzzo, and Calabria—and included faulty sanitation, improper ratio of guests to available space, lack of safety measures, poor conservation of food and improper slaughtering of animals for meat. A number of establishments did not even seem to be agriturismo
in the accepted sense of the term. They were little
more than restaurants or hotels that had decided to
cash in on our societal yearning for—and lemming-like
summer rush to return to—the good old days. These
places were by a main road, say, and just decided to
hang their agriturismo shingle on that one tree out in
the parking lot. I have not given up on the quest for
the perfect, small family-farm with the authentic
cheese, wine and bread, the one with the scythe from
1840 mounted over the fireplace. Nor should you give
up, but if it has a blinking neon sign, alternating
blue and yellow for "agri-" and "-turismo,"
keep driving. to: portal index for
traditions, sociology, customs, etc. |