Giovanni Testa

Cascina Grampa and the "pista del riso".

Giovanni Testa, a young engineer from Turin, after having spent his childhood and youth in the city, decided with his father to take over the management of the family farm, which had been left in the hands of local farmers for many years. Located in San Pietro Mosezzo, the farmhouse stands out for a truly rare feature: having a canal available for exclusive use: the Roggia Crosa. The story deals with the description of the machinery and professions that were traditionally used in the Po Valley for rice processing in great technical detail.

At Cascina Grampa, under a layer of cement, Giovanni discovers six vases, dug out of a single block of stone, the remains of a rice track, a machine, driven by the force of the water, which through an abrasive action, hulls the grains of paddy rice and gradually whitens them. The entrepreneurial project and one of the identifying characteristics of Grampa rice was born from this discovery. Today the virtuous synthesis of traditional processes, combined with recent optical technologies for the selection of the beans, allows to obtain an extraordinary and unique product.

The interview is full of anecdotes and historical information on the subject of rice which compare the Novara plain with that of Lombardy and with the Veronese area.

Interview information

Geographic information

Country: IT

Region: Piemonte

City: San Pietro Mosezzo

Suburb: Cascina Grampa

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People

Giovanni Testa

Date of birth: 09-13-1973
City: Torino
School: University
Profession: Farmer
Languages: Italiano

Document by: Luca Ghiardo
Video by: Gianpaolo Fassino, Luca Ghiardo
Created: 16-05-2017

Questo video fa parte del seguente archivio
Rice stories

Rice stories

Food is a fundamental resource for man and his health, both through the supply of nutrients and the ability to embody traits of human culture that play a leading role in our well-being.

Over time, each territory has built original ways in which to relate to the fruits of its land, enriching them with rituals, symbolic meanings and culinary customs. Much of these relationships have been lost following the years of the economic boom, with the exodus from the countryside to urban centers, with the advent of agriculture for mass production and ultimately with the globalization of markets and the consequent impoverishment of the heritage of biodiversity and ethnodiversity.

The purpose of this archive is to collect evidence relating to the main rice production area in Europe, that is the Po Valley, and to investigate, through the analysis of textual sources and testimonies collected in the field, both what survives of this heritage, and the ways in which which has evolved and reached us, paying particular attention to the explicit and implicit links that bind food and health.

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