When they moved from the Twin Cities to Spain three years ago, Ryan and Gabriella Opaz didn't know anyone, spoke very little Spanish and didn't have jobs.
But their biggest problem was that they were without "el enfouche." Literal translation: "an outlet plug." Real-life translation: an acquaintance who connects you with a job, which, they learned, is virtually the only way an outsider can procure fulltime employment in Spain. "You could be the King of England, and it doesn't matter," said Opaz.
Gabriella found part-time work teaching English to businessmen, and Ryan did what any unemployed 30-year-old wine geek would be expected to do:
He started blogging.
Three years later, Catavino is among the most popular and respected wine blogs around, with 15,000 unique visitors a month, and the Opazes are even making a few Euros helping wineries set up English-language websites. Along the way, they've added Portugal to their "beat" and the food and culture of both Iberian nations to the topics at www.catavino.net.
Covering Spain's 68 wine regions and sampling Portuguese signature snail dishes is a daunting job, and the Opazes are just the ones to do it.
"When I started in wine about 10 years ago, Spain was the up-and-coming wine region -- and it's still the up-and-coming wine region," Ryan Opaz said during a recent visit to the Twin Cities. "In that period of time, South Africa up and came, other regions up and came. Spain just seems to be still climbing.
"And Spanish food is amazing. It's all about ingredients. I have a friend who says 'Italian cooking isn't cooking. It's grocery shopping.' And Spanish is the same. There are no sauces. I have a Spanish cookbook, and one of the recipes is 'grab fish, put on grill.' "