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Cook at Seliano
Paestum and Tenuta Seliano

 

PaestumTo quote the Blue Guide to Southern Italy, "Paestum has been for a thousand years a romantic ruin in the midst of a solemn wilderness. Its Doric temples, unsurpassed even by those of Athens in noble simplicity and good preservation, produce an incomparable effect of majesty and grandeur."

That’s evocative but not exactly true. Paestum is more than 2,500 years old, not a mere 1,000, and it’s surrounding countryside is no longer a solemn wilderness, but rich, bucolic farm land.

The city was founded in the 6th century BC by the Greeks, who called it Poseidonia, referring to Poseidon, the Greek god of the sea because it is on the sea. (Neptune is Poseidon’s Roman name). In ancient times it was famous for its roses, which bloomed two seasons of the year, and for violets, which still grow wild. It appears to have been gradually abandoned because the swampy land harbored malaria-carrying mosquitoes. In 877 AD, it was destroyed by the Saracens, after which the ruins became overgrown and hidden. They were rediscovered in the 18th century when the road that now still exists was built.

The famous line about Mussolini is that "at least he made the trains run on time." In Paestum, which is the Latin name for the ancient city, the joke about Mussolini is that at least he drained the swamps. A water/irrigation system was built, and now, with the water and mosquitoes under control, the land is fertile and the area has become not only a place to raise water buffalo and crops, but a beach resort, mainly for Italian families.

The main feature of the ruins of Paestum are three 5th and 6th century Doric temples. Greek painting is extremely rare, but an exquisite tomb mural dedicated to "the diver" was discovered in Paestum and is housed in the museum across the road. A visit to the temples and the museum is always on the agenda at Cook At Seliano. They are just down the road.

TowerThe Sele Plain on which the temples sit, and for which Tenuta Seliano is named, is now most famous for mozzarella di bufala, and the main road is lined with small cheese factories. Naturally, we visit a cheese factory to see how the mozzarella, ricotta, and other buffalo dairy products are made.

The Seliano estate itself was built in the 18th century as, primarily, a horse-breeding farm. Only in the last decade has it been converted into an agriturismo with modern, comfortable accommodations in former horse stables and other farm buildings. Horseback riding is available. At Masseria Eliseo, down the road, the Bellelli family breeds water buffalo, and the rooms there, as well as the kitchen in which we conduct classes, are only a few years old.

 
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