Campania
The Amalfi Coast's dramatic beauty—Positano's cliffside villages, Capri's azure waters, Pompeii's preserved history—provides the backdrop for some of Italy's most ancient winemaking. Campania's indigenous varieties like Aglianico, Fiano, Falanghina, and Greco di Tufo produce wines that have captivated travelers for millennia. Our relationships span historic estates in Taurasi, coastal producers overlooking the Mediterranean, and family wineries where traditions reach back to Roman times. Between vineyard visits, experience the region through Michelin-starred coastal dining, archaeological exploration with private guides at Pompeii and Herculaneum, ceramic workshops in Vietri sul Mare, limoncello tastings in Sorrento's lemon groves, and boat excursions to Capri's hidden coves. This is Southern Italian wine at its most profound—powerful reds, elegant whites, and cultural experiences that capture Mediterranean luxury.
CULINARY ARTS
Learning to make pizza from a master at legendary Neapolitan pizzerias where the craft hasn't changed in generations, watching mozzarella di bufala shaped by hand at working farms minutes from the coast, fresh Mediterranean seafood prepared dockside with the morning's catch, tasting colatura di alici — Cetara's ancient anchovy elixir passed down from Roman garum traditions, sfogliatella still warm from neighborhood pasticcerie in Naples, limoncello made from Sorrento lemons picked that afternoon in terraced groves above the sea.
CULTURE & LEISURE
Private Pompeii and Herculaneum tours with archaeologists who bring the ruins to life, wandering Positano's bougainvillea-draped stairways down to the sea, boat rides to Capri for long seaside lunches overlooking the Faraglioni, evening concerts at Ravello's Villa Rufolo suspended above the coastline, the Path of the Gods hiking trail where cliffs meet open Mediterranean sky, private yacht charters tracing the Amalfi Coast from Sorrento to Salerno.
ARTISAN TRADITIONS
Painting your own majolica tile alongside ceramicists in Vietri sul Mare whose families have worked the kilns for centuries, coral jewelry crafted by hand in Torre del Greco's workshops dating to the Bourbon kings, watching Sorrento's master intarsiatori transform tiny cuts of wood into intricate inlaid designs, handmade leather sandals fitted to your feet in a Positano workshop steps from the beach, paper pressed by hand in Amalfi's medieval mills along the same river that powered them in the thirteenth century.