Whether you have been in Italy for  a few weeks or  for fifty years,   old
traditions and seasonal treats are never forgotten. 
Thanksgiving   is perhaps the best loved American tradition
for it means  getting together with
family and friends, relaxing and enjoying 
good food and music.   
| Refectory, Abbazia di San Giusto, Tuscania | 
| tower and cloister, San Giusto Abbey | 
A few years ago the culinaryconcierge team of Mark and Ginger Medina-Rios brought the traditional Thanksgiving meal to Tuscania and now it is a consolidated “happening” loved by both expats, visiting Americans and local Italians.
This year both lunch and dinner sittings were offered along with a few special twists and additions.
The rectory of the  magnificent 12th century  Abbey of San Giusto, hidden in the Marta
river  valley  near Tuscania  was the setting for the  Thanksgiving meal  and entertainment. 
 Recently restored after centuries of abandonment,
the Abbey is now  a splendid example
of  medieval religious  architecture 
where the church, cloister, refectory, and abbey rooms have been  returned to their simple, original splendor.
| Ginger with some of the guests | 
| guests from Tuscania, Vetralla, Castel Cellesi | 
 After  admiring  the  Abbey and its  resident cats and donkeys, the guests who
arrived from as far away as  USA, UK, Rome, Orvieto, Orte   and towns in-between, were lured into the
Refectory by the sound of music  and the
perfumes  emanating  from Mark’s kitchen. 
| Some of the Orvieto group | 
| musicians from Montefiascone | 
| serving mulled wine | 
Under  the  high ceilings of the refectory   appetizers,
mulled wine and  aperitivi  were enjoyed along with ethnic and   folk music  
by  instrumentalists of  Minima Mysticanza  from Montefiascone. 
Mark and  Ginger,
along with  a small   team of
helpers,  orchestrated  the 
luncheon and evening meals  to
perfection.
|  | 
| Mark carves the turkey | 
 The location, the history behind the monastic complex, the music and good
will  all added  to the
special atmosphere. 
As plates of delicious food  and bottles of wine from the
Sergio Mottura vineyards  were passed
back and forth along the long  tables, strangers  became friends,  connections were made and consolidated . 
 The  monks who inhabited these halls  hundreds of years ago  had never tasted most of the foods  offered: pumpkins, turkey and sweet potatoes  had still to arrive from the New World.
| mini pumpkin pies | 
| and then the dancing began | 
The afternoon evolved with guests enjoying  mini pumpkin 
pies and some even added to  the  entertainment   dancing  the tango, jigs and reels . 
More about the history of the  San Giusto abbey    at this link and in  the book. 
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| see chapter "Mysterious Sites of N. Lazio" | 
