- Blog -

No Martini, No Party: A Visit to Casa Martini, the Italian Home of Vermouth

No Martini, No Party.” George Clooney made the line unforgettable, but in Pessione, a small village just outside Turin, those words become something more than a glamorous slogan. They become a place, a perfume, a story, a ritual. They become Casa Martini.

On a warm June morning, we arrived at the elegant villa that welcomes visitors into the world of one of Italy’s most iconic aperitifs. Casa Martini is located in Pessione di Chieri, less than 30 kilometers from Turin, in the very place where Martini built its production heart after the brand’s beginnings in Turin in 1863. Today, the site invites visitors to discover the history of Italian aperitivo, the secrets of vermouth, the aromatic world of herbs, and the art of mixology through tours, tastings, and masterclasses.

The first impression is already a promise. The villa has the charm of an Italian estate: graceful, welcoming, refined without being intimidating. As soon as we crossed the threshold, Martina greeted us and guided us into the museum, where the Martini story unfolds like a journey through time. Here, visitors do not simply read about history; they feel it. They can touch and smell some of the herbs that help create the mysterious soul of Martini vermouth, admire historic bottles alongside modern ones, and move through decades of advertising, design, and visual culture that helped transform Martini into a global symbol of Italian style.

For American travelers, this is exactly the kind of experience that makes Italy unforgettable. It is not only about seeing a beautiful place. It is about entering a living tradition. Martini is not just a bottle on a bar shelf in New York, Los Angeles, Miami, or Chicago. It is the result of vision, craftsmanship, Piedmontese roots, and more than 160 years of Made in Italy passion.

Link: Turismo Torino

Then comes the moment when the visit becomes almost cinematic: the production plant. We put on our fluorescent safety jackets and step into the world where vermouth is made. The atmosphere changes. The elegant museum gives way to the powerful silence of production, to the presence of enormous barrels, so majestic they feel almost like the columns of a cathedral. All around us, the air is filled with an intoxicating aroma: herbs, wine, wood, time. It is impossible not to stop for a moment and breathe it in.

Discover the history of Vermouth Martini

This is the magic of Casa Martini. It turns something familiar into something sacred. We have all seen a Martini bottle. Many of us have ordered a Martini cocktail, an aperitivo, a spritz, or a vermouth drink without thinking too much about where it came from. But here, in Pessione, the glass suddenly has roots. It has hills, history, recipes, hands, barrels, labels, journeys across the world.

And then, just when we think the experience is complete, Casa Martini gives us one final surprise.

We retrace our steps and return to what looks like the giant wooden end of a barrel. Suddenly, it opens as if by magic, revealing the entrance to the Bar Academy. It feels like stepping through a secret door into the most elegant playground an aperitivo lover could imagine. The official Casa Martini experiences include cocktail-focused masterclasses where Martini Ambassadors guide guests through the techniques and secrets behind iconic drinks, turning visitors into bartenders for a day.

Link: Martini GL

Here, the story becomes personal. Guided by a talented barwoman, we learn the gestures, proportions, aromas, and little secrets of mixology. The bottles are no longer museum pieces. They are alive in our hands. We mix, stir, taste, adjust, laugh, and finally raise the glass we have created ourselves. It is our Martini drink, our small masterpiece, our toast to Italy.

For Americans planning a trip to Turin, Casa Martini deserves a place on the itinerary. It is easy to reach by train from Turin Porta Susa in about 20 minutes, and the official site also notes connections from Turin Caselle Airport to Pessione, making it a surprisingly accessible experience for travelers who want to go beyond the usual city landmarks. Public weekend visits and private group experiences are available, with several tour options dedicated to the museum, production site, tastings, cocktails, and vermouth.

Link: Martini GL

Casa Martini is more than a museum, more than a tasting room, more than a brand experience. It is a celebration of Italian hospitality. It is the story of how a small village near Turin helped send the taste of the Italian aperitivo around the world. It is a place where history smells like herbs, where barrels look like cathedrals, where advertising becomes art, and where every visitor leaves with a glass in hand and a smile that says the same thing: No Martini, no party.

Cin cin.

Discover the itinerary