Greetings from Robbi and Jim
A warm welcome to all of the members of our Aroma Tours newsletter in more than
50 countries around the world.
All is now well under way for next year's tour season and Robbi and I are
thrilled by the wonderful early response we are enjoying for all of our 2008
offerings.
We are so very grateful and feel truly blessed to see our dreams flourishing as we continue to
share our passion for our Aroma Tours with wonderful people from around the
world.
Latest Memorable Photos Pages et al
We love what we do and it is always a great joy for us to receive the many
lovely messages of thanks that arrive after we return from our tour season. We also
enjoy
browsing through the photos of our adventures remembering the many delightful
moments we shared.
We thought you might enjoy a little reading and peeking yourself at: Aroma Travellers Have Their
Say and Memorable
Photos 2007-3
Please remember that there are also hundreds of other lovely photos that we have
collected over the years in our Picture
Gallery Pages for your viewing pleasure.
Our Current Booking Status
We are once again enjoying a fabulous start to the upcoming tour season with
both our Turkish
Aromatic Odyssey and Flavours of
Italy Tour already fully booked as well as a healthy number of early bookings for all of our other tours.
Our booking status at present is:-
With all of this lovely enthusiasm about, it seems likely that more of our tours
will be filling in the next short while, so if you are planning to join us in 2008
and would like to reserve your
place, please do visit our Tour
Booking Page shortly.
Please contact us at info@aroma-tours.com
if we can assist you with any questions you may have.
- Our up-to-the-moment booking status is available via our Calendar
Page
Aroma Travellers Our Thanks
One of the main reasons that we continue to grow and flourish, is
the on-going support we receive from our past Aroma Travellers and
this has certainly been the case this year with our highest ever number of
returning guests. It was a great delight for us to
be welcoming back so many good friends.
Robbi and I would also like to give our heart-felt thanks to all of you
who continue to support us with your kind words and referrals and by
spreading news of our tours and retreats amongst your friends.
Provence Lavender Dreams
Whenever possible between our busy schedule of tours, Robbi and I like to take a
little time off to relax and catch up with our friends.
This year we were absolutely delighted to finally be able to stay a few days
with our dear friends Jack and Sophie on their lavender farm, high in the Haute
Vaucluse: arguably the largest true French lavender farm in the world.
The lavender harvest was in full swing, so everything was a bustle, with
harvesters plying their way gracefully along the long rows, creating swathes of
aromatic purple blooms that could be seen in various stages of drying [ over 2
or 3 days ], in preparation for their journey to the distillery.
I found myself fascinated by the patterns the machinery left in the dusty
soil and the wisps of lavender scattered randomly at the end of the rows. Also,
the way the landscape was gradually changing from vibrant purple, to rows of
green, set between the swathes of cut blooms.
The distillery with its twin "couldrons" was the heart of
operations with deliveries of fragrant lavender constantly arriving by the
tonne. Ready for their metamorphosis into this most precious of essential oils:
the aromatic "grassy" smell of freshly distilled lavender was
everywhere.
At evening meal times it was exciting to share with our friends [ freshly back from cutting, collecting and
distilling ] their news of the day's work; weather, equipment breakdowns,
essential oil yield and quality...... As always the conversation quickly turned
to light-hearted banter as we sat - glass of wine in hand - watching the amazing
sight of the sun setting over 80 hectares of lavender fields.
During the daytime, I took to rambling amongst the fields and through the nearby forests
which were absolutely bursting with wild lavender - we were after all in the
natural home of this amazing plant. In one spot, I found a veritable carpet of
wild lavender and nearby, dozens of hives with their nimbus of bees busily
gathering lavender flavoured honey.
I can't begin to describe the beauty and incredible joy we felt during those
precious few days except to say:-
"To drift off to sleep in the true darkness of night, as the gentle lavender
scented breeze outside, dances across the flowering rows of purple - all is
bliss, all is bliss...."
- Lavender is one of our strongest anchors to Provence and has always welcomed
us. It is always a joy for us to share our love of this amazing plant with our Aroma Travellers in Provence each
year.
Aroma Tours Vision Statement
Earlier this year Robbi was a speaker at several conferences and as
the finale for her presentation, "Living a Visionary Life - Rekindling Purpose and
Passion", we created a Vision
Statement for Aroma Tours to illustrate our journey over the years.
The combination of photos and music did a wonderful job of expressing the
passion we have for our chosen adventure - Aroma Tours. We hope that you enjoy
it.
- Please turn on your computer's speakers, and if you internet link is a bit
slow please be patient while the video file loads.
The Story of Champagne - Part 3
The Story of Champagne continues: ( Part 1
and Part 2 can be found in our
previous newsletters )
Champagne was enjoying an era of unprecedented growth and skyrocketing
popularity in the late 1860's as demand for their sparkling wines continued to
spread throughout the world. However, with the end of the American Civil War [
circa 1867 ] there was a great deal of political friction in Europe, which when
coupled with Napoleon III's desire for power and the corruption and nepotism of
his government, led to growing animosity between France and neighbouring
Prussia.
The Champenois were rightly concerned about what this would mean for them;
both their business fortunes and the fact that due to its' location, Champagne
would inevitably become the primary battle ground for any hostilities. This
concern was well founded, and in July 1870 Napoleon III declared war on Prussia.
Within two weeks, three hundred and fifty thousand Prussia troops and reservists poured into Alsace-Lorraine,
sweeping all before them. That is until they arrived in Champagne, where instead of the normal hot summer, they were
greeted with plunging temperatures and torrential rain that turned the countryside into a morass of sticky mud.
The
weather had changed almost the moment that the invasion began and once again made true the ancient legend:
"God sends
a bad harvest to mark the beginning of war".
Hostilities were both short lived and savage with dreadful losses on both
sides. This was largely due to the advent of the machine gun and long range
artillery, which were now being used for the first time with devastating effect.
By September 1st, Napoleon III had led France to a humiliating defeat and was deposed in favour of a new Government
of National Defence who, despite their weak position, steadfastly refused to acquiesce
to Prussia's demand for the territory of Alsace-Lorraine. Now
Paris itself was to be held to account, however, unhappily for the Champenois, Reims lay directly on the line of march
and Champagne quickly found itself under military occupation by thirty thousand
thirsty Prussian troops.
Knowing that "The German hates the Frenchman but loves his
wines", the Champenois set to walling up their
champagne stores. Over the ensuing months curfews, arbitrary taxes [ usually in bottles of champagne ] led
ultimately to a guerrilla war and subsequent bloody reprisals.
By January 1871 in the midst of a particularly severe winter, the situation for Champagne was bleak. It had borne the
brunt of the Prussian occupation, crops had been left to rot, champagne sales were in a slump and more than two and
a half million bottles had been pillaged by the Prussian soldiers.
It was at this most inopportune moment, that Louise
Pommery divined that tastes for champagne were changing and decided to
"risk it all" by making the first significant attempt at producing a dry white 'Brut style'
champagne. This new drier style was more difficult and expensive to make, needed better
quality, more fully ripened grapes and required three years, instead of one for ageing.
Champagne makers such as Louis Roederer had made a
name for themselves by selling sweet champagne [ mainly to Russia ] and were
very resistant to the idea of Brut style champagnes, which they feared would
damage the reputation of their own product. However, it was true to say that at
the time, many makers relied on added syrup and sugar to mask faults in their
wine [
especially excess acidity caused by picking unripe grapes ]. Louise Pommery
persisted against this tide of opinion by
contracting growers and agreeing to buy all of their grapes as long as she could say when they would be
picked.
Because of poor growing conditions in Champagne, it took three years for her to
achieve the quality she was hoping for, however, in 1874 the Pommery and Greno
Brut champagne produced was so good and fetched such a high price, that it swept all before
it and was heralded as the best vintage of
the century! Pommery and Greno as a result was transformed from a small company
into one of the largest and most important champagne houses. Louise had
single-handedly changed the character of champagne forever.
Following the devastation of the Franko-Prussian war, it was expected that
France would take thirty to fifty years to recover, but thanks to the industrial
revolution of Napoleon III's reign, the French came roaring back.
Three World's Fairs between 1878 and 1900 drew people to Paris from all over the
world. Champagne flowed like Niagara Falls and helped fuel a soaring optimism
that led to the construction of the Eiffel Tower in 1889. Every day seemed to
bring something new: horseless carriages on the Champs-Elysées, the first
telephone booth, the first Metro line, Marie Curie and Louis Pasteur making
great discoveries, the opening of the Moulin Rouge, Hedonism and
Toulouse-Lautrec's posters of beautiful women holding glasses of champagne were
all the fashion.
It was the time of the Belle Époque and the Gay 90's. Everything
sparkled, the people, the conversation, the decor and especially
the wine! Champagne prices were at an all-time high and as one wine grower in
Champagne put it, "it's like a rain of gold".
By the end of the nineteenth century, champagne was firmly fixed as part of
the French national character: "It bubbles like our spirit, it is piquant
like our language, it sparkles and chatters and is constantly in motion".
It became the symbol of the importance of a moment: the birth of a child, a
marriage, the launching of a ship, friends getting together.
With the advent of modern advertizing, the great champagne houses battled to
promote their brands, often utilizing "stunts" to gain notoriety and
put their name in the headlines. Eugène Mercier arrived at the 1889 World's
Fair with a team of twenty four white oxen pulling the world's largest wine
barrel [ it took 16 years to build and contained the equivalent of two hundred
thousand bottles of champagne ].
Moet and Chandon's agent in New York substituted a bottle of their French
champagne for the German "sekt" [ also a sparkling white wine ] that
was meant to be used for the christening of Kaiser Wilhelm II's new imperial
yacht. Unlike his father Wilhelm I, he was adamant that only German wines would
ever pass his lips and when the deception was discovered it provoked an
international incident, which of course guaranteed that the name of Moet and
Chandon was emblazoned in newspapers across America.
Mass advertizing was new and there was an "anything
goes" attitude, which inevitably led to the phenomenon of name rustling.
Unscrupulous individuals used famous names like Moët and Chandon to their
advantage: Léon Chandon realized that if his name was printed just right,
people would confuse the champagne he made with Moët and Chandon.
Other "faux champagnes" were made by paying people for
the use of their family names in order to legally high-jack their more famous
name-sakes such as Clicquot [ Victor Clicquot, brick layer ] and Roederer [ Theophile
Roederer, a waiter from Strasbourg ]. There was even a Pommery
"champagne" [ Madame Pommery, a French cook ] made in Rheims, New York USA!
The Belle Époque was the Golden Age of champagne but as the
twentieth century dawned, the glamour and excitement that characterized the era
was being replaced by a growing anxiety. As one historian remarked: "The Belle Époque
had become a dance on top of a volcano".
In Champagne, cheaper grapes had begun pouring in from the south [ especially the
Loire valley ], undercutting the local growers and threatening their way
of life. According to them, using wine and grapes that did not come from
Champagne was wrong and the result was not "real" champagne.
The situation for the Champenois continued to deteriorate and it
didn't help that champagne producers only had to source 51 percent of their
grapes from Champagne for the wine to use that name: the other 49 percent was up
to the maker. Some unscrupulous producers even resorted to using pear, apple and
even rhubarb juice! No law existed at the time that said that wine had to be
made entirely from grapes and the potential for fraud and a quick profit, was
enormous.
For the growers it just kept getting worse, as the vine-eating
louse phylloxera began to devastate their crops. It was however, not lost on
them that sales of champagne worldwide had doubled despite the fact that nearly
every harvest in Champagne between 1889 and 1907 had been deplorable. The
extremely low prices that they were being paid for their grapes [ if indeed they
could even sell them ] led to the saying that "phylloxera isn't the only parasite
in our vineyards".
Over the years until 1913, the distrust in governments that
allowed Champagne's growers to be so unfairly exploited, as well as the struggle
between the regions of Marne and Aube to settle the legitimate boundaries of
Champagne, led the region into insurrection that at times hovered on the verge
of civil war.
In the summer of 1914 the French government was finally bowing
to pressure and starting to introduce measures to combat wine fraud and ensure that growers
would receive a fair price for their grapes, when news arrived that a young
Serbian nationalist in Sarajevo had just assassinated Archduke Ferdinand of
Austria and his
wife.
World War One had begun.....
The final part of The Story of Champagne will continue in our
next newsletter.
Etruscan Treasure Hunt
One of the exciting things about our work is the continual discovery of
wonderful new places and experiences to share with our Aroma Travellers, which this year
in Tuscany included
a newly discovered Etruscan
burial site - complete with archaeologists, unearthing discoveries on
a daily basis.
The site dates from circa 600 BC and because of
continuous flooding in the area during and after Roman times, it was gradually
covered by a layer of protective mud and has been lying there undiscovered until
now.
The site has several different tombs for high-ranking families and is the
only example yet found of an intact Etruscan temple stairway. It was fascinating
to talk with the archaeologists and see how Roman tombs and artefacts, added to the site in later epochs [ after
the war-like Romans had absorbed the Etruscan culture into their own ] looked
simple and haphazard in comparison.
For that matter the stone arch, thought to
be one of the crowning achievements of Roman ingenuity was in fact invented by
the Etruscans 100's of years before and was "borrowed" by the Romans.
There
are so many discoveries and delights to enjoy during our Aromas of Tuscany
tour and we look forward to sharing "Slow Food" and the "Sweet Life"
in the beautiful Tuscan hills and villages, with our Aroma Travellers again next
year.
Wonderful New Hotel for Flavours of Provence ( Repeat
)
During our travels we are always keeping an eye out for new locations and
experiences to add to our offerings and as a result we are excited to announce that next year we will be spending the first
three nights of our Flavours of
Provence Tour in a beautiful, newly-renovated boutique hotel that we discovered and immediately fell in love with.
We have also added a few small changes to the Flavours itinerary to make our
time together even more delightful.
For details please visit our Information
Request Page
Moules Marinière
I was reminded of one of my favourite Provencale dishes the other day during
a visit by my
parents who are now living at Portarlington by the sea.
Their offer of a box of fresh mussels
straight from the boat next time they visit, set my mouth "a-water" as
memories of my first taste of Moules Marinière in Avignon many years ago came
flooding back.
Ingredients
2kg fresh mussels
45g butter
1 large onion, finely chopped
1/2 celery stalk, finely chopped
2 cloves of garlic, crushed
400ml dry white wine
1 bay leaf
2 thyme sprigs
220ml double cream
2 tbsp parsley, finely chopped
Method
- Scrub the mussels to remove their beards. Discard any that are already
open.
- Melt the butter in a large saucepan and cook the onion, celery and garlic,
stirring occasionally, over moderate heat until the onion is softened but
not browned.
- Add the wine, bay leaf and thyme to the saucepan and bring to the boil.
- Add the mussels, cover the saucepan tightly and simmer over low heat for
2-3 minutes, shaking the saucepan occasionally. Remove the lid and use tongs
to remove the mussels to a warm dish as they open. Throw away any mussels
that haven't opened after 4 minutes.
- Strain the liquid through a fine sieve into a clean saucepan, leaving
behind any grit or sand. Bring to the boil and boil for 2 minutes. Blend in
the cream and reheat the sauce without boiling. Season well.
Serve the mussels in individual bowls with the sauce poured over them and
garnish with the parsley. Enjoy them with lots of fresh crusty bread. Mmmm!
Email, White Lists and Address Books
Over the years the circulation of our Aroma Tours newsletter has grown to
more than 5000 subscribers and in these days of filters and anti-spam software
it is becoming increasingly more difficult to be sure that our email will
arrive safely in your inbox.
There is of course good reason to have this filtering, however, as a consequence
we recommend that you add our email address info@aroma-tours.com
to your address book or white list to help ensure that our emails will continue to be delivered to you successfully.
- If of course for any reason you would prefer to stop receiving our
newsletter please don't hesitate to email us at info@aroma-tours.com
to unsubscribe.
Arranging Your Travel
To join us on tour all your need to do is make your travel
arrangements to meet us at our rendezvous point, either with the help
of your travel agent, or for the more adventurous, by booking your
flights and connections yourselves. All of our rendezvous are easily
achieved and naturally we provide all of the information and
assistance that you will need.
Just a reminder that we have a Frequently
Asked Questions Page to help answer the most common questions
including how to book, travel arrangements, group sizes etc.
Previous Newsletters
Our past newsletters are well worth a browse and are available in our Newsletter
Archives
You may also enjoy reading a few of the stories that we have compiled
over the years on our Stories
of Interest Page
Thought for the Day
"If we could see the miracle of a single flower clearly, our
whole life would change."
~ Buddha
Our Invitation
Robbi and I look forward to welcoming you to one of our delightful tours
or retreats in the near future and invite you to visit our Aroma
Tours Website for more information and to take a peek at the latest photos of our
travels in our Photo
Galleries
If you would like detailed information about any of our tours please visit
our Information
Request Page
As always if you have any questions or if you would like us to assist
you personally with advice about your travel arrangements or with any
other details please contact us either by email at info@aroma-tours.com
or by phone on +61 3 5331 3254 ( afternoon/evening USA time zones, mornings from other countries ).
Warmest regards,
Jim and Robbi
Aroma Tours (R)
4 Cootamundra Road
Invermay 3352 Australia
Mailing Address:
PO Box 55N Ballarat North 3350 Australia
p: +61 3 5331 3254
f: +61 3 5331 3254
e: info@aroma-tours.com
w: www.aroma-tours.com