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In Sicily, the land has always whispered to those who listen. For young Sicilian winemaker, Arianna Occhipinti, the call came early. At just 16, she found herself pouring wine at Italy’s grand Vinitaly fair, an invitation extended by her uncle, Giusto. From that moment, a quiet passion stirred—a calling she would eventually chase back home to the arid, sandy soils of Vittoria, Sicily, in the shadow of the Hyblean Mountains. But Arianna was not the sort to follow someone else’s script. While attending winemaking college in Milan, she was taught formulas, recipes, the kind of winemaking that sought perfection in predictability. Arianna instead wanted wine that lived and breathed its roots. She clashed with her professors in heated debates, refusing to bow to commercial yeasts and “textbook” methods. No, she wanted a wine that was raw, unfiltered—a voice of the Sicilian soil. At just 22, she moved back to Sicily and released her first bottles, crafted from Nero d’Avola and Frappato, two of Sicily’s most prized native grapes. Each wine was a statement. Nero d’Avola, bold with dark berries and spice; Frappato, light and fresh, with hints of red fruit and flowers. “I feel myself in their expression,” she says—a Sicilian pouring her soul into each glass, guided not by tradition, but by the raw instincts of a winemaker born to break the rules. And to give you a little taste of her personality and passion for Sicilian wine, here’s a short clip from Stanley Tucci’s "Searching for Italy," where you’ll hear directly from Arianna herself.