Italian Sommelier Association

Italian Sommelier Association
Founded July 7, 1965 (1965-07-07)
Founder Gianfranco Botti, Leonardo Guerra, Ernesto Rossi, Jean Valenti
Type Non profit, Educational, Cultural
Vat IT 11526700155
Registration no. 1494/176
9401rep. / 1245racc.
Location
Coordinates 45°29′16″N 9°13′01″E / 45.487913°N 9.217054°E / 45.487913; 9.217054
Area served
International
Key people
Antonello Maietta, President
Affiliations Worldwide Sommelier Association
Mission qualify sommelier’s role and profession, therefore adding value to wine, traditional specialties and gastronomy culture.
Website aisitalia.it

Italian Sommelier Association, 'AIS' (Associazione Italiana Sommelier, sometimes also as known as Italian Association of Sommeliers) is an Italian non-profit organization founded in Milan on July 7, 1965, officially recognised and legally acknowledged by the Italian government on April 6, 1973,[1] with formal President of the Republic decree #539 in 1973. Its founding members were Prof. Gianfranco Botti, Jean Valenti, Leonardo Guerra (tax advisor) and Italian sommelier Ernesto Rossi. Italian Sommelier Association is part and founding member of the Worldwide Sommelier Association (WSA),[2] which is officially recognized across the world, wherever it is present with an affiliate.[1] AIS is one of the oldest and actually the largest sommelier association in the world, featuring more than 30.000 members only in Italy.[1]

Mission

The aim of the Italian Sommelier Association, as stated in the third article of its charter, is to qualify sommelier’s role and profession, therefore adding value to wine, traditional specialties and gastronomy culture. Its aim is also to promote, even in the legislative branch, the introduction of its didactic approach in hospitality related schools, as well as to endorse the sommelier’s professional role, international recognition and esteem.[3]

Activities

AIS features a main central office in Milan and many branches in each region of Italy which supervise all the local delegations which operate in almost any province throughout the country. Each branch features its president and delegates who promote local initiatives. Other than educational activity, Italian Sommelier Association organizes many food & beverage activities such as guided wine tastings, seminars, dinners, visits to vineyards and wineries and even cruises.[4] It is also host and main partner to many official professional wine evaluations, services, consultings and exhibitions[5] like, for example, Vinitaly.[6]

Education

Diplomas & certificates issued by Italian Sommelier Association are officially recognized throughout the world, wherever WSA is present with an affiliate (United States, Canada, Mexico, Chile, Brazil, Peru, Caribbean, Singapore, Japan, South Korea, Slovenia, Russia, Latvia, Czech Republic, Denmark, San Marino, Scandinavia, Belgium, Germany, Italy, France, Switzerland, United Kingdom and Romania).[1][7] Italian Sommelier Association exclusively teaches a three-level certified sommelier course[8] which leads to the achievement of an AIS Sommelier Diploma (Silver). A professional sommelier qualification leading to an AIS Professional Sommelier Diploma (Gold) may be issued after candidate’s career assessment as it is only intended for sommeliers actually working in a Food & Beverage establishment.

Qualifications overview and curriculum:[9]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "North American Sommelier Association". - WSA / AIS Affiliation
  2. "WorldWide Sommelier Association". - The Association
  3. Italian Sommelier Association - The Charter (in Italian)
  4. AIS Cruise - MSC Cruises
  5. Chianti Consortium - Italian Sommelier Association 47th Conference
  6. "Avvinare.com". - AIS to host first National Wine Day
  7. UK Sommelier Association - About US
  8. Discovering Wine - AIS
  9. Italian Sommelier Association - The Sommelier Course (in italian)
  10. ALMA - ALMA / AIS Master Sommelier
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sommeliers.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.