Visit Your Local PBS Station PBS Home PBS Home Programs A-Z TV Schedules Watch Video Support PBS Shop PBS Search PBS
HomeAirWaterEarthTalk For Educators
Resources
Sitemap
Talk
Douglas Gayeton
DOUGLAS GAYETON
Photographer & Pastamaker
 
Right now I'm in Pistoia, a town 30 kilometers outside Florence. I divide my time between Italy and the U.S., working on a variety of projects in film, photography and writing.
 

I Recommend...
Websites:
The Slow Food Movement
Future Imperfect: The Counter-Counter Food Future
Slow Food in The Nation
Michael Pollan on Slow Food
Lost in Italy
(includes an episode profiling my butcher, Battista)

Vertical header

Douglas Gayeton
My shoes are caked with mud: a Tuscan photo diary

Home
«  Part 4: Vino Biodinamico

Part 5: Me Viene Latte Alle Ginocchia
Tuesday, Jun 1, 2004 (05:59 PM)

A stone farmhouse in Secadura, Spain has been in my family for nearly 300 years. One of my earliest childhood memories is set in the barn behind the house. I'm standing beside my great uncle. After milking a cow he hands me the bucket to take a drink. It's warm, heavy, intoxicating (for a young boy). I've never forgotten that taste.

This isn't a memory any six year-old in Los Angeles is likely to have, first because family run farms don't really exist in LA, and second because the sale of raw milk is actually illegal.

I now live in Tuscany. In the mountains above my town a raw (non-pasteurized) milk is the basis for a type of cheese that has been under increased scrutiny as Europe attempts to establish continent-wide health laws.

This is the story of Tuscan pecorino cheese made with latte crudo or raw milk, and the farmers who've banded together to protect it...

Feature launches in a new window.

EPILOGUE: Il Podere la Fornace, the farm where these images were taken, is an agenda agricula which sells its products to the public. As their cheese is in high demand, it's a good idea to call ahead to place an order (011 39 057369034).

Click for larger version.
Stefano milks his 80 sheep
twice a day.

Click for larger version.
The stomachs of lambs
filled with milk are hung
to dry outside the barn.

Click for larger version.
The cheese (la forma) is placed
on wood racks to age.

Further:

•  One of the hallmarks of the Slow Food movement is their ongoing efforts to recognize and protect indigenous foodstuffs around the world.

•  A succint explanation of the D.O.P. process (denominazione di origine protetta)... in Italian.

Note to readers: this is Douglas Gayeton's final entry for P.O.V.'s Borders. We hope you'll check out his previous entries, below, and browse through the other guest pages on Border Talk. Thanks for stopping by.

Send Me A Comment

Home
«  Part 4: Vino Biodinamico

Past Entries
04/05 Part 1: Un Vero Macello
04/08 Part 2: La Giuseppina
04/12 Part 3: Una Scampagnata
04/20 Part 4: Vino Biodinamico
06/01 Part 5: Me Viene Latte Alle Ginocchia


The Modern Industrial Steak
Weeds for Food

Expand Your Borders
Elsewhere in P.O.V.'s Borders: Environment
Explore EARTH:
 Seedlings Garden (Shockwave required)
Cultivate your own heirloom garden patch in this interactive playspace, a marriage between new media and the age-old tradition of saving seeds.
 Seed Stewards Game
(Shockwave required)
A flock of super butterflies will help you defend your plot in this arcade-style game. Populate your garden with heirlooms and you could win a pack of real heirloom seeds.
Elsewhere on PBS.org
 Frontline:
Modern Meat

Go inside the world of the modern American meat industry. Learn about the politics of meat and whether changes in the industry have compromised the safety of beef.

Environment Home  |  Air  |  Earth  |  Water  |  Border Talk  |  For Educators  |  Resources  |  Credits  |  Site Map
P.O.V.'s Borders Home  |  About P.O.V.'s Borders  |  Contact Us
P.O.V. Home  |  About P.O.V.  |  P.O.V. Pressroom  |  P.O.V. Projects  |  Newsletter  |  About American Documentary
            Copyright © 1995-2004 American Documentary, Inc.
Powered by MOVABLE TYPE 2.64