• 26Aug

    “THE PYRENEES BASQUE REGION OF FRANCE AND SPAIN”

    What in the world is Txakoli? A few months ago, I had no idea! And serve it with some Pintxos? Now that really sounds intriguing! As you probably have learned by now, if you have followed any of my previous forkandcorkdivine.com wine adventures, I’m always on the alert for a “new-to-me” and unique wine region to explore. When I asked a few of my most loyal winelover foodie friends (They are the ones who will follow me into whatever tangent I go off on, no matter how crazy it may sound kind of friends) said “How about Basque Country”? I immediately said “Yes, of course”! Here are the results of about three months of my off-and-on research and writing about “THE BASQUE COUNTRY”. I guarantee that you will probably learn more about Txakoli and Pintxos than you ever wanted to know! And off we go…….….

    Ameztoi Txakoli from Getariako Txakolina DOC

    The Basque Region of the Pyrenees Mountains straddles between two countries and consists of seven different provinces of France and Spain. The part of the world referred to as “Basque Country”, or Euskal Herria, is home to the Basque people who first inhabited the area back 200,000 years ago during Lower Paleolithic times.  It is geographically located in southwestern Europe between the Aturri River to the north and Ebro River to the south. This is the land of mountains.  The mountain chains of the Pyrenees plus Aralar, Aizkorri and Gorbeia mark the dividing line between the watersheds of the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea.  Extending for a little over 300 miles from the Bay of Biscay to the Mediterranean Sea and reaching up to a height of over 11,000 feet, the Pyrenees do an excellent job of separating the Iberian Peninsula from the rest of continental Europe.  On the Iberian side of the region, the Basque Mountains of Spain transition from the Pyrenees in the east to the Cantabrian range in the west. 

    Just like other regions in mostly temperate climates between 30-50 degrees of latitude that usually promote excellent conditions for growing grapes, people in the Basque Country region have been growing grapes and making wine for centuries.

    A QUICK OVERVIEW

    3 million people live in Basque country including 262,000 on the French side or Northern Basque Country, the remainder in Spain or the Southern Basque Country.  There are 10 million Basques and their descendants around the world.  Those 3 million who still live here have their own language, their own culinary traditions and a very distinctive landscape.  The term “Euskal Herria” defines the historical and cultural entity of the Basque area but not a unification of politics and government. The Basque language, known as “Euskara” is a link between all Basques and is one of the oldest languages in Western Europe; it may possibly be connected to the Iberian, Berber or other languages found around the Caucasus.  Northern Basque Country does not officially recognize the language.  If you only remember one thing about the Basque language, this is it!  THERE IS NO “CH” IN BASQUE.  IT’S SPELLED “TX”!  TXOMIN sounds like “CHO-MEEN”.  And there you have it…………your first lesson in speaking Basque!

    The Basque people have long sought to have their own autonomous government.  After the French Revolution (1789), the Basque provinces north of the Pyrenees were abolished and designated as French Republic departments.  In Spain, their Nationalist Party formed a government that allied with General Franco during the Spanish Civil War.  When they lost the war in 1939, Franco abolished their autonomy.  When democracy was restored to Spain in the 1970s, the Basque Country was once again approved as autonomous. 

    Spanish Southern Basque Country is made up of four provinces, three of which are: Viscaya (Biscay, Bizkaia), Guipúzcoa (Gipuzkoa), and Álava (Araba) all comprising one of the 17 Autonomous Communities of Spain. These 3 make up the Basque Autonomous Region whose administrative capital is Vitoria-Gasteiz.  The fourth province is Navarre, another one of the 17 Autonomous Communities also having its own government and parliament.     Pamplona-Iruñea is the administrative capital of Navarre.  We probably know it better for it’s famous “Running of the Bulls”. 

    Álava is in the foothills of the Pyrenees with an easy rolling landscape, mild climate and vineyards everywhere.  Alava is the largest in size of the three provinces in the Basque Autonomous Community with almost 3000 km. and also the least populated of the three.  It borders on Biscay and Gipuzkoa to the north, La Rioja to the south, the province of Burgos to the west and Navarre to the east.   The landscape and climate make it an ideal location for wineries and some have taken great advantage of this by using avant-garde architecture, new brands and lots of marketing.  The Marques de Riscal Winery in the town of Elciego has a building designed by Frank Gehry, the world-famous architect who designed the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, about 100 miles from here.  Just outside Laguardia, another famous architect Santiago Calatrave created the Isios Winery.  Not familiar with his work?  He also designed the new Olympic stadium in Athens, Greece.

    French Northern Basque Country has three provinces, all part of the Pyrénées Atlantiques Département which it shares with the Béarn region.  They are: Labourd (Lapurdi), Lower Navarre (Baxe Nafarroa), and Soule (Xiberoa).  These three provinces were united in one governmental body and then joined together with Bearn to form the Department of the Atlantic Pyrénées which makes up the new Aquitaine region, a fusion of three French regions of Aquitaine, Limosin and Poiton-Charentes, which was created in 2014. 

    Basque Country Flag

    After reading many articles about the history and current status, It seems that Basque Country is both complicated and controversial.  According to an article of February 12, 2019 in the online “basquetribune”, this region is filled with many differences from identity to versions of past history and what is to come in the future.  “There are many citizens who feel Basque and only Basque, many who feel Basque and Spanish, others who feel Basque and French, and many (from Navarre) that do not feel Basque at all”.  But we are here primarily to learn about the wine, so that is how we will focus moving ahead, no matter what the identity of the winemakers. 

    FRENCH NORTHERN BASQUE COUNTRY (Pays Basque Français/Pays Vasco Francés)

    Fifteen percent of Basque Country is in southern France which is home to Biarritz, Bayonne and St-Jean-de-Luz (famous for sunbathing and surfing) and Hendaye in the Pyrénées foothills (famous for hiking).  It’s a 1,108 square mile region in the western part of the Pyrénées-Atlantiques Department and the region of Nouvelle-Aquitaine. The region was first known as Aquitania because when Caesar came here, the Aquitani people lived here.  They weren’t Celtic and are often regarded as Basques.  There have been many wars and conquests since those days.

    It has constituted the Basque Municipal Community since January 2017 and was formerly home to those 3 historic French provinces of Lower Navarre, Labourd and Soule.  The department of Landes lies to the north, the Bay of Biscay on the west, Bearn to the east and Southern Basque Country on the south. 

    We wine lovers know it best of all for the indigenous grapes and wonderful interesting wines that we tasted in 2018 when forkandcorkdivine studied about the “le sud-ouest” region of France during our celebration of Wine Enthusiast Magazine’s Wine Star Award for the “2017 Wine Region of the Year”.   

    IROULÉQUY AOC

    The grapes and wines of the French Basque Country are synonymous with the Irouléquy AOC.  You can find it about 125 miles south of Bordeaux — as far south as you can go in France before crossing the Pyrenees into Spain – and 25 miles southeast from the Atlantic coast at Bayonne reaching right down to the Spanish border.   Irouléquy AOC wines, or Irulegi, come from the historic province of Lower Navarre and are usually considered part of the Sud-Ouest wine region.  These are the only AOC certified wines in the Northern Basque Country.  About 550,000 liters are produced annually with about 70% being big fruity tannic reds, 20% intensely fruity deeply colored rosés and 10% tangy full-bodied whites.  The tiny village of Irouléquy is in the middle of the AOC and according to Map-France.com, 320 people live there. The vineyards are often on very steep slopes which requires the development of special growing and terracing techniques by the Basque wine growers. The hills and steep ridges rise up to 3300 feet sheltering the valleys below.  The terraces are between 100-400 meters above sea level and most of the soil is sandstone-rich clay deep red in color.   Weather is usually calm here – rainfall is moderate, falling mostly in winter, and autumn is warm and dry, which usually makes harvest here less stressful than cooler wetter regions.  However, they do sometimes suffer from the wrath of unpredictable mountain storms and the hot dry autumn wind called Haïze hegoa.

    THE GRAPES AND WINES OF FRENCH BASQUE COUNTRY

    Whites

    The classic southwest France white wine blend is made from Courbu, Petit Courbu, Gros Manseng and Petit Manseng, the same blend used nearby in the Jurançon and Bearn appellations.  The grapes ripen more fully and retain more of their refreshing acidity here than further inland due to sunny ocean breezes.  The wine is full-bodied with aromas of tropical fruits and just the right amount of tangy acidity. 

    Gros Manseng (Izkiriota in Basque) represents the main part of white grapes planted here.  This golden color grape brings a beautiful aromatic freshness to wine along with quince, apricot and passionfruit aromas with a spicy floral note and plenty of acidity. It makes wine with moderate alcohol potential sometimes reaching 13% alcohol level.  Gros Manseng originally comes from southwestern France, and for a long time was not produced in any other areas.  It is ideally suited to the high humidity and dry sunny late summers of the region. Gros Manseng almost disappeared in 1958 but production has constantly increased since the 1970s. 

    Petit Manseng (Izkiriota Ttipia in Basque) gives power and volume to the wine.  It brings aromas of citrus, exotic fruits and truffles with freshness on the palette with elevated acidity and an aromatic complex finish.  Petit Manseng is also primarily grown in this region of southwest France, although still in small quantities, plus Basque Spain and Italy.  Some of it has found its way to the US and Australia.  This grape is often left on the vine to made a late harvest dessert wine. 

    Petit Courbu or Courbu (Xuri Zerratia in Basque) is a rare grape variety in Irouleguy and really isn’t found in any other part of France.  It adds some smoothness and roundness to the wine along with honeyed citrus aromatic notes often accompanied with minerality.  It is perfect for lowering the acidity and alcohol levels of the Mansengs.    Petit Courbu is not the same grape as Courbu Blanc; however there are very subtle differences and both grapes are used to make the dry white wines of Irouleguy.  This is another grape that neared extinction but has made a bit of a comeback. 

    Reds

    The red wines are made from Cabernet Franc and Tannat grapes which have been grown here for centuries.  Tannat is especially symbolic of red wines in Southwest France; Madiran being the most famous.  Cabernet Sauvignon is used in smaller quantities.  The resulting wines are so fruit-forward and intensely tannic that they usually need at least four years before you can drink them.  You can cellar the best examples for a good ten years.  If you do, you will be rewarded with spicy, earthy notes and softened tannins. 

    Cabernet Franc (Axeria in Basque; “the fox”) adds aromatic finesse and elegance to the wines of Irouleguy.  It is all about red berries, violets and notes of spice.

    Cabernet Sauvignon (Axeria Handia in Basque; “the big fox”) adds a bit of character, structure and volume to the wines.  It brings some aromas of blackberry, chocolate and sometimes pepper.  It is only used in small amounts.

    Tannat (Bordelesa Beltza in Basque; the “black Bordeaux”)) is also historically from southwest France.  It is the major red (or black!) grape in Irouleguy vineyards.  It is full of black currant, blackberry, black plums, black licorice, vanilla, dark chocolate and possibly some graphite, blood, iron, menthol, sandalwood, tobacco, cardamom, brown spices and smoke.  It is definitely not for the winelover who prefers finesse and elegance in the glass!  But it does  bring a balanced tannic structure to the wine.

    The most popular Irouléquy wines are made by Domaine Arretxea, Domaine Brana, Domaine Ilarria, Jean-Claude Berrouet and the Cave d’ Irouléquy.

    Rosés

    Lots of rosé is produced here but most of it is for local consumption.  It’s a fruit-driven very fragrant rosé with a deep color and aroma that is very similar to that produced in nearby Navarra.  It’s excellent to pair with the local spicy cuisine, especially a Piperrada which is a stew make with Jambon de Bayonne ham and spicy Piment d’Espelette peppers and is very similar to a ratatouille.  The ham and peppers are both local products with their very own protected AOC. 

    THE WINEMAKERS

    We can thank the Romans and the monks for developing vineyards here, just like many other areas of France.  In this case, it was the Roncesvalles Abbey where the eleventh century monks made wine for religious pilgrim travelers on the way to the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostella in Spanish Galicia.  Between constant decline and the Great French Wine Blight in 1912, there was little land cultivated in vineyards.    Today there are a handful of independent vintners plus the Cave Irouléquy, a cooperative formed in 1952 to attempt a rescue resulting in some wines receiving certification and AOC status awarded to Irouléquy in 1970.  In 1970 there was just 250 acres of vineyards cultivated by 60 growers.  Good luck finding some for purchase – they are still few and far between!  But with persistence in internet wine shopping, you should be lucky enough to latch onto a red.  These are not your big black tannic wines of Madiran.  They have more exotic flower and red fruit flavors with a bloody iron tang. I also suggest trying extra hard to find a white because they are so unique with their flowers, yellow fruits, savory and saline flavors and aromas. 

    Domaine Arretxea

    Michel Riouspeyrous worked on his family farm in Irouléquy until he studied Agronomy and went off to military service.  He eventually came home with Thérèse, his wife from Alsace.  In 1989 they rented 2 hectares of vineyards and started farming organically.  They moved on to biodynamics which was radical then especially since they bottled their own wine without joining the cooperative.  Their Domaine (Maison) Arretxea now has eight hectares of steep terraced land set against the peaks of the Pyrenees with sheep grazing between the vineyard rows and beautiful wildflowers.  The majority of their grapes are native varietals: Tannat (red), Gros Manseng and Petit Manseng (whites) which are ideal to grow in the soils of dolomite, clay, limestone, silica, mica and iron oxide.  They vinify each different terroir separately by using traditional methods and bottle four cuvees.  White wines are fermented and aged in foudres and stainless steel; reds are aged on the lees in cement or foudres then unfined and unfiltered.  Rosé is made by the Saignée method with no malolactic fermentation.  They now own about 20 acres and make just 3,300 cases a year.

    Domaine Arretxea Irouléquy 2015, Irouléguy, France

    Domaine Arretxea Irouleguy Rouge is made from a blend of 66% Tannat, 17% Cabernet Franc and 17% Cabernet Sauvignon grown on 7 – 15 year old vines in 5 hectares of vineyards.  Each parcel of grapes was vinified separately, macerated for 3 – 4 weeks with daily punch-downs, aged for 10 months on the lees in cement, then bottled unfined and unfiltered.   We expect a beautiful purple color wine with aromas of cassis, raspberry and licorice; then full-bodied on the palate with black fruit notes, herbs and minerality.  The tannins promise to be well balanced and we can drink it now or put away for a few more years. 

    Domaine Brana

    The Brana family has been passionate about the wines of Basque Country since 1897 when Pierre-Etienne Brana began trading wine.  In 1974 grandson Etienne Brana and his wife Adrienne began a distillery and planted an orchard of pear trees William. Ten years later they started making Irouléquy wines and set up their own vineyard. They have 22 hectares planted along very narrow terraces cut out of the remarkably steep hillsides.  Their farming practices are non-intervening and include bio-dynamic principles.  All harvesting is done manually.  They have exceptional terroir and brought back their ancestral viticultural traditions with the rebirth of the white Irouléquy blend – Courbu and Manseng. They make reds from their origins – Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon and Tannat.  Four generations later, Martine and Jean Brana continue the family goal for quality. 

    Domaine Brana Irouléquy Blanc 2016, Irouléquy, France

    The Domaine Brana Blanc is a savory but fresh and lively white made from a blend of 50% Gros Manseng, 30% Small Corbu and 20% Petit Manseng.  The color should be crystal clear with green highlights.  On the nose, we expect citrus notes, exotic fruits and flower pollen.  It promises to be nicely balanced with a fresh long harmonious finish.  It should be especially good paired as an aperitif or with fish, shellfish, sheep and goat cheese. 

     “Herri Mina” Jean-Claude Berrouet

    If Martine and Jean Brana ever feel that they need any winemaking advice, they can always go to Jean-Claude Berrouet, another Irouléguy native.  Jean-Claude just happened to be the winemaker for Chateau Petrus for over 30 years and has consulted all over the world!  It seems that Jean-Claude became homesick for his Basque Country and eventually came home.  In 1992 he planted 4.5 acres of sandstone terraces and produced his first vintage in 1998.  He named his estate “Herri Mina” which means country and homesick in Basque.  Jean Claude makes a wonderful white blend of Gros Manseng, Petit Corbu and Petit Manseng from vines no higher than 400 feet above sea level.  He also produces a small amount of 100% Cabernet Franc wine. 

    Domaine Ameztia

    Although the Costera family has been making Irouléquy wine since the 17th century, it wasn’t until 2001 that Jean-Louis, a shepherd turned winemaker, modernized the winemaking facilities on the family estate.  He brought on board his Bordeaux-trained oenologist nephew, Gexan, and started relinquishing control to him.  Previously  Gexan had been practicing his skill by making wine at Arretxea.  Along with the same philosophy used in raising the best lambs, the two of them are now using more organic practices and are replanting the Cabernet Sauvignon with Cabernet Franc and Tannat.  Their 7 hectares also have a little Gros Manseng and Petit Manseng for their white wines and a single-vineyard wine called Cuvee Pantxo, named after a close family friend.  

    Irouléguy Wine Cellar

    The Cave d’Irouléguy began in 1952 when 9 wine growers decided to join forces in a “cooperative”.  The creation of the Irouléguy AOC in 1970 gave the group some momentum; they now represent 60% of the planted vineyards of the appellation (150 hectares) and market 650,000 bottles per year.  There are currently  81 wine growers associated in the cooperative. 

    SPANISH SOUTHERN BASQUE COUNTRY (Pais Vasco)

    Known as Pais Vasco in Spanish, it is bordered by the Bay of Biscay to the north and Navarra to the east, La Rioja to the south, and Cantabria to the west.  The Pyrenees Mountains separate Spain from France to the northeast; however Navarra makes up most of the actual border with French Basque Country.  This 2793 square mile autonomous Spanish portion of Basque Country was officially established by Spain in 1979.  Its government has a president and a parliament in the capital of Vitoria-Gasteiz.  The Spanish mountains are steep and jagged and rivers are short and fast, cutting deep gorges through the mountains.  The people of the Pyrenees tend to have individual farms, called caserio, which allows them to cultivate their small mountain plots.  This is in contrast to the Ebro River basin where there are more communal group vineyards, and they are in open fields.  Most of the population is along the coast with four-fifths of the Basques in the coastal Greater Bilbao area. Bilbao is the largest city of the region and home to the famous Guggenheim Museum Bilbao.  Head east along the coast to Getaria, a fishing village where you can enjoy some top-notch fresh seafood.  A little further east is San Sebastian, a provincial capital with a beautiful beach and cliffs and Hondarribia, a fishing town with a walled old town.  Basques have traditionally been sheepherders, but corn and potatoes are heavily cultivated here.

    The Pais Vasco is part of Green Spain where the landscape is lush and green.  This area spans from Galicia in the northwest to where Basque Country borders on France in the east.  Winemaking here is limited because many vintners didn’t bother replanting after the scourge of phylloxerra during the second half of the 19th century.  But what vines there are grow some pretty outstanding grapes, and winemakers make a very distinctive style of wine.  This is the land of TXAKOLI!  Pronounced cha-koh-lee, Txakoli has been made here by the Basque since the Middle Ages.  It’s the characteristic spritz, ultra-dry, ultra-high acid that makes it perfect for local seafood.  But before we dig deep into the unique and exciting world of Txakoli, let’s find out what grapes grow here. 

    THE GRAPES AND WINES OF SPANISH BASQUE COUNTRY

    There are two main categories of wine in the Spanish Basque Country: 1) Txakoli, the traditional Basque wine, and 2) the wines from the Rioja Alavesa, which is one of the three sub-regions of the Rioja DOC.  There are some reds and an occasional rosado, but this is predominantly white wine country.

    The Grapes of Spanish Basque Country

    Hondarrabi Zuri is the dominant white grape of Spanish Basque Country and is native to the area.  It is used to make the citrusy, floral wine with lots of minerality and a touch of fresh herbs known as Txakoli.  You can sometimes even get an aroma of sea spray. The grape is named for the town of Hondarribia and the word “Zuri” means white in Basque language.  Some experts say the grape is indigenous to Basque Country while others say it comes from southwestern France.  It can be blended with a number of other Basque Country varieties of which Folle Blanche is the most common, but also small amounts of Chardonnay, Pinot Blanc, Sauvignon Blanc and Riesling.

    Hondarrabi Beltza is the main dark-skinned variety of Spanish Basque Country, and the only place it is grown.  Its parent is believed to be Cabernet Franc and tastes of raspberries, black fruit and violets.  It is also used to make Txakoli in both red and Rosado styles.  The wines are fresh, meant to be consumed young and are high in acidity.  They are sometimes bottled with a bit of carbon dioxide to keep their freshness. 

    Folle Blanche is a white grape grown in Spanish Basque Country where it is known as Mune Mahatsa and sometimes blended with Hondarrabi Zuri. It’s a little known grape found almost exclusively in western France especially the Loire Valley.  High susceptibility to rot and disease sent it on the decline.  A high acidity and fairly neutral flavor profile make it ideal for brandy — It is most often used to make brandy in the southwest of France.    Also known as Picpoul in some parts of the French southwest; however not the same as the Picpoul found in Languedoc-Roussillon.  

    Petit Corbu, Gros Manseng and Petit Manseng are white grapes used in smaller amounts in Spanish Basque Country.  See information about these grapes in our French Basque Country section. 

    The wines:

    White………..TXAKOLI

    Basque farmers made homemade Txakoli up until the 1980s.  The name itself means “farm wine” or “homemade wine”.  Txakoli grapes are not easy to grow – there are cold winds and year-round rain creating constant threats of mildew and mold.  Txakoli (also known as Txakolina) almost died out due to the phylloxerra plague in the 19th century, but the Basque people tried to keep their culture alive and were finally rewarded when three production areas received DO status in the 1990s. Today there are 33 wineries.

    During the recent years Txakoli has become quite famous for several reasons.  First of all, the quality of the wine has improved greatly, but even more importantly, the wine itself fits nicely in the trend for light fruity easy-to-drink wines.  It has a pale greenish hue with citrus, green apple, saline and mineral notes and is perfect with fish, seafood and appetizers. Txakoli is bone dry, extremely sleek on the palate, bracing acidity, often semi-sparkling and often served from several feet high into a little tumbler that should be low and wide.  Splashing on the floor is quite acceptable!  This process is called “breaking” and tends to open up the wine making it taste and smell even more vivid.  It should be served cold, and drink it before the bubbles are gone in order to get the whole Spanish Basque experience.  If you want to pour Txakoli like a Basque Country native, get yourself a “speed pourer spout” advertised “for perfect perpendicular flow of wine, Txakoli, liquor and cider………” and watch a video on the fine art of pouring Txakoli.

    Be sure not to tuck this wine away in your cellar; you had better drink it the first year!  Txakoli is traditionally fermented in kupels, which are very old large oak or chestnut barrels, but some Txakoli is now made in stainless steel vats.  Fermentation lasts 20-25 days and then the wine is left on its lees.  The CO2 gives the wine its sparkle and since the wine isn’t racked, the sparkle is still there when poured into your glass. The alcohol content is usually between 9.5 – 11.5 %.  Do be sure to try it whenever you can as it is difficult to find anywhere else in Spain – or in the world!  If you are lucky enough to be tasting it there in Spain on a January 17, it’s Txakoli Day!!!

    Txakoli goes perfectly with pintxos, which you will be served in every tavern in Basque Country and in other areas nearby such as Cantabria, La Rioja, and Navarre.  Officially pintxos or pinchos are small snacks typically found on a tray in bars or taverns.   They are called pinchos because they usually consist of ingredients placed on a small slice of bread fastened with a toothpick or “spike”.  The customer keeps track of the number of items they have eaten by the number of pinchos accumulated.  Sometimes, the toothpicks even come in different shapes or sizes to differentiate the prices.  You can put just about anything on a pintxo, but most commonly in Basque Country you will find fish (hake, cod and anchovy), tortilla de patatas, stuffed peppers and croquettes.  It is a way of life here to socialize with your friends while eating pintxos and drinking a glass of Txakoli white wine.

    In case you want to try your culinary skills making Pintxos, you can get some excellent Pintxos recipes on the internet that all sound quite tasty, or you can invest in some cookbooks. While this one is not from Basque Country, it is by a San Francisco Chef Gerald Hirigoyen who along with Lisa Weiss published this book in 2009: “PINTXOS small plates in the Basque tradition”. All of the recipes sound delicious and I plan to make several of them at our upcoming “Txakoli, Pintxos and Tapas” wine dinner event. It received great kudos from both Eric Ripert and Paula Wolfert.

    THE DENOMINACIONS DE ORIGEN (D.O.s) FOR TXAKOLI

    D.O. Getariako Txakolina (Chacoli de Guetaria): This was the first Txakoli to be awarded D.O. status back in 1989.  It is located in the north of the Guipúzcoa Province around the towns of Getaria and Zarautz along the coast of the Bay of Biscay. The vines are planted on slopes facing away from the sea to protect them from strong breezes and make sure they get enough sun.  Vines are trained over wires and sometimes over earthen or stone pillars.  With just 200 hectares of vineyards it may be the smallest in size but is the largest in production which is why you will probably see more of it available here in the US.  Accepted grape varieties are Hondarrabi Zuri (about 95% of what is grown here) and Hondarrabi Beltza (about 5%).

    Txomin Etxaniz Winery (Txakoli de Getaria)

    is the most renowned producer of Txakoli and the largest winery in Getaria with 600,000 bottles produced annually. The Txueka family has been in the wine world since 1649 and spearheaded the move for legal designation of the first Txakoli appellation. “Txomin” is the same as “Domingo” in Spanish and represents a modern winery with spotlessly clean stainless steel equipment that produces and exports about 15% of its 300,000 bottle production to 26 countries.  They have trellised vines over 100 years old growing on 35 hectares right next to the Atlantic Ocean.  Since the US is the largest export market for Txakoli, you can find Txomin wine right here to experience it.  They do also make a Txakoli rosé which was unheard of until about 10 years ago.  It’s a 50/50 blend of the white Hondarrabi Zuri and the red Hondarrabi Beltza, pale pink with strawberry scent and savor and dry in taste.  According to Mr. Txueka, they make it primarily for American taste.  Txomin is also experimenting with fermentation in large acacia wood barrels which give a distinctive new take on Txakoli.  Now they also make a traditional method dry sparkling wine not at all unlike Champagne. 

    Txomin Extaniz Getariako Rosado 2018, Getariako Txakolina D.O.

    The Txomin Rosado is a blend of 60% Hondarrabi Beltza and 40% Zuri.  Grapes are harvested manually in early October then go to the winery for an 8 – 10 hour maceration followed by temperature controlled fermentation and rest on its lees before bottling.  The resulting wine is light, fragrant, fresh and fruity with hints of minerality and medium acidity and an alcohol content of 11%.  This wine pairs well with white meat, grilled seafood and as an aperitif.  Serve it between 45-50 degrees F. 

    Ameztoi

    is one of the top producers of Getariako Txakolina.  Ameztoi has 20 hectares of 25 year old vines facing the Bay of Biscay on seaside cliffs with views of the town of San Sebastian 20 minutes away along a serpentine highway.  Ignacio Ameztoi is the fifth generation to make the family’s Txakolina in Getaria.  Hondarribi Zurri and Beltza grapes are sustainably farmed and used to make wine fermented in stainless steel kept chilled to about 32 degrees F. and bottled with residual carbonic which causes that wonderful Txakoli natural spritz.  Ametzoi was the first producer of rosé txakoli and méthode traditionelle Txakoli sparkling wines in addition to their whites and reds. Their Rubentis rosé is a field blend of Hondarribi Zurri and Beltza. 

    Ameztoi Getariako Txakolina 2017, Getariako Txakolina DOC

    The Ameztoi Hondarrabi Zurri Txakolina is pale white with a touch of green, fragrance of green apples and grapes and notes of mint and green tea.  It is dry on the palate with a big aromatic finish and a fine elegant effervescence.  The alcohol level is 10.5 – 11% with no fining or filtering.  It pairs well with all kinds of seafood and fish – an excellent choice for oysters, sushi or tempura fish.  Drink it young between 45-50 degrees F. W&S rated it at 91 points. 

    D.O. Bizkaiko Txakolina (Chacoli de Viscaya): Established in 1994, it’s located in the Viscaya Province in the north of Basque Country close to Bilbao and the coast.  The 250 hectares of vines are planted around 500 feet high.  You will find a few more Hondarrabi Beltza vines here, therefore more reds and ojo gallo, a dark rosé, but the main variety is Hondarrabi Zuri with some Folle Blanche.  Vines here are on pergolas near the coast and trellises further inland.  There are 69 wineries in this D.O. and most are very small.

    D.O. Arabako Txakolina (Chacoli de Alava): Created in 2001 on the initiative of the only five producers left in the Alava Province, it’s the newest region and has 60 hectares.  Alava is further inland than the other two, which means the grapes can get riper.  Alava is also known as Rioja Alavesa (part of the Rioja D.O.) which is just to the south but is also a historic Basque region.  Rioja wines are produced in the southern part of the province, and Txakoli vineyards are to the north right beside the border with the Vizcaya Province.  Grapes permitted are white Hondarribi Zuri, Gross Manseng, Petit Manseng and Petit Corbu and red Hondarribi Beltza.  There are small amounts of red and rosé Txakoli produced here.  Alcohol content is 9.5%. 

    Txakoli is also produced in the Cantabria and Burgos regions.  When Spain tried to limit production just to the Basque Country, the producers of Burgos reminded them that they had been making it for over 10 centuries! 

    From Txakoli to the Ebro River Valley

    We came to Spain to visit the Spanish Southern Basque Country.  While the Pais Vasco region is what first comes to mind with the zesty white Txakoli wines, there are two more very important regions to explore as part of Basque Country.  The sub-regions of Navarra and La Rioja are found in the Ebro River Valley, and we are heading there next.  Navarra is known mostly for rosado wine made from the Garnacha (Grenache) grape, but there is so much more to learn there.  La Rioja is the home of King Tempranillo plus some very worthy oak-aged white wines of Viura (Macabeo).  We can’t talk about Basque Country without mentioning these next-door neighbors with some very famous and long-standing bodegas that include Lopez de Heredia and Marques de Murrieta.  Besides Navarra also falls under a sub-zone of the D.O. Rioja, its southern neighbor.  So we are legally bound!  Next stop from Pais Vasco —- Navarra!

    Rose………….from Navarra

    D.O. Navarra

     Navarra is another one of Spain’s 17 Autonomous Communities and has its own government and parliament.  The capital of Navarra is Pamplona-Iruñea, famous for the “Running of the Bulls” in the annual San Fermin Festival.  Navarra is considered as part of the Spanish Southern Basque Country.  This is a huge region with a great variety of landscapes and climates from mountains to deserts………and a variety of wines.   It is close to the Bay of Biscay in the northwest, the Pyrenees in the northeast and the Ebro River all combined with moderate temperatures created by the Mediterranean climate.  Winemaking was recorded here way back in ancient Roman times; but the winemaking boom was cut short by phylloxerra just like most other areas of Europe. 

    The D.O. Navarra was created in 1933 with 11,000 plus hectares differentiated into five production subzones with three different climates:

    Cool humid Atlantic climate:

    Baja Montaña sits along the border with Aragon in eastern Navarre at the foothills of the Pyrenees Mountains.   It’s hilly here with lowland forest.  The grapes are only red – Garnacha and some Tempranillo.

    Valdizarbe is in Central Navarre just south of the Pamplona basin in the heart of the Pilgrims Way to Compostela and is the most humid of the subzones.  It largely runs along the river Arga in an area of gentle hills and valleys.  You will find Tempranillo, Garnacha, Cabernet and Merlot along with some Chardonnay and Malvasia. 

    Tierra Estella is in western Navarre along the Pilgrims Way to Santiago which borders on the official Basque Country area and La Rioja.  The land slopes down towards the south where you will find lots of olives and cereal crops.  The grapes include Tempranillo plus Cabernet Sauvignon and quite a bit of Chardonnay.

    Continental climate with extreme winters and summers:

    Ribera Alta is located in central Navarre along the Ebro valley between Aragon and La Rioja.  It’s a large very flat plain with little vegetation.  Tempranillo is the main grape followed by Garnacha.  There is quite a bit of white Viura and Muscatel here. 

    Mediterranean climate with hot summers and moderate winters:

    Ribera Baja is in the south of Navarre near the town of Tudela and is the most important of the five in terms of area and number of wineries. It covers 14 different municipalities, all on a dry, sandy plain on the right bank of the river Ebro.

    Navarre has traditionally been known for production of crisp, fruit-driven rosé (rosado) but has been overshadowed for many years by its southern neighbor, Rioja, for making high quality red wine.  But that has begun to change somewhat thanks to innovative and brave winemakers who have done a lot to bring Navarre out of the shadows.  The rosado is generally made from Garnacha which pairs really well with the hearty local cuisine; however recently Tempranillo and varietal reds based on Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Pinot Noir are also produced.  A smaller quantity of white wines are produced and based mainly on Chardonnay, Viura and Garnacha Blanca.  A natural sweet wine is made from Moscatel. 

    Bodegas y Viñedos Artadi

    Artadi began in1985 as a cooperative making traditional young wines for the local market.  It is now an icon growing grapes and making wine in three different Spanish wine regions: Alava, Navarra and Alicante. These 150 hectares of vineyards respect the terroir and natural environment of each region.  In 1992 the Lacalle and Laorden family took control of the project that began with 80 hectares in Laguardia, Alava.  In 1996 Artadi expanded to Navarra with Artazu, in 1999 in Alicante with El Sequé and in 2015 with the latest acquisition of Izar-Leku in Guipúzcoa.  All of Artadi practices organic and biodynamic agriculture.  They are biodiverse and sustainable.  Artadi has played a major role in the transformation of Spanish wine in the last decades.  They left the Rioja appellation in December 2015 which means that any wine bottled at their facilities will not carry the Rioja seal.  They are “wines without DO”.  They also pioneered the move to discard the traditional Crianza category and instead highlight the vine age.  It is said that Carlos Lopez de Lacalle launched the Artazu winery at the request of a friend from the US who wanted to sell a good Spanish Garnacha in the US. For quite some time Artazu was the only producer in Navarra to make high quality red Garnacha wines.  Up to that point Garnacha was reserved for the production of rosés.   

    Artazu Garnacha “Artazuri”  Rosado 2017 Navarra DO

    Artazuri Rosado is made from 100% Garnacha grapes grown around the village of Artazu in the Valdizarbe subzone of the northernmost part of the Navarra DO.  The rosado is made by maceration of Garnacha grapes for 4 – 5 hours.  The resulting wine should be fresh and floral with intense strawberry and cherry aromas and some herbal notes on the background.  The alcohol content is 13%. 

    Bodegas Nekeas

    Bodegas Nekeas was founded in 1990 as a collaboration of a number of families, all friends for decades and native to Navarra.  Their histories in viticulture are rich.  The estate in the Valley of Valdizarbe has grown to be recognized as a figurehead of quality in Navarra.  They use sustainable techniques – dry farming, no fungicides, herbicides or pesticides.  They grow Garnacha, Tempranillo, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Chardonnay and Viura. The oldest vineyards, El Chaparral, are Garnacha planted in clay based soils between 80 – 130 years ago, and are one of Navarra’s most historical viticultural areas.  These vineyards get one of the latest harvests in Spain.  Bunches are destemmed, fermented in stainless steel, then aged in new, second and third use French oak barrels for six months. 

    Bodegas Nekeas Garnacha El Chaparral de Vege Sindoa 2016 Navarra DO


    The El Chaparral 100% Garnacha gives the expression of the most Atlantic Garnacha grapes in Spain. The climate here is both Mediterranean and Atlantic.  There are spring frosts, dry warm summers and drastic temperature swings between day and night. The wine is vivid garnet in color, juicy and spicy on the palate with red fruit and black and white pepper flavors.  Expect accents of coffee and minerality.  The finish should be elegant, fine and delicate but with firm tannins. 

    Vino de Pago or is it “Wines of Payment”?

    Navarra participates in a Spanish wine classification first introduced in 2003 called Vino de Pago. Vino de Pago (pago means “estate”) refers to the Vineyard and Wine Act 24/2003 of July 10th which is the highest category existing within Spanish wine law. It covers individual wine estates usually associated with top-quality wines that were typically not covered by a DO status. These estates must be small – meaning not equal to or larger than any parish in the Region; they must have unique characteristics in soil and micro-climate enough so that they are differentiated from surrounding sites; and their wines must be distinctive with singular qualities. Vino de Pago can also have a DO or DOC status if they meet those particular requirements.

    The Spanish word “payment” comes from the Latin word “pagus” which means a country district. Their were 17 Wines of Payment as of 2017. This classification was similar to the emergence of “Super Tuscan” wineries in italy, and it is still quite controversial. Fewer than half of Spain’s regions ratified the legislation . Navarra did; however Rioja chose not to do so. Rioja now has the new classification Viñedos Singulares which was recently added to focus on single vineyard sites in Rioja.

    Pago de Arinzano, Pago de Otazu and Prado de Irache are examples of Vino de Pagos in Navarra. Arinzano is a 740 acre estate located in the municipality of Aberin (Merindad de Estella) . It was purchased by the Chivite family in 1988 and operates as Bodegas Chivite. Pago de Otazu is in Cuenca de Pamplona, less than 7 miles west of Pamplona. Prado de Irache is located near the town of Estella.

    The critics of this category will tell you that some of the wines have remained outstanding while several have not. The term “Vino de Pago” is not legally restricted; any winery can use the word Pago in their name. So try the wine and know there are no guarantees. Drink what you like!

    Crossing into Rioja…………Navarre is also part of D.O. Rioja and Rioja DOCa

    Because of the close proximity to its southern neighbor, part of Navarre also falls under the D.O. Rioja, Baja sub-zone.  Navarre has a total of 6,220 hectares in Rioja Baja and a choice of reds, rosés and whites along the Ebro River.  A small section of Navarra is also classified as Rioja DOCa.  Denominación de Origen (DO) and Denominación de Origen Calificada (DOCa) are the two highest Spanish categories for quality wine. Rioja is one of only two winemaking regions in Spain to have received the prestigious DOCa classification, the other being Priorato.

    DOCa Rioja Alavesa …….yet another part of Basque Country

    DOCa Rioja Alavesa is a subzone of D.O. Rioja that has vineyards in the south of the Basque Country.  Vineyards are planted on the banks of the Ebro River at 1150-1600 feet altitude.  Around 80% of the subzone is planted in Tempranillo grapes with 4% dedicated to other red grapes and the rest to several varieties of white grapes.  Just to create more confusion, this is the same geographical area as the D.O. Arabako Txakolina which is officially part of Basque Country. 

    The Prestigious La Rioja

    By now it must be obvious that we cannot talk about Southern Basque Country without digging into La Rioja.  D.O. Rioja is one of the four main wine producing areas of Northern Spain; the other three being Galicia, Catalonia and Ribera del Duera.  The DO Rioja wine region includes municipalities in three northeastern Spanish provinces: La Rioja, Navarra and Alava; however, most of the municipalities (116) vineyards (41,000 plus hectares) and wineries (320) are located in the autonomous community of La Rioja. 

    There are over 70 Designations of Origin (Denominaciones de Origen) used to classify Spanish wines.  The better known is La Rioja for its red wine, but don’t underestimate the quality wines of Ribera del Duero in northern Spain or Jumilla in southern Spain.  There are quality white wines especially in Galicia.  Jerez is located in the south and known for sherry.  Each area is unique with its own special wines. You can be sure that each area is rich in history and culture and has their own varied and delicious cuisine.  We should add that other important wine regions of Spain are equally unique: the Penedes, Rias Baixas and the Priorat.  And we can’t neglect the smaller regions including Bierzo, Calatayud and Campo de Borja, Castilla-La Mancha, Rueda and Toro.  

    You may think that Spanish wines will be really big and bold because of the really hot weather there, but some of the best vineyards are well over 1000 feet above sea level where temperatures are much cooler.  Spain is actually the second most mountainous country in Europe after Switzerland.  Still with all of those mountains, Spain has more vineyard acreage than any other nation — 2.5 million acres of them. Even with all of those vineyards, it is third in wine production after Italy and France. 

    One of the significant differences with Spanish winemakers in general is that they still prefer their indigenous grapes made in the “old ways” and the flavors that this brings to the wine. They also still prefer long aging in the barrel.  While they don’t go for 25 years any more due to the change in modern taste, the highly regarded Rioja Gran Reserva, for example, is still barrel aged for 5 years. 

    Spain has a very long history of growing grapes and making wine. Grapes have been harvested and wine produced here in La Rioja dating back to the Phoenicians and the Celtiberians.  Monks recorded the earliest written evidence of the existence of grapes here in 873, and viticulture was documented in 1063.  Rioja wine was exported to other regions as early as the late 13th century.  The first document to protect the wine quality was written in 1650. 

    History continues to tell about many old traditions; however, Rioja has been honored with several impressive “wine firsts”.  In 1925 it was the first wine region in Spain to receive a D.O. designation (guaranteed by the “Denomination of Origen” D.O.)   Fast forward through the years to 1991 when the prestigious “Calificada” or Qualified nomination reserved for producing Spain’s finest wine was presented to La Rioja, now the first DOCa of Spain. 

    Those old traditions get a new twist!

    Rioja wines account for a large share of Spanish wine sold in the US, according to Ana Fabiano, the trade director and North American brand ambassador for the region. “Change in an old-world wine region does not happen frequently” was a very significant comment made at an early 2019 press conference in New York to present the newest marketing campaign and changes in classifications.  It was reported by Ms Fabiano that the US bought more than 1.1 million cases of Rioja wine in 2018, and it is hoped that we will buy around 2 million cases annually in the next several years.  Their new global marketing campaign is Saber Quien Eres or “Know Who You Are”.  Ms. Fabiano summed it up this way “Rioja is looking to the future, but is standing in the history of her soil”.  (From a Forbes article of 2.15.2019 “Will Rioja Wine Increase its Market Share?” by Mike DeSimone and Jeff Jenssen.)

    The grapes of Rioja and Navarra

    Let’s start with the grapes.  According to the latest issue of Madeline Puckette’s “Wine Folly” Magnum Edition, there are 100 common varieties of grapes in Spain, the country with the highest vineyard acreage in the world.  The most widely planted and/or best known varieties from the 5500 Spanish bodegas (wineries) and cooperatives are Airén (white), Tempranillo (red) and Albarino (white) from Rias Baixas and Parellada, a white grape from the Penedès wine region in Catalonia used to make Cava.

    Airén is the most widely planted grape variety in Spain accounting for 22% of the vineyards; and is most notably planted throughout Central Spain due to its tolerance for hot, dry conditions and poor soil.  Airén is very resistant to diseases and makes a “snappy crisp white”.  It is often used for blending but sometimes vinified to make red wine.  Airén is also distilled to make a spirit.

    Traditional varieties

    In 2017, the Rioja harvest consisted of 88% red grapes even though since 1925 there have been seven traditional authorized  grape varieties – four red and three white.  They are:

    RED GRAPES

    Tempranillo is the best loved and the most prized Spanish grape.  Tempranillo is to Spain like Cabernet is to Bordeaux! This variety is the fifth most cultivated variety in the world, covering 231,000 hectares in 2015.  It may be found in 17 other countries, but 88% of it is cultivated in Spain.  This is a grape that buds early, ripens early and has a short growing cycle.  Not without some problems, it is susceptible to mildew and sensitive to extreme drought and wind, but it is very vigorous and well suited to growing here.  Tempranillo makes a deeply colored wine with high alcohol content and low acidity.  Synonyms for Tempranillo include Tinta Roriz, Tinto Fino and Tinto del Pais.

    Garnacha Tinta (Grenache Noir) is one of the most widely planted grapes in the world with 163,000 hectares in 2015. It was thought to be introduced from Spain to France during the Middle Ages. Spain and France account for 87% of the world’s Garnacha. This variety gives a good yield, is extremely drought resistant and adapts to different soils although it does not come without a lot of susceptibilities that make it a challenge to grow.  It is generally spicy with notes of cinnamon and white pepper, red berry-flavors, soft on the palate and makes relatively high alcohol wine.  You may get more leather and tar flavors with age.  It is often used as a blending grape – Chateauneuf-du-Pape and GSM – for example.    The grape tastes different depending upon where it is grown.  In France, Southern Rhone Grenache-based wines have more smoky herbal notes including oregano, lavender and tobacco while American Grenache smells more like licorice and flowers.  But in northern Spain where it is warmer, the grapes can get very high sugar levels adding both body and spice.  It tends to express the place where it is grown, especially in Navarra.  In fact, it has been noted by some winemakers as the “Pinot Noir of Spain” and the signature grape of the region which is quite a step up as it used to be considered a workhorse variety.  Today it is the third most widely planted grape in Spain (behind Tempranillo and Bobal).  Garnacha Tinta has many aliases, but its known as Cannonau and Tocai Rosso in Italy.

    Mazuelo (Cariñena/Carignan) is a black-skinned grape of Spanish origin often found in Spanish and French wine but is widely planted throughout the western Mediterranean and around the world.  It’s most common use is for blending with other grapes in northeastern Spain and in France’s Languedoc-Roussillon where it is most often blended with Grenache, Syrah and Mourvέdre. Winemakers of Rioja use Mazuelo to add acidity to their Tempranillo-based wines. It expresses high tannins, acid and color which makes it an excellent choice for blending.  When used to make a varietal wine, it shows rich dark and black fruits, pepper, licorice and spicy savory accents.  It is also prominent on the island of Sardinia where it’s known as Carignano.  This is yet another one of those grapes that was considered low-quality and fell out of favor until some producers started to bring it back to life.  Mazuelo or Carignan can be a perfect food wine with its balance of flavors and no bitter tannins.  It has earthy meaty notes that make it a good partner for everything from turkey to duck to bacon and cheeses like Gouda, Basque and Manchego.  In the US, it was once the third most widely planted grape variety in California where it was a big part of the California jug and box wine industry.           

    Graciano is a small black-skinned grape grown primarily in Navarra and Rioja although there is now a bit of it to be found in California and Australia.  A small amount of it is also grown in Languedoc under the name of Morrastel.  Graciano grapes make a moderately tannic, deeply colored intensely perfumed wine with aromas of mulberry, violets and chocolate.  These characteristics make it very popular with winemakers of Rioja who use it mostly in the Rioja bland with Tempranillo and Garnacha.  Graciano vines are quite susceptible to mildew and on top of that, are very low-yielding which is why they have been unpopular.  However like everything else that goes out of style, it is now gaining a following as a single varietal wine both in Rioja and Navarra. 

    Red grapes make up about 95% of all vines planted in the Navarra DO although this percentage is decreasing somewhat as more whites are planted.  Tempranillo, Garnacha, Mazuelo and Graciano are also the significant reds there with the addition of some Cabernet Sauvignon. 

    WHITE GRAPES

    Viura (Macabeo) can be found in both the French and Spanish Basque Country vineyards; however it is the most important white grape of La Rioja.  Viura is key to Rioja Blanco and may be blended with some other varieties such as Malvasia, Garnacha Blanca, Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc.  Early harvest will make wines aged in stainless steel that are fresh, citrusy, floral with aromatic notes while late harvest wines are aged in oak and are honeyed, nutty and heavier body.  The fact that it is a very versatile grape makes it perfect for still, sparkling, dry and sweet wines. Viura, or Macabeo as it is more commonly known in Spain, is used in Catalonia to make the traditional method sparkling wine Cava, where it is blended primarily with Parellada and Xarel-lo.  Viura is widely planted throughout Spain and considerably planted in the Languedoc-Roussillon region of Southern France.  The Roussillon winemakers use it in the sweet wines of Banyuls and Maury and the rich dry wines of Corbieres and Minervois. 

    Malvasia is a versatile white grape capable of producing wines in dry, sparkling or sweet styles. It is now grown in Spain, Portugal, Italy, Croatia, Slovenia, Greece and the US.  Even the Malmsey wine on the Portuguese island of Madeira is made from Malvasia.   There are many sub-varieties grown in Douro, Portugal sometimes used to make white Port.  But in Rioja and Navarra, it adds body weight and texture when blended with Viura to make White Rioja Blend.  Malvasia was more dominant in White Rioja wine prior to the arrival of phylloxerra when it made oak-aged rich alcoholic wines.  Then along came the 1960s and the increase of Viura which is perfect for crisper lighter whites.

    Garnacha Blanca (Grenache Blanc) is a light-skinned mutation of Grenache Noir and native to northern Spain but best known for its part in French white wines particularly as one of the grapes allowed in Chateauneuf-du-Pape.  It makes light golden straw-colored juice often used in a blend; however it is increasingly used to make a varietal wine.  In Spain you will mainly find it along the Pyrenees, Navarra and Catalonia in particular.  It is permitted in the white wines of Rioja. 

    The main white varieties of the Navarra DO are Viura, Garnacha Blanca, Malvasia and Chardonnay.

    Newer authorized varieties

    In 2007, the Regulating Council of the DOCa approved these additional varieties:  Indigenous reds: Maturana Tinta (also called Maturana Parda or Maturano) and Autochthonous varieties – Whites: Maturana Blanca, Tempranillo Blanco and Turruntés or Torrontés (which is different than that planted in rest of the world) and the Foreign varieties of Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc and Verdejo. 

    The classifications

    And how are wines of Rioja classified? You have probably noticed by now that the wine world is very slow to make any major changes, but in 2018 that is exactly what happened in Rioja.  The Rioja Consejo Regulador released a new classification system

    We already have talked about the quality or regulated classifications, the most common terms of DO and DOCa, which is an appellation classification system somewhat similar to both France and Italy. Spain also has two “unregulated” label designations referred to as “country wine” and “table wine.” 

    Denominación de Origen (DO) includes wines that are sourced only from the designated growing regions and meet specific criteria and quality standards.  These are good quality wines from over 60 Spanish wine regions usually offered at reasonable prices. 

    Denominación de Origen (DOC) “DOCa”, which is similar to the Italian DOCG, is the strictest classification representing the highest quality wines offered from Spain.  There are only two regions with this honor to date: Rioja, which was first to be awarded, and Priorat, the second.

    There is also the designation of “Vino de la Tierra” or “wines of the land” used for categorizing and naming Spanish wines that are not in DO designated growing regions. The label designation “Vino de la Tierra” romantically translates to “wines of the land” or “country wines.” Wines that don’t fall into any of the categories are called “Vino de Mesaortable winestatus. 

    For many years, the D.O. Rioja classification of wines has taken this a step further to assign a quality level to their wine.  Their quality level has been based on the length of time the wine remains in the barrel.  It must remain in 225-liter oak barrels for 1 to 3 years, and then in the bottle itself for 6 more months to 6 years.  These are the specific levels of aging time which include the latest revisions:

    Crianza: Red wines must be aged in oak barrels and bottles for a minimum of 2 years. This is the youngest of red wines with a minimum of 1 year in the barrel.  Whites and rosés need only 6 months in the barrel.  You can expect some red fruit flavors and subtle spices from the Tempranillo.

    Reserva: Reds must be aged in oak and bottle for a minimum of 3 years with at least one year in the barrel and 6 months in barrels.  Whites and rosés require 2 years minimum in oak and bottles, 6 months of which must be in oak barrels.  Reserva makes for great balanced red wines with some subtle aged flavors of spice and dried fruit. 

    Gran Reserva: These are usually wines made from exceptional vintages.  Total aging for red must be 5 years including a minimum of 2 years in oak and at least 2 years in the bottle.  Whites and rosés need at least 5 years aging but just a 6 month minimum in barrels. 

    Gran Añada: A new aging classification was added in 2018 to be used for sparkling wine. Sparkling wine must spend at least 3 years on the lees and age for at least 15 months.  Vintage wines must be hand-harvested. 

    Generic (Joven): This classification was previously called cosecha or harvest and was used for young wines.   There is no aging requirement; you can expect minimum use of oak.  In the past, these wines were the lowest indication of quality; however, you may now see some much higher quality wines in this classification especially some Rioja Blanco made with Viura grapes

    Viñedos Singulares

    The most significant change is the addition of a completely new category called Viñedos Singulares.  This category was added to encourage greater focus on single vineyard sites and promote the differences in regional microclimates.  This system, which is similar to grading in Burgundy, now focuses on terroir!  This change came after a long-running battle between the Regulatory Council of the DOCa and over 150 producers who argued that major changes were necessary to promote the value of quality over quantity and point out the differentiation in soils. Yes, they still have the same three levels of aging, but now the winemaker can add the name of the village or municipality of origin to the front label on the bottle.  All 145 of them in Rioja! 

    Here’s what to look for on the bottle from those who use this new category. The label on the front has to indicate the name of the vineyard which must be registered as a brand.  The term “Viñedo Singular” must appear directly underneath the vineyard name.  The guarantee seal on the back of the bottle might read “Crianza Viñedo Singular” or “Gran Reserva Viñedo Singular”.  There are some additional specifications to ensure the quality of wine in the bottle — the vineyards must be at least 35 years old, grapes have to be hand-picked, yields relatively low, and the wines have to pass a certification test by a regional tasting committee before marketing.   So far there are 76 applications for this category from 44 wineries and growers. 

    The Vinos de Zonas

    The second part of this major change is the use of “Vinos de Municipio” and “Vinos de Zona”.  The use of these terms has been permitted since 1998; however the sub-regions of Rioja are now known as Zonas.  The sub-regions of Rioja Alta, Rioja Alavesa and Rioja Oriental and Municipios (municipalities)/Pueblos (villages and towns) can now be identified on the label in the same text size as Rioja instead of just two-thirds as before.  85% of the grapes in the bottle must come from the Zona or Municipio indicated.

    Rioja used to be fairly easy to learn about as wine regions go.  It had just one appellation for the entire 210 square mile region with over 150,000 acres of vineyards.  It did however have three sub-zones based upon a variety of terroirs and climates.  Then the Rioja Regulatory Council decided to be a bit more specific and officially divided the region into three zonas (zones) and allow the name of the zone to appear right on the wine label just below the word Rioja and even in the same type size! 

    The D.O. Rioja region is now officially divided into 3 sub-zones and can be named on the bottle:

    Rioja Alta (High)

    Occupies the westernmost portion of the region with most of its vineyards west of Logroño on the south bank of the Ebro River and a small area on the north bank around the villages of Abalos and San Vicente de la Sonsierra.  All vineyards are within the province of La Rioja.  Tempranillo thrives here along with other important grapes, Graciano and Garnacha.  Wines from this subzone are usually elegant, lighter in body and lower in acid.  Some producers of note here are Muga, Marqués de Murrieta, La Rioja Alta and Marqués de Cáceres.

    Compañía Vinícola del Norte de España

    ………is better known as CVNE which is confusing since most people know it as “Cune” ………pronounced COO – nay.  The CVNE winery, or whatever name you prefer, was founded in Haro, La Rioja, in the year 1879 by two brothers Eusebio and Raimundo Real de Asúa.  Since 1879 CVNE has grown to 545 hectares of vineyards and three bodegas or wineries each with its own winery and winemaker.  CVNE sits near the railroad tracks in Haro which was important to get their wines out to Bilbao and beyond. CVNE is the largest of the three, only uses grapes grown or purchased in the Rioja Alta subzone and packages the wines in a Bordeaux-style bottle.  The Imperial cellar is an independent winery inside the original CVNE winery.  Viña Real is a Rioja Alavesa brand that uses a Burgundy bottle and made their first vintage in 1920. The new Viña Real winery in Laguardia was completed in 2004 and is probably the most advanced winery in Spain.  Then there is Viñedos del Contino in Laserna which only makes wine from its own 62 hectares of vineyards in the Rioja Alavesa.  

    The company’s bottom line thrives on the production of lots of Crianza classified wine, particularly CVNE Crianza which is labeled “Cune”.  An early misspelling of CVNE caused this wine to forever be known as Cune.   At the other end of the spectrum, the CVNE 2004 Imperial Gran Reserva was selected as the Wine Spectator number one wine of the annual Top 100 in December 2013. Real de Asúa, named after the two founders, had its first vintage in 1994.   The wines of CVNE now include: CUNE, Imperial, Monopole, Real de Asúa, Viña Real, Pagos de Viña Real and Contino.  CVNE celebrated its 140th anniversary in 2019 with the launch of its newest winery called Bela. Bela is an avant garde winery located in Villalba del Duero with 74 hectares of vineyards.  Their first wine produced was Bela Roble 2017, a 100% Tempranillo.

    CVNE has had some prominent milestones in Spanish winemaking including the use of a pasteurizer device, “El Carmen” the largest all-concrete winemaking facility of its day in Spain which was set up in 1940, and in 1989 use of “El Pilar”, a gravity-driven winemaking facility, began.  Eiffel’s Cellar was designed by the legendary French architect, Alexandre-Gustave Eiffel.   

    CVNE Rioja Monopole Clasico Blanco Seco 2015, La Rioja Alta  

    Monopole was the oldest registered white-wine brand in Spain and first produced by CVNE in 1915.  Monopole was one of CVNE’s main wines from the early 20th century to the 1970s when it fell out of fashion, sales fell and production ceased in the 1980s.  It was fresh and bone dry with some barrel aging and the addition of some Sherry wine.  Some years ago a lone bottle of 1979 Monopole was found in the cellar.  Upon tasting it was found to be savory, fresh, balanced and delicious!  And Monopole production was reborn in 2014 after a 35 year gap!!! Today it is unoaked and made entirely from Viura with a tiny bit (5%) of Manzanilla Sherry added.  Our bottle of 2015 Monopole Clasico Blanco Seco was made from hand harvested grapes put into concrete tanks; then into stainless steel for alcoholic fermentation.  Then it went with its lees into vats and previously used botas for about 8 months aging.  When we taste it, we expect straw yellow color with slightly golden notes, complex aromatics including gooseberry, apple and chamomile flowers.  It should be elegant with saline notes and a long slightly acidic finish.  The alcohol content is 13.5%. Tim Atkin rated it 94 points and Robert Parker gave it 92.  VinePair rated it as their #17 wine in their Top 50 of 2018. 

    R. López de Heredia Bodega

    Don Rafael López de Heredia y Landeta was an enthusiastic student in the art of wine making who fell in love with the area around Haro in the Rioja Alta region.  Around 1877 he began the complex now known as the López de Heredia Bodega, the oldest in Haro, one of the first three bodegas in the Rioja region and today is one of the most traditional.  Today the estate covers 53,000 square meters which includes over 65,000 square feet of cellar space, up to 200 meters long and 15 meters below ground. The many cellars include the “El Calado Cellar”, which was built in 1892 with a main gallery 215 meters long stretching towards the Ebro River. Bodega Vieja, the “old cellar”, is used as the bottle vault plus the Bodega de Reservas aging area, home to very select wines. The “new cellar” Bodega Nueva was completed in 1907.   “The Cemetery” is their private wine cellar.  There are almost 13,000 Bordeaux oak barrels stored in those cellars.  There are also 72 oak vats ranging in size from 60 hectoliters to 640 hectoliters.  And they have their own cooperage!  They are one of the few Spanish bodegas crafting their own barrels. 

    When Don Rafael first established the bodega, he decided he couldn’t make outstanding wine without the best of materials to work with including the vineyards.  Therefore he founded what many people consider the most famous vineyard in Rioja – Viña Tondonia.  Over 247 acres of Tondonia is on alluvial and limestone soil along the Ebro River which also serves as the border to the Rioja Alavesa sub-region further north.  The top Reserva and Gran Reserva wines come from Tondonia.  Today the bodega owns 180 hectares (445 acres) of land with 110 currently in production.  This includes the additional vineyards of Viña Cubillo, Viña Bosconia and Viña Zaconia.  They use only estate grapes and practice organic farming.  Lopez de Heredia has preferred to stay true to their roots and traditions unlike Spain’s growing number of new-wave producers with modern technology and new French oak.  All of their wines begin in the 72 large oak vats, some of which are 139 years old, then on to a long aging in 14,000 handmade American oak barrels.  They are frequently racked, fined with egg whites and are bottled without filtration.  They produce a wide range of red wines at different price points.  Vino Cubillo is younger with a healthy addition of Garnacha; Bosconia Reserva and Gran Reservas are richer and more complex.  The Tondonia Reserva and Gran Reserva receive the most critical acclaim and are made from the standard Tondonia blend of Tempranillo, Garnacha, Graciano and Mazuelo.  Tondonia also stands out with aged and complex white Riojas and produces some Tondonia Blanco from a small section of Viura and Malvasia.  The smooth, elegant and delicious Viña Gravonia wine comes from the 59 acres of Viura grapes planted at Viña Zaconia.  About 25,000 cases of wine are produced annually.

    R. Lopez de Heredia Rioja Blanco Viña Gravonia 2009 La Rioja Alta Calificada Rioja DOC

    Viña Gravonia is made from 100% Viura grapes. The 2009 is a year officially rated as VERY GOOD.  It was barrel aged four years, being racked twice per year and fined with fresh egg whites.  Then it rested in the bottle unfiltered at 12.5 % alcohol.  13,100 bottles were made.  We expect it to be fresh and aromatic, complex and developed with some candied citrus and honeycomb, dried pear, quince, and fresh almond well balanced with a long finish.  This wine is a great example of traditional style.  James Suckling and Wine Spectator both scored it at 94 points. 

    CUNE CVNE Rioja Gran Reserva 2010 La Rioja Alta Calificada Rioja DOC

    The CUNE Gran Reserva is made from hand selected grapes in their vineyards in Rioja Alta. It’s a blend of 85% Tempranillo, 10% Graciano and 5% Mazuelo.  The wine was aged in American and French oak for two years and three more years in the bottle and has an alcohol content of 13.6%.  Our wine should be maroon in color with a perfect balance between ripe black fruit and aromas of vanilla, toffee, leather and tar.  It should be nicely rounded with balanced tannins; however there will probably be less finesse than in the Gran Reservas from Imperial, Viña Real and Contino. 50,000 bottles were produced.  But with scores of 94 points WS, 92 points WE and 91 points Robert Parker, how bad can it be?  Wine Spectator also selected it as their #22 wine in the Top 100 of 2016.  Sounds like a winner to me!

    Bodegas Marques de Murrieta

    Marques de Murrieta was founded in 1852 near Logrono in the Rioja region.  Then in 1872 Peruvian –born Luciano de Murrieta y Garcia-Lemoine purchased the Castillo Ygay estate which is still where they produce the wines.  This became the first estate in Rioja to export their wine.  Murrieta was somewhat of an innovator – he was the first person in Rioja to age his top red wines in oak barrels similar to Bordeaux.  Up until then, the wines were sold in the same year as production.  He was also one of the first to start exporting wines.  Then the company lost its luster and was later bought by Vicente Cebrián Sagarriga. It is now run by his son, Vicente Dalman Cebrián..  Today Murrieta is the largest single estate in the region with 750 acres divided into 28 separate plots growing all of their own grapes mainly Tempranillo with smaller amounts of Garnacha, Viura, Mazuelo, Graciano and Cabernet Sauvignon.  The current owner also has an estate in Rias Baixas and a history of making white wines.  Maybe that is why Ygay also makes two whites.  The main focus still remains its Reserva, which makes up 85% of production and made from the typical Rioja red Tempranillo blend.  The winemaker, Maria Vargas, is one of the highest profile women winemakers in Rioja.  The Rioja Reserva has been shifting gradually towards a more fruit-driven terroir style of wine with a little higher percentage of Garnacha and Graciano.  This allows the Gran Reserva to better show off the characteristics of aging.  In 2016 they started making a more modern rosé further proving that Murrieta is not totally focused on tradition. 

    Marques de Murrieta Rioja Ygay Reserva 2014 La Rioja Alta Calificada Rioja DOC

    The Murrieta Rioja Reserva is made from a blend of Tempranillo 84%, Graciano 9%, Mazuelo 5%, and Garnacha 2% all grown on the 741-acre Ygay Estate in Rioja Alta.  The grapes were de-stemmed then fermented in stainless steel tanks under controlled temperature for 8 days in constant skin contact.  The wine is aged for 19 months in 225 liter American oak barrels.  2014 was a somewhat challenging vintage; however it still received 94 points from Tim Atkins, 93 from Robert Parker and 92 Wine Spectator.  We are expecting to taste a great bottle of Murrieta upon opening!  We will look for red cherries and some aromatic herbs on the nose, a velvety texture with round tannins and a subtle finish.  900,000 bottles were produced. 

    Rioja Oriental (Eastern Rioja)

    Previously known as Rioja Baja (Low), this is the area east of Logrono on both banks of the Ebro and lower in altitude.  Interestingly enough, most of the vineyards on the north side of Rioja Oriental actually lie within the province of Navarra.  This makes up the largest portion of D.O. Rioja and represents 40% of its wine production.  This zone has very dry and warm summers with large proportions of silt and alluvial as well as ferrous clay soils.  Garnacha and Tempranillo are both grown here.  The wine industry here is largely made up of cooperatives.   When previously named Baja, producers thought the name meaning “low” denigrated the image of their wine.  So in 2017 the DOCa Rioja approved the name change to Rioja Oriental.  This name did not go over well with many both inside Spain and US, but the name is now official. 

    Rioja Alavesa (In Basque Country)

    This is the smallest of the three subzones and is located on the north bank of the Ebro River that lies entirely within the province of Alava in the Basque Country. Alava is within the autonomous community of Pais Vasco (Basque Country). In 1998 Alavesa was permitted to label wines Rioja Alavesa if made from Alavesa grapes and bottled in Alavesa.  Alavesa’s climate, soil and style is similar to Alta and the two of them are considered to produce the best wines of the region.  Tempranillo is the main grape along with Garnacha, Mazuelo and Graciano used for blending.  Some Viura is also produced.  A producer of note is Marqués de Riscal. 

    The Vino de Municipios

    There are 144 authorized Municipios or villages in the DOCa.  85% of the grapes in the bottle must come from the named Municipio.  The rest can come from a neighboring Municipio.  49 wineries and 20 Municipios have requested this labeling designation so far out of the current 145 municipalities.  It is still unknown which ones will emerge as standouts.  

    Single varietal white wines

    There are even more changes.  Single-varietal white wines may now be sold under the Rioja Blanco label. The amount of white grapes planted has increased to approximately 1500 hectares and close to 8% of total Rioja sales, an increase from 5% just 5 years ago as white Rioja wines have gained in international prominence.  Single varietal wines can now be produced from any of the permitted grape varieties. 

    Espumosos de Calidad de Rioja

    For the first time ever Rioja has a sparkling wine designation.  It’s called Espumosos de Calidad de Rioja, somewhat similar to Champagne, must be by the traditional method and must age for at least 15 months. It can be made from white or rosé wines produced from any of the native grapes of Rioja.  The first vintages will be released beginning the year of 2019, and must be labeled “Método tradicional” Brut, Extra Brut and Brut Nature. 

    There’s a new aging classification added in 2018 named “Gran Añada” to go along with the new sparkling wine designation. Sparkling wine must spend at least 3 years on the lees and age for at least 15 months.  Vintage wines must be hand-harvested.  Hopefully this new classification will not be confused with the existing Cava sparkling wines.

    Rosado or Rosé wines

    Rosé or “rosado” wines can now be made in a lighter color since it appears that the lighter color rosés of Provencal have been much more successful in the market than a Spanish rosado. 

    Bodegas Muga

    You can find Bodega Muga in Haro located in the Alta subzone of Rioja.  It is among some of the oldest wine ventures in Rioja and is considered one of the region’s most important winemaking families even if it is less than 100 years old!   Muga was established in 1932 and moved to its current location in 1970.  Their 70,000 hectares of vineyards can produce around 2 million bottles of very high quality wines annually.  It’s still family owned, and now the third generation is leading the charge.  They have led the modernization of the winery during the last few decades in which Rioja has become transformed during this time as well.  Muga still makes extremely classical wines with malolactic fermentation and aging performed in oak and egg whites used for fining.  The reds are fermented in oak vats (each one of their big tanks can hold 55,000 liters), aged in American oak casks, and then racked every four months.  You won’t find any stainless steel tanks here! They are also one of the few wineries with their own cooperage, so if you are in the Haro area, Muga is definitely worth a visit.  The Mugas go to France every winter to personally inspect the trees and select them for their barrels.  They use 100% indigenous yeasts and rack by gravity.  The wine is inspected by candlelight during racking to watch for sediments. Muga makes classical Crianza, Reserva and Prado Enea Gran Reserva, the Prado Enea being made from high altitude vines close to the boundaries of the western end of Rioja or Alavesa in the Basque Country.  This makes perfect sense as ‘Muga’ actually means “border” in Basque.  It is also well-known for “Torre” Muga and “Aro” Muga.  James Suckling gave the 2016 Aro 100 points!  Not to mention the 99 points for the 2011 Prado Enea and 98 for the 2016 Torre. 

    Winemaker Jorge Muga has been working with grapes other than their main grape, Tempranillo – he puts around 20-30% of Garnacha, Graciano and Mazuelo in his Tempranillo blend.  He also barrel-ferments a white made from Viura with a bit of Malvasia.  Muga makes Cava Conde de Haro from Viura and several Rosados.  Muga Rosado is made from a blend of Garnacha, Viura and Tempranillo grown in the upper Najerilla Valley, one of the 7 valleys in the Rioja wine region which is known for its very old vineyards with Tempranillo and Garnacha vines between 80-100 years old.   The extra special Flor de Muga Rosé is made from 100% Grenache grapes grown in specially selected plots.   On a personal note, I can still recall that very first bottle of Rosé that I ever drank – it was a Muga Rosado!  And I loved it! 

    As previously mentioned, with the change in classifications from the Rioja Consejo Regulador, rosado or rosés can now be made in a lighter color more closely resembling the rosés of Provence.  You can now expect to see Muga rosés with a very pale pink color.

    Bodegas Muga Flor de Muga Rosé 2017

    The first thing you will notice when looking at a bottle of Muga “Flor de Muga”, or “Wine Flower of Muga” Rosé, is the very pale pink color of the wine not at all unlike a Provence Rosé but quite different from the salmon color Artazu Rosado of Navarro.  The Flor de Muga is made from specially selected plots of 70-90 year old Grenache grapevines growing at 600-750 meters altitude.  The soils in the upper Najerilla Valley are made up of clay-limestone and red iron-clay soil.  The grapes are handpicked, given short 12 hour skin contact maceration and only 50% of the purest free run juices are used.  They are fermented in very small oak vats for 15-20 days; then kept on its lees for at least 4 months.  The result is a light pale rosé with an elegant fresh nose, hints of peach, strawberry and white flowers.  It should have a full and fleshy palate with a long finish.   The alcohol content is 13.5%.  James Suckling 94 points; Wilfred Wong 93; Robert Parker 91; and Wine Spectator 90.

    We have been “Basque…ing” in the Pyrenees!

    That wraps up our latest forkandcorkdivine wine region “armchair” adventure.  Our Basque Country travels are now complete.  We covered a lot of territory!  We have traveled between two countries, crossed the Pyrenees Mountains and visited seven different provinces of France and Spain that make up the ancient and exciting Basque Region.   We have learned about a variety of grapes and wines – some probably quite unfamiliar to many of us – and others that many of us have known about for quite a few years.  We’ve learned about the French Basque wine of the Irouleguy AOP including the Tannat blend and the lesser known Blanc blend of Gros and Petit Manseng and Courbu.  Crossing the Pyrenees into Spain, most of us probably have never even heard of Txakoli wine and surely not the Hondarrabi Zuri or Beltza grapes unless we have visited the Basque Pais Vasco where you would most likely have enjoyed Pintxos with your Txakoli.  On to another part of Basque Country – the Kingdom of Navarra. The wines of Navarra have traditionally showcased Rosados in the past, but Navarra is now coming into its own with a good selection of reds, whites and rosés.  Then who hasn’t enjoyed the wines of La Rioja where Tempranillo is king?  After all it even received the very first DOC status of Spain, and one of La Rioja’s three subzones is part of Basque Country.   Some of the best red wines in the world have come from this part of Spain.  And then there is the food!  You can eat like a Basque shepherd in France and cook up some of Paula Wolfert’s delicious and famous Southwest France recipes or have a taste of everything by trying all of those Pintxos and Tapas like a true Spaniard. 

    The winemakers have various philosophies in Basque Country, just like we have learned about in so many other wine regions.  While there are many who still embrace the traditional methods, there is a younger generation of winemakers attempting to modernize the industry.  But quite often you will find the middle of the road is still most favored with just the right blend of the old traditions mixed with some new modern technology and ideas.  And even better, the cost of wines from these areas are a pretty good value that will give you a great tasting experience without breaking the bank.  Now that is something that this winelover can really appreciate! 

    So once again we repeat – be adventurous!  Branch out a bit and try different wines.  Drink the Txakoli and eat the Pintxos!  You may just find out that you have really been missing out on a great experience.  Forkandcorkdivine will be hosting a Basque Country wine dinner for a small group of our winelover foodie friends in the very near future. We will taste a number of wines from Basque Country (with a few extras from the rest of Rioja for good measure!) and we will pair them all appropriately with food that we lovingly prepare.  Just in case you think that whipping up a little wine dinner menu is a quick and easy task, here is a humorous quote from my husband Chuck who is forced to endure (and yes assist!) throughout each one of these wine and culinary adventures: 

    “A wine dinner based on the Pyrenees
      almost brought Linda to her knees.
      Creating a menu that was Basque
      was a monumental task,
      but she did it with grace and ease”.

    from Chuck Rakos

    I don’t know about “grace and ease”, but I do know that I am passionate about the entire learning experience and can’t imagine how boring our life would be without it.  You can be sure to read all about our Basque Country dinner – “Txakoli, Pintxos and Tapas” – in the next forkandcorkdivine article.  And of course there will be many pictures of the food and wine.  Then on to our next adventure – topic yet to be determined!  Where would you go next? 

    All of the information that I used to prepare this article is available on the internet and the following books: “The wine Bible” by Karen MacNeil; “Wine Folly: the Master Guide” Magnum Edition by Madeline Puckette and Justin Hammack and “The World Atlas of Wine” by Jancis Robinson and Hugh Johnson.  Please accept my apologies if there is any incorrect data or information; I try to verify from several sources. 

    LFRakos@gmail.com

    Forkandcorkdivine.com

    8.25.19

  • 21May

    If you think Italian Pinot Grigio is an inexpensive bulk-produced white wine for non-serious wine drinkers, then you probably have not had the “real deal” Pinot Grigio from Alto Adige.   That is what I used to think, and promptly turned up my nose in true wine-snob fashion if offered a glass of Pinot Grigio.  Then one day someone served me Pinot Grigio from an Italian wine region that was fairly close to being unheard of.  Wow!  I quickly decided that this is not a white Italian wine to be taken lightly, and that I had better learn something about where it came from.  Alto Adige?  Is that in Italy?

    Alto Adige is located just at the very top northernmost part of Italy just below and bordering on Austria and Switzerland.  It’s a little valley that used to be the main gateway between Italy and the rest of Europe.   It has also been desired in war by many people from the ancient Romans to the Nazi regime.  If you want to learn about Alto Adige, you also need to know a bit about her other half, Trentino, and what’s the connection to our new favorite Pinot Grigio from Alto Adige. Here is information for you about the region, the grapes, wines and the DOCs along with a few featured wineries and some of their wines. I hope you find it helpful and make you want to try the wine!

    Trentino-Alto Adige

    This region may be known as Trentino-Alto Adige, but it really is comprised of two separate provinces – Trentino and Alto Adige – that are joined together like twins.  Trentino covers a 2,300 square mile area and is almost entirely Italian speaking while Alto Adige with 2,800 square miles is predominantly German speaking.  In fact the German population knows their region as Südtirol or South Tyrol in English.  Alto Adige was once part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, but was reclaimed by Italy in 1919.  About one million people live between the two provinces.  Alto Adige is in the north and Trentino is in the south.  The two are divided east from west by the Adige River, the second longest river in Italy, which is how Alto Adige (Upper Adige) got its name.  The vineyards are in the valleys formed by the Adige and its tributaries.  The rest of the provinces are quite mountainous; Trentino-Alto Adige is known for the beauty of its mountain peaks. Trento, the provincial and regional capital, sits on the banks of the Adige just downstream from the Istituto Agrario di San Michele all’Adige, Italy’s top winemaking school.  Part of Trentino also borders on Lake Garda, a very picturesque scene between the high mountains. Trentino borders Lombardy to the west and Veneto to the southeast.  Bolzano, located in the center of Alto Adige, is the capital of Alto Adige and the province of Bolzano.   

    The wines from these two provinces are also as dramatic and complex as their culture and political past.  Germanic varieties such as Müller-Thurgau are prevalent in some of the region while the local Schiava grape is plentiful alongside more increasing vines of international grapes like Pinot Grigio, Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, Pinot Bianco and Sauvignon Blanc.  Modern wine consumer preferences have also had great influence here just as in other Italian wine regions.  Trentino-Alto Adige is the only Italian region with an increase in vineyard planting in the last quarter of the 20th century. 

    The region straddles the 46th parallel north and shares it’s latitude with central Burgundy.  The valley floors heat up quickly in the mornings in summer which sends warm air up the slopes into the vineyards that are in rows ascending the sides of the valleys.  There is bright sunshine which makes for rich ripe wine styles which is unexpected in an alpine climate.  The warm alpine air also helps to save the vines from disease and fungus.  The soil is alluvial and colluvial, free-draining and rich in minerals. 

    Winemaking in Trentino-Alto Adige

    While we are enjoying our exceptional floral, fruity, fuller-bodied, food friendly acidic Pinot Grigio with “something to say”, get ready to familiarize yourself with a number of German-sounding wines like Gewürztraminer, Müller-Thurgau, Sylvaner and then there are the Italians like Schiava and Teroldego.  After a while, you’ll be looking for your old friend Chardonnay.  And that’s OK because there is a lot of it here, too.  

    Trentino is known for sparkling wine, Pinot Noir and Chardonnay – all international style – but if you go to Alto-Adige, you may think you have actually arrived in Germany.  Winery estates in Alto-Adige are called “Schloss”, the German word for castle or chateau, and it is very common to see German names and words on the labels.  Alto-Adige may be tiny with only 13,000 acres; however there is enough variation to have 7 different growing sub-regions.  The area’s historic name is Südtirol (South Tyrol) from its Austrian past, and many of the people who live here are more familiar with goulash than polenta.  This is also the land of speck, bresaola, Asiago, strangaolopreti gnocchi, and Knὂdel.

    Wine was made here even before the Romans and possibly as long ago as the Iron Age.  2,500 year-old wooden barrels fitted with iron hoops were discovered in Alto Adige in 2002.  Just like so many other wine producing regions, it was the knowledge of monasteries that improved and refined the local wine.    Monasteries north of the Alps bought wineries in Alto Adige so they could have wine for mass. The largest wine press in Alto Adige may be in the Trostburg Castle in the Isarco Valley.  The vineyards of Trauttmandsdorff Castle in Merano have conserved fifteen indigenous grape varieties from extinction including Blatterle, Jungferler, Fraueler and Gschlafenerr.  You can see the “Versoaln”, one of the oldest grapevines in the world at the Katzenzungen Castle in Prissian.  You can also taste the wine.  There are numerous monasteries you can visit in the region. 

    Whether you are actually visiting monasteries in Trentino-Alto Adige, or at home sipping wine from the region, you will learn that some of their most important white grapes are Pinot Grigio, Traminer, Gewürztraminer, Sylvaner, Müller-Thurgau, Pinot Blanc and Chardonnay.    Then there is Pinot Grigio!  I hate to sound repetitive but this Pinot Grigio really is some of the best you will find.  Twenty percent of the total wine production in Alto Adige is Pinot Grigio and Pinot Blanc.  American Pinot Grigio may be less acidic than those of Alto-Adige and less expensive, but believe me, the Alto-Adige is usually worth every penny!  The Pinot Grigio and Pinot Bianco have faint lemon and waxy peach aromas with slight honey and almond undertones.  They are great rivals for Austrian Grüner Veltiner and German Riesling.

    Traminer is a specialty in Alto Adige.  It’s a sister of gewürztraminer and is known for making gorgeous floral, flavorful light white wines.  Don’t be afraid to give Müller Thurgau a try here; it is nothing like the somewhat drab version from Germany.  The indigenous reds can be very enjoyable, too.  Be adventurous!  Schiava, Teroldego, Lagrein, Tazzelenghe and Schioppettino all deserve to be tasted; however, you might have to work really hard to find some of them.  A few producers to search out are Castel Schwanburg, Franz Haas, Hofstätter, Kuenhof, Alois Lageder, Tiefenbrunner and Elena Walch.


    Schlosskellerei Tiefenbrunner


    The Tiefenbrunner Castel Turmhof Wine Estate in now in its fifth generation of family operation. Sabine and Christof Tiefenbrunner say that it is a privilege and a duty to continue the story of their winemaking family. The Linticlar Estate was first mentioned in records dating from 1225. The castle ruins above the winery show that people have lived here since prehistoric times. The Turmhof was registered as a winery in 1848 making it one of the oldest wine estates in Alto Adige. Herbert Tiefenbrunner started work as a wine-maker before the end of WWII, and bought the winery in 1968. Sabine and Christof took it over in 2012. The winery produces over 20 types of wines with the flagship being the Müller-Thurgau “Feldsmarschall”. Their 60 acres of vineyards are located along the Wine Route of South Tyrol mainly on the mountain slopes around the castle. At 3280 feet above sea level, it is the highest vineyard in Europe. Production is 800,000 bottles a year.

    That sparkling wine from the Trento DOC, or “Trentodoc” as local producers have more recently rebranded themselves, became very popular in the early twentieth century when Giulio Ferrari – sorry, he doesn’t make the cars! – pioneered sparkling wines in Trentino. Ferrari studied in France and thought there were a number of similarities between the Champagne and Trentino regions, and decided to bring Chardonnay to the area and make some traditional method sparkling wine just as he had learned in Epernay.  Today Ferrari is still one of the best known and top sparkling wine houses of Italy.  It seems that Ferrari put Trentino on the wine map.  I’ve had a number of their sparklings and found them quite delightful!  There are 50 wineries here producing 8 million bottles per year.  Only a few of them export to the US – Ferrari, Altemasi and Rotari – so don’t expect to find it unless you make a major effort.  I have purchased mine from internet wine sites like wine.com

    The Trentino DOC also produces a wide range of varietal wines from the light local Schiava to fine barrel-fermented Chardonnays.  Then there is Teroldego in the north of Trentino that can be intensely fruity and deep-colored.  Teroldego is a good example of what was old and out of fashion has now become new and popular once again.  Elisabetta Foradori’s biodynamic estate at Mezzolombardo in Trentino is a good introduction to Teroldego.  Foradori is considered the leading producer of Teroldego.


    Foradori 


    Elisabetta Foradori is a key figure in Italian winemaking who put Trentino and its native grapes on the map. She is considered as one of the most influential female winemakers in the world. Her grandfather bought 15 hectares in Campo Rotaliano in the 1920s and sold wine in bulk. In 1960 her father learned oenology and put more ambition into the winery. Then in 1984 Elisabetta took over the winery. In 1986 she started making Granato old-vine Teroldego wine, which later became their flagship wine. After an “existential crisis” Foradori reconnected with the soil and by 2002 was running the entire domaine biodynamically and became fully certified by Demeter in 2009. The next important chapter was the use of clay amphorae to make natural wine. Now her son Emilio leads the winemaking working with his mother. Foradori is planted in 75% Teroldego, 15% Manzoni Bianco, 5% Nosiola and 5% Pinot Grigio which includes 9 leased hectares. The average annual production is 160,000 bottles of which 80,000 is estate Teroldego.


    Foradori Teroldego Vigneti delle Dolomiti 2015


    This Teroldego is sourced from 16 parcels including Mezzolombardo Campazzi, Settepergole and others. The soil is alluvial and gravelly-sandy. The fruit, 30% whole bunch, is fermented in concrete tanks then aged 12 months half in oak, half concrete. This is the signature wine and is juicy with a purity of dense red and black fruit, violets, a peppery edge and well integrated tannins. Alcohol is 12.5%.

    One of the main distinctions between Trentino and Alto Adige is that in the north, wines are produced mainly by small family owned and managed wineries that sell their high quality wine mainly locally.  Trentino has a number of growers who have all joined together in cooperatives that produce wines with consistent taste and characteristics every year.  They are popular in Italy, but also abroad.  These are some of the most exceptionally competent cooperatives in Italy.  Bolzano, Caldaro, Colterenzio, Cortaccia, San Michele Appiano, Terlano and Termeno are all great examples.  Cantina Terlano was founded in 1893 just above Bolzano at Terlan; they produce exquisite white wines especially Pinot Blanc from the terraced Vorberg vineyards. Cantina Caldaro overlooks Lake Caldaro and produces local reds such as Lagrein, Schiava and Sta Maddalene, which is 90% Schiava and 10% Lagrein.  Count Michael Graf Goéss-Enzenberg’s “eco-sensitive” Manincor winery is in the area of Lake Caldaro.  They produce excellent Pinot Noir, Moscato Giallo and Moscato Rosa.  Alois Lageder’s Lὂwengang winery in the village of Magré was built in 1995 to strict environmental and ecological criteria.  Then there is the historic estate of Foradori’s Hofstgatter built in 1907 in Tramin famous for Gewürztraminer, single-vineyard Pinot Noir Barthenau Vigna San Urbano and local Lagrein. 

    South of Trento near Volano is home to Eugenio Rosi, a controversial but authentic producer of the indigenous red grape Marzemino.  The San Leonardo estate is further south near Avis and is home to one of northern Italy’s most famous Bordeaux-style wines. 

    Trentino’s terroir is very similar to Alto Adige except it is a little further down the valley and just a bit less ruled by mountains even though the mountain peaks are many thousands of feet above.  Those high mountain peaks actually bring some protection from the elements keeping the vineyards free from rot and fungal disease.  The capital city of Trento is one of Italy’s warmest cities in the summer.  The valley floor heats up so much that you shouldn’t be surprised by the 104 degree temperatures in July. 

    Grape growers use the pergola trentina system of vine training in both Trentino and Alto Adige.  This consists of high canopies supported on wooden arms high enough that people can walk under the vines without ducking, and with a dense leaf canopy that allows the fruit to ripen more slowly. 

    Grapes and wines of Trentino-Alto Adige

    In 2017 Trentino-Alto Adige produced just over 11.3 million cases of wine.  More than two-thirds of it was white.  The primary grapes are Chardonnay (22%), Pinot Grigio (19%) and Schiava (9%). 

    The Grapes

    WHITES:

    Chardonnay: Now one of the most widely planted grapes in Trentino-Alto Adige (and Italy) due to the big boom of Spumantes in Trentino in the 1950s and 60s. 

    Gewürztraminer: It is traditionally off-dry with aromatics of fresh lychee, honeycomb and ginger.  Alto-Adige is home to Gewürztraminer and was recently found to be the same grape variety as Traminer (Traminer Aromatico).  You can find it mainly in the most southern wine area of Bassa Atesina which is warmed by Lake Garda. It is grown in both Alto Adige and Trentino. 

    Kerner: This aromatic white grape is named for Justinus Kerner, a 19th century German poet and writer of German drinking songs!  It was bred in 1929 in Germany where it is grown widely, plus the Alto Adige, Austria, Switzerland, and a few unusual places like Japan.  High in acid and able to age well, but as a varietal lacks the flavor and refinement of Riesling. 

    Müller Thurgau: This one is lighter and more flowery than Gewürztraminer.  It has less alcohol and more citrus blossom aromas.  It also grows in the Bassa Atesina wine-growing zone, but higher up as high as 4000 feet.  The grape is a cross between Sylvaner and Riesling; it’s fairly widespread in northern Italy. 

    Moscato Gialla: A distinct sub-variety of Trentino-Alto Adige.

    Nosiola: A tart native grape of Trentino.

    Pinot Bianco: Widely planted in Italy, but extremely important in Alto Adige.

    Pinot Grigio: This grape can be rich and potent, but lots of it is made into a thin high acid wine. Not the rule in Alto Adige!

    Sauvignon: Sauvignon Blanc has become quite popular in northern Italy.

    Sylvaner: Mainly found in the Isarco Valley of Alto Adige; probably brought there from Germany.

    REDS:

    Cabernet: Both Cabernet Sauvignon and Cabernet Franc were brought here from France before but especially after the deadly phylloxerra. They are both widely planted. 

    Casetta: A native grape of Vallagarina between Trento and Verona.  One of its synonyms is Lambrusco a foglia Tonda which is not the same as Enantio/Lambrusco a foglia Frastagliata grapes.  The berry is black medium-large with medium thin blue-black skin.  The vine does best in hilly terrain, no more than 400 meters above sea level and with good exposure.  It makes intense ruby red wine, fruity with plant notes, good tannins, rich in alcohol and acidity.   Find it in Valdadige Terradeiforti DOC and Vallagarina IGP.

    Lagrein: This is an ancient native varietal grape with mention as far back as the 1500s. There are only 1100 acres of it in Alto Adige, Trentino’s Campo Rotaliano plain and that may be it for the whole world, so it is hard to find.   It needs intense heat to ripen, and thrives in the sandy alluvial soils of the plains near Bolzano.  It’s made into a dark dense red wine with earthy pepper notes, relatively high tannin and acidity and called scuro (Dunkel).  “Scuro” means dark in Italian; “dunkel” means dark in German. Like Teroldego it is usually deeply flavored with some spice on the finish and pairs up well with a rich braised meat or stew. It also makes a spicy fragrant full of flavor rosato (Kretzer).  All in all it’s a good wine to tuck away in your cellar.  Some say it tastes similar to French Syrah and Italian Barbera. 

    Marzemino: Grows primarily in Trentino around Isera but also in the Veneto, Lombardy and Emilia-Romagna.  It has a grassy, herbal element and sour cherry tang.  Its biggest claim to fame is in the sweet Colli di Conegliano Refrontolo passito wines of the Veneto.

    Merlot: Grows easily here and is one of the most widely planted red grapes in Italy.

    Pinot Nero (Pinot Noir): Another one of the international grapes of French origin and is considered one of the noble red grapes.  It is difficult to grow and a challenge from vintage to vintage and area to area due to climate and soil conditions.  You will find it in Italy mainly in Trentino-Alto Adige and Collio Goriziano, but there are some winemakers attempting to grow it as far south as Tuscany.  Lombardy winemakers make their classic Franciacorta DOCG sparkling from Pinot Noir, and the Pinot Nero dell’Oltrepò Pavese DOC has been in existence since 2010. 

    Schiava (Vernatsch):  This is the most widely planted grape in Trentino-Alto Adige and is probably of Slavic or German origin.  73% of Italian Schiava grapes grow in Trentino-Alto Adige.  The other 21% are in Puglia. The best place to find it is in the Lago di Caldaro DOC and the Santa Maddalena subzone.  

    Teroldego Rotaliano:  Mostly grown in the Campo Rotaliano plain of northern Trentino; possibly related to Marzemino grape variety. 

    The wines

    Alto Adige

    The majority of wines produced in this DOC are also covered by smaller DOCs and several IGPs that are more specific to area and wine style.  This is quite unique in Italy’s wine regions.  The same is true for Trentino. And then there are sub-zones!  It is quite possible you will find a bottle of wine labeled Alto Adige DOC …..plus the name of the specific DOC ……. Plus the name of the sub-zone…….. and oh yes, probably with the addition of names in German! Just for more “fun”!  Schiava and Lagrein are the dominant local grapes and the standard French origin international grapes plus the popular German varieties. 

    ALTO ADIGE WHITE WINES

    The Alto Adige DOC is home to 11 white grape varieties including Chardonnay, Müller-Thurgau, Sauvignon, and Pinots Grigio and Bianco.  The big difference is which grapes producers here focus on,  and as we indicated before, the greater use of German on the label.  Some producers age their Chardonnays in oak while others use stainless steel.  The same is true for Sauvignon, but stainless steel seems to be the more preferred method.  These are the most appealing and popular wines – and they are bright, acidic and tingly.  Alto Adige also makes a lot of single-vineyard cru wines and special blends, which do use more oak and are heavier on the palate.  Pinot Bianco wines are especially affected by this; they respond quite well to fermenting and oak aging.  Also Pinot Bianco gives a good crop every year and it’s really versatile.

    Fritz Kupelwieser

    Fritz Kupelwieser planted his Alto Adige vineyard in 1878. The current wines reflect his dedication and commitment and serve as a reminder of Fritz’s philosophy. The wines are fresh and lively and the winery approaches them with elegance and style right down to the stylish design of the bottles. Kupelwieser makes white wines of Chardonnay, Gewürztraminer, Müller-Thurgau, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Grigio, Riesling and Sauvignon and reds from Lagrein and Pinot Noir.

    Kupelwieser Pinot Grigio Fritz Alto Adige 2017

    Fritz Pinot Grigio comes from vineyards on the valley floor of the “Lowlands” of Alto Adige. The low grape yield per hectare of 60 hl ensures the wine’s high level of quality. The grapes are gently pressed and naturally clarified. Fermentation takes place with pure strains of yeast at 66 degree F. temperatures. The result is a straw yellow wine with rich aromas of delicate fruity with subtle tones of pears, excellent acidity and a soft but full dry finish. You can cellar this Pinot for 2-3 years.

    Abbazia di Novacella Stiftskellerei Neustift

    This abbey was founded in 1142 by the Augustinian order of Canons Regular. You can find it in the little town of Novacella in the Isarco River Valley. The Isarco (also known as the Eisack River) is the second largest river in South Tyrol. Abbazia di Novacella is a huge complex including a two -story gate chapel, church, library, museum, gardens, convention center, boarding school, restaurant, gift shop, and………….a wine estate! In fact the winery has been known for many years as a producer of world class white wines. Italy’s Gambero Rosso named Celestino Lucin, the abbey’s winemaker, as the 2009 Winemaker of the Year. The white grapes grow on 6 hectares around the abbey in the northernmost vineyards of Italy at elevations of 1970 – 2950 feet and 15 hectares of red grapes further south in the warmer central region near Lago di Caldaro and Bolzano. They also work with 50 small growers in the region. The soil is mainly granitic schist created by ancient glaciers and the vineyards are very steep. The vines here produce wines that are aromatic, fresh and rich. They may have been making wine for over 850 years, but their cellar is entirely modern and they farm organically. Production includes Pinot Grigio, Kerner, Sauvignon, Schiava, Gruner Veltliner, Lagrein, Pinot Nero and Moscato Rosa.

    Abbazia di Novacella Pinot Grigio Valle Isarco Alto Adige 2015

    This Pinot Grigio from the Abbazia di Novacella in the Isarco Valley grew in gravelly soil between 1969 – 2461 feet above sea level with a south-southwest exposure. Two-thirds of the wine was fermented and stored in stainless steel tanks; one-third in 30 hectoliter oak casks for 6 months. It was made with natural and selected yeasts. We can expect a straw yellow color with aromas of citrus fruits, peaches and honeydew melon; medium rich and fruity on the palate with orchard fruit flavor and a tangy, acidic, full and elegant finish. Alcohol level is 13% and it received 92 points from James Suckling; 91 W & S and 90 from WE.

    Gewürztraminer is the symbol of Alto Adige wine culture.  The grape Traminer may well have come from the town of Tramin (Termeno).  Its heavy aromas and flavors can be the perfect match for the heavy mountain foods of the area like gnocchi with wild herbs and smoked sausages.  It also goes well with cinnamon which is used a lot in the cooking of Alto Adige.

    Cantina Tramin Kellerei

    Tramin Winery represents one of the oldest networks of farmers forming a co-operative winery. It was founded in 1898 by Pastor Christian Schrott and now has 290 members across approximately 620 acres in the communities of Tramin, Newmarkt, Montan and Auer. The philosophy of the co-operative is that the farmers operating individually on their small estates allows for hard work, dedication, creativity and pride. The town of Tramin (the German name for Termeno) is home to the Gewürztraminer grape, and claims the best vineyards of that grape are planted around the village on the west bank of the Adige Valley. Cantina Tramin built a new headquarters that opened in 2010 that incorporates the original cellar into a striking new building that even features a luminated glass bubble suspended between heaven and earth that allows visitors to have a panoramic view of the foothills, orchards and vineyards. Tramin produces many other fine white, red and sweet wines from grapes that thrive in this region.

    Cantina Tramin Kellerei Gewürztraminer Alto Adige 2017

    This is a 100% Gewürztraminer that came from 100 acres of vineyards in calcareous and clay soils of Alto Adige at an altitude of 990 – 1485 feet above sea level. The grapes were fermented in stainless steel tanks for 10 days at a controlled temperature of 70 Degrees F. It was then aged for 5 months before bottling. The resulting wine is straw-yellow in color with scents of peach and fresh cut grass over subtle hint of white spices. It has a balanced acidity and weighty texture. Tropical flavors of lychee and starfruit on the palate complement the delicate floral finish. 300,000 bottles were produced.

    Sylvaner is another aromatic white of Alto Adige you should search out, especially those wines from the Val d’Isarco/Eisacktaler sub-zones of the Alto Adige DOC.  The Isarco Valley offers one of the most beautiful mountainous natural landscapes in Alto Adige, with alpine farmhouses, castles, monasteries, villages, and terraced vineyards enclosed within neat low stone walls.  The vineyards are on the steep mountain slopes at heights of up to 950 meters.  The long narrow Isarco Valley, located northwest of Bolzano, was an independent DOC until 1993 when it became a sub-zone. In addition to the Sylvaner, you will also find Gewürztraminer, Kerner, Müller-Thurgau, Pinot Grigio and Riesling, plus Klausner Laitacher.  Just in case you aren’t familiar with that one – I sure wasn’t!! –  Klausner Laitacher wine is made following an ancient Isarco Valley tradition.  It consists of a blend of Schiava, Lagrein, Pinot Nero and Blauer Portugieser resulting in an elegant wine with a charming fresh fruit note.      

    Tiefenbrunner Merus Pinot Bianco South Tyrol/Alto Adige DOC 2017

    The “Merus” is made from 100% Pinot Bianco grapes grown on hillside vineyards in Cortaccia’s chalk gravel moraine soil and the sandy alluvial soil of valley floor locations near Magre from 688 – 1968 feet altitude. The grapes went through temperature controlled fermentation in steel tanks followed by four-month aging on the fine lees in concrete vats prior to bottling. The resulting wine is fresh and elegant with pale yellow color, flowery, fine and fruity notes of apple and tropical fruits, and fresh minerally acidity with a harmonious finish. Alcohol is 13%.

    Tiefenbrunner Vigna Feldmarschall Von Fenner Müller-Thurgau 2016 South Tyrol/Alto Adige DOC

    The Vigna is made from 100% Müller-Thurgau grapes at 3280 feet above sea level. The red soil is characterized by glacier moraine rock, silty-loamy sand, some white and red marble, granite rocks, dolomite and limestone. The soil also has a high salt content which adds to the fruit and herb aromas. After the grapes are gently pressed, one half is left to ferment in a large wooden barrel and one half in a stainless steel tank. There is no added yeast. The wine then rests on the lees for just under a year. After that it spends another 6 months in the bottle. The bottles are closed with screw caps to preserve the aromatics. The final result is a light straw yellow wine with notes of white flowers and yellow fruits, peach and apricot and fresh acidity. Mineral notes become more prominent as it ages. You can cellar this wine for 10 years or more. Alcohol is 13%. 13,000 bottles were produced. Wine Enthusiast rated this wine at 94 points.

    ALTO ADIGE RED WINES

    Schiava is the most widely planted variety and wines based from Schiava remain pretty much a local choice.   Schiava makes a fruity light to medium- bodied red wine with intense strawberry, cherry, cranberry, almond, violet, red currant, and pomegranate.  It is low in alcohol and tannin and is often blended with something more robust like Lagrein.

    Kupelwieser Lagrein “Fritz” Alto Adige 2016

    Lagrein is unique to Alto Adige and grows well in the loamy soils of the Val d’Adige valley. The low yield of 65 hl per hectare ensures an outstanding quality wine. The destemmed grapes are fermented at 79-82 degrees F for about 8-10 days. The must is kept in contact with the skins. After two rackings, 70% of the wine is aged for 12 months in large oak barrels and the rest in 2-3 year old small French oak barriques. The wine is placed in Bordeaux-style bottles and then aged for 6 more months before going to market. The resulting wine is ruby to dark garnet red in color with intense, complex, spicy aroma and fresh perfume of wild berries and violets. It has a good amount of tannins, soft velvety body with a lightly spicy finish. You can cellar the Lagrein for 6-8 years.

    Cabernets and Merlot may be the most popular international grapes here but Pinot Nero seems to be the best suited.  Pinot seems to thrive in this altitude and climate.  Many of the Cab blends made here have a vegetal aroma and flavor not unlike green bell peppers which is not popular with some Cabernet drinkers.

    Tiefenbrunner Turmhof Blauburgunder Pinot Nero 2017 South Tyrol/Alto Adige DOC

    There are only a handful of red grapes in the acres and acres of Turmhof Vineyards. These 100% Pinot Nero grapes came from 6 acres at 1470 – 3200 feet above sea level. The grapes were fermented on the skins in stainless steel tanks for 12 days, and then aged in barriques and barrels for 8 months. Bottle aging lasted 4 months. The wine is ruby red with garnet tones, aromas of raspberries, red cherries, strawberries and violets. It is smooth with red berry flavors balanced with crisp acidity and soft round finish. Alcohol is 13.5%. 39,000 bottles were produced. Tiefenbrunner is considered a “Green Attitude” wine by LLSGreen Attitudes tool designed by Winebow.

    Tiefenbrunner Turmhof Pinot Nero Alto Adige

    Trentino

    Trentino has a wide range of varietal wines with 20 specified made from local grapes like Schiava, Teroldego and Lagrein, and international varieties of which Chardonnay and Pinot Noir are most used.  The standard Trentino Rosso is made from Cabernet grapes with some Merlot added for good measure.  Trentino Bianco is a base blend of Chardonnay and Pinot Bianco with Sauvignon Blanc, Müller-Thurgau and Manzoni Bianco as possible additions. There are 10 dry white varietals.

    TRENTINO WHITE WINES

    Chardonnay, Pinot Grigio and some Pinot Bianco are most planted at the lower elevations, because they can handle the occasional intense heat and humidity of the valley floor.  The majority of Chardonnay producers strive for fresher, fruitier wine with emphasis on acidity.  The best ones are somewhat like young Chablis wines. 

    The aromatic whites are the most interesting:  Sauvignon Blanc, usually called just Sauvignon – both in Trentino and Alto Adige; Nosiola – Trentino’s true native white; and Müller-Thurgau – can be excellent in both Trentino and Alto Adige.  Sauvignon is usually more restrained here than in Friuli due to the Alto Adige gravel limestone soil and the balance of the cooler climate. 

    Trentino DOC Nosiola is grown mainly on hillsides around the shores of Lake Garda and the Val di Cembra.  Nosiola wine is super tart, light bodied with lemon-apple flavor and mineral finish.  You should absolutely love it especially if you are drinking it in the place where it is grown!  Its partially dried grapes make excellent Trentino DOC Vino Santo.

    The Muller-Thurgau is a more exotic grape; Trentino may be its ideal habitat!  This is the only variety growing in the Tyrols that thrives at the highest altitudes of 500 meters and up.  It is at its best in Val di Cembra, and a great wine to try is Pojer & Sandri.  Trentino Müller-Thurgaus keep their exotic aromas of dried apricots, white flowers and wild herbs but without being too heavy.   The Val di Cembra Valley is in a deep basin created by the Avisio River a long time ago.  It has gentle rolling hills, lakes, woods and meadows with the Dolomites towering high above and is known for fertile soils and an ideal wine-growing region.  High quality wines and exquisite grappa come from this valley.  If you are a tourist, you must see another one of the valley features – “The Pyramids of Segonzano” which are pinnacles of earth with very suggestive shapes, as a result of the disintegration of the mountains and action of the water over thousands of years.  The vineyards are on wide dry terraces marching up and down the steep slopes.  In fact the Cantina della Valle di Cembra, the Cembra Mountain Wine Cellar, is the winery located at the highest altitude of Italy, a mere 700 meters above sea level or 2300 feet.  This winery is renowned for their Müller-Thurgau for which the Rassegna dei Müller-Thurgau dell’Arco Alpino  – a special festival to celebrate the Müller-Thurgau – takes place every year. 

    TRENTINO RED WINES

    Schiava, Teroldego and Lagrein are the local red wines you will find here along with international red varieties of which Pinot Nero is the most widely used.  Cabernet varietals can be made from any combination of Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc and Carmenere as long as there is 85% of the main grape.  The dual varietal of two Cabernets has also become popular.  All they need is 50-75% of the first named variety.  There is a lot of Merlot in the standard Rosso to make it somewhat like a Bordeaux blend.   The Casteller DOC produces only red wine made from Schiava, Lambrusco a Foglia Frastagliata (also known as Enantio), Teroldego and 50% minimum of Merlot.  The Caldaro DOC produces only red wine made from Schiava. And guess what red wine they produce in the Teroldego DOC?  That’s right, 100% Teroldego!  All of these wines go well with the mountain dishes of Trentino like canederli known as knὂdel in German. 

    The wine growing regions of Trentino-Alto Adige

    Trentino-Alto Adige consists of 9 DOCs, no DOCGs and 4 IGPs.  Ninety-one (91%) of those 11.3 million cases of wine produced in 2017 were at the DOC level, which is the highest percentage of any Italian region. The proportion is typically between 5 and 40%. 

    The focus here is definitely white wine; two-thirds of the production was white.  The majority of wines produced in Alto Adige are covered by several DOCs which is very uncommon in Italy.  Close behind is Trentino with almost three-quarters of its wine produced coming from one of the smaller DOCs that are very specific in area and style: Teroldego Rotaliano, Caldaro, Casteller and Valdadige. 

    Alto Adige/Südtirol DOC – All of Alto Adige Province

    There are over 11,000 acres of vineyards in this DOC established in 1975.  Almost 3.3 million cases of wine produced in 2017.  The Alto Adige DOC covers the majority of wines made in this region.  The principal white grapes are: Chardonnay, Gewürztraminer, Kerner, Moscato, Müller-Thurgau, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Grigio, Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc, Sylvaner and Italian Riesling (Welschriesling).  Principal red grapes are: Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Lagrein, Malvasia Nera, Merlot, Moscato Rosa, Pinot Nero, and Schiava.  They produce whites in blends and varietals, rosato, reds in blends and varietals, sparkling, dessert and specialty wines.  Spumante wines must undergo their second fermentation in the bottle (Metodo Classico) and cannot be sweeter than Brut.  There are also a number of sub-zones, all with Italian and German names, that are for more specific grapes:

    Colli di Bolzano/Bozner Leiten: for the varietal Schiava only.

     Meranese di Collina/Meranese/Meraner Hügel/Meraner: for the varietal Schiava only.

    Santa Maddalene/St. Magdalener and Santa Maddalena Classico: for varietal Schiava only.

    Terlano/Terlaner and Terlano Classico: all white nonsparkling types (including Vendemmia Tardiva, Passito, and Riserva) made from Chardonnay, Müller-Thurgau, Pinots Bianco and Grigio, Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc and Sylvaner Verde.

    Valle Isarco/Eisacktal/Eisacktaler: all white nonsparkling types (including Vendemmia Tardiva, Passito and Riserva ) made from Gewürztraminer, Kerner, Müller-Thurgau, Pinot Grigio, Riesling, Sylvaner and/or Veltiner; also Klausner Laitacher.

    Valle Venosta/Vinschgau: all white nonsparkling types made from Chardonnay, Gewürztraminer, Kerner, Müller-Thurgau, Pinot Bianco and Grigio, Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc; also varietal Pinot Nero and Riserva, and Schiava

    Casteller DOC – Trentino Province

    These 62 acres of vineyards became a Trentino DOC in 1974. Only these red wines can be produced: 50% minimum Merlot; and a maximum of 50% from Schiava, Lambrusco a Foglia Frastagliata (Enantio) and/or Teroldego.  Almost 27,000 cases were produced in 2016.

    Delle Venezie DOC – Trentino Province, all of Friuli Venezia Giulia and Veneto

    This is a cross-regional DOC created in 2017 often referred to as the Pinot Grigio DOC as it elevated Pinot Grigio from IGP delle Venezie.  It includes 62,000 acres of vineyards producing 20 million cases or more.  White grapes allowed are: Chardonnay, Friulano, Garganega, Müller-Thurgau, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Grigio and Verduzzo; they may be produced as a blend, varietal, and Pinot Grigio Spumante.

    Lago di Caldaro/Caldaro/Kalterersee/Kalterer DOC – Trentino Province

    1000 plus acres of vineyards in the Trentino Province were established as a DOC in 1970 to make red Rosso, Scelto or Auslese from the Schiava grape.  Classico can be produced from the sub-zone communes of Appiano, Bronzolo, Caldaro, Cortaccia, Egna, Montagna, Ora, Termeno and Vadena.  294,000 cases were produced in 2016. 

    Teroldego Rotaliano DOC – Trentino Province 

    1000 acres were established as a DOC in 1971 to specifically make wine only from the red Teroldego grapes grown on the Campo Rotaliano plain of the Adige Valley in northern Trentino.  Wine can be Rosso, Superiore, Riserva or Rosato but must be 100% Teroldego. The communes here are Mezzolombardo, Mezzocorona and the village of Grumo which belongs to the San Michele all’Adige commune.  These wines have become something of an icon for Trentino’s wine industry.  360,000 cases were produced in 2016. 

    Trentino DOCAll of Trentino Province

    There is one large regional DOC (granted in 1971) covering all of the province of Trentino.  It includes over 16,000 acres of vineyards that produced over 3 million cases of wine in 2017. There are vineyards from the valley floor to 100 meters in elevation. There are 20 specified varietal wines made from blends, whites, rosato, reds, dessert and specialty wines.  The whites: Chardonnay, Gewürztraminer, Kerner, Manzoni Bianco, Moscato, Müller-Thurgau, Nosiola, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Grigio, Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc, Sylvaner and Welschriesling;  and reds: Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Carmenere, Lagrein, Lambrusco, Marzemino, Merlot, Moscato Rosa, Pinot Nero, Rebo, Schiava and Teroldego.  There is also a Trentino Superiore DOC.  The smaller DOCs of Trentino (Teroldego, Caldaro, Casteller and Valdadige) focus on specific areas and wine styles.  Almost three-quarters of wine produced here qualifies for one of these DOCs, which is a much greater amount than other Italian regions and second only to Alto Adige. And then there are sub-zones:

    Castel Beseno or Beseno: Moscato Giallo Superiore, Passito and Vendemmia Tardiva only.

    Isera: for Marzemino Superiore only.

    Sorni: Sorni is a small sub-zone just east of the Adige Rive.  The vineyards are in Lavis, Giovo and San Michele all’Adige.  The Istituto Agrario di San Michele all’Adige wine school is located here.  This is one of the hottest places in July on the Italian peninsula especially near San Michele all’Adige making the wines here noticeably fuller and more mature in style. They make Bianco and Rosso wines only in Sorni.

    Valle di Cembra or Cembra: Müller-Thurgau, Riesling Renano, Pinot Nero and Schiava Superiore.

    Ziresi: Marzemino Superiore only.

    Trento DOC – Trentino Province

    Trento was established as a sparkling wine DOC in 1993 and includes just over 2,000 acres of vineyards.  It produced almost 700,000 cases in 2016.  It is famous for sparkling wine made from Chardonnay, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Meunier and Pinot Nero. All wines must undergo second fermentation in the bottle by use of Metodo Classico. 

    Valdadige Terradeiforti/Terradeiforti DOC – Trentino Province and Verona Province in Veneto

    Previously a sub-zone of the Valdadige DOC and established as a separate Trentino DOC in 2006.  It’s only 52 acres of vineyards and officially allowed to produce six types of wine: three varietals – Enantio (Lambrusco a Foglia Frastagliata), Casetta and Pinot Grigio – as well as red aged riserva and white superiore.  The Enantio grape can only be found here in Trentino.  It is deep red and makes intensely colored wine.  Casetta is equally unknown and wasn’t even officially recognized in the DOC regulations until 2002.  Part of the communes are located in the Veronese province in the far north-western corner of Veneto. 

    Valdadige/Etschtaler DOC – Trentino Province and Verona Province in Veneto

    This is an inter-regional DOC granted in 1975 that shares 2720 acres of vineyards within the provinces of Alto Adige, Trentino and Verona in the Veneto wine region.  It includes the Terradeiforti communes of Brentino, Belluno, Doce and Rivoli across the regional border in north-western Veneto.   1.4 million cases of blended and varietal wine were produced in 2017 from the principal allowed grapes of Chardonnay, Garganega, Müller-Thurgau, Nosiola, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Grigio, Sauvignon Blanc, Trebbiano, Italian Riesling, Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Lagrein, Lambrusco (Enantio), Merlot, Pinot Nero, Schiava and Teroldego.

    Mitterberg IGP – Alto Adige Province

    This tiny IGP includes just 61 acres of vineyards in the entire province of Alto Adige and produced about 38,000 cases in 2016.  Created in 1995 to cover white and red blends and varietals, rosato, dessert and specialty wines limited to: Chardonnay, Gewürztraminer, Kerner,  Moscato, Müller-Thurgau, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Grigio, Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc, Sylvaner, Italian Riesling, Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Carmenere, Lagrein, Malvasia Nera, Merlot, Moscato Rosa, Petit Verdot, Pinot Nero, Schiava, Syrah and Teroldego. 

    Trevenezie IGP – Trentino Province and all of Friuli Venezia Giula and Veneto

    This geographical area was originally established as IGT delle Venezie in 1995 but renamed when Delle Venezie DOC was split off in 2017.  It is the same zone as the old IGP and the new DOC.  There are many Italian and international grapes permitted; however the exact list varies by province.  Trevenezie Includes over 12,000 acres of vineyards and produced over 18 million cases in 2016. 

    Vallagarina IGPTrentino Province and Verona Province in Veneto

    This is a 422 acre inter-regional IGP established in 1995 to include Trento (Trentino-Alto Adige) and Verona (Veneto).  It covers the Vallagarina district in southern Trentino and is named after the Lagarina Valley where the Adige River flows through the Limestone Alps down into Verona.  Vallagarina wines can be made in any one of various styles: red, white, rosato, blend, varietal, still, sparkling or sweet; however Pinot Grigio, Casetta, Teroldego, Marzemino, Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon are most used.  Vallagarina produced almost 31,000 cases of wine in 2016. 

    Vigneti delle Dolomite/Weinberg Dolomiten IGPTrentino-Alto Adige and Belluno Province in Veneto

    This is a 2800 plus acre inter-regional region established in 1997.  Over 2 million cases were produced in 2016.  Vine growing here can be traced back to the Ancient Bronze Age (1800-1600 BC).  The harvest rules date back to the medieval period when the “Statutes of Trento” were issued in the twelfth century.  Wines can be made from these grapes: Chardonnay, Friulano, Glera, Kerner, Malvasia, Manzoni Bianco, Moscato, Müller-Thurgau, Nosiola, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Grigio, Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc, Sylvaner, Barbera, Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Carmenere, Casetta, Franconia, Groppello, Lambrusco, Malvasia Nera, Merlot, Moscato Rosa, Petit Verdot, Pinot Nero, Rebo, Schiava, Syrah and Teroldego.  Style can be white, rosato, red, blend, varietal, sparkling, dessert and specialty wines generally based on the requirements of the province.

    La Strada del Vino

    The strada del vino or wine road (Weinstrasse) is well marked especially in Alto Adige. It runs from Salorno to Balzano and will take you through a number of picturesque wine villages.  There are small lodges in both provinces and many of the wineries have shops and restaurants attached.  The wine trails take you right through some of the top vineyards.  If hiking and skiing is also your thing, there are plenty of options for that in the nearby Dolomite mountains.  In any case, you will find some of the most beautiful vineyards and breathtaking views in the world here. And then there is the food!  Food Festivals of Trentino-Alto Adige are held three times a year.  The La Casolara (Cheese Sunday) is held in Trento on the first Sunday of Lent in February.  The festival offers guided cheese tasting with the best wines of the area.  In September in Trento there is the Strudel, Muscat and Vin Santo Wine Festival.  In April it’s the Nosiola Fair at the Castle Toblino.  Sounds like the best of everything!

    Trentino-Alto Adige: the perfect conclusion to our Tre Venezie adventure

    Trentino-Alto Adige is not one of those wine regions that the average wine consumer has heard of, unless you taste a lot of wine from as many parts of the wine world as possible.  It’s not where the majority of tourists go when they first venture to Italy just like the wines are not the first Italian wines of choice.  You won’t find Chianti, Brunello or Barolo here.  But you will find some fantastic cutting-edge white wines made from grapes you are probably not very familiar with either.  In fact you might even think you are in Germany or some other Austro-Hungarian country.  You will find an astoundingly beautiful region of Italy rapidly gaining in prestige in the wine world that also happens to be a foodie paradise.  How can you possibly go wrong? 

    It is hard to compete with the rest of Italy for excellent red wines like Sangiovese and Nebbiolo when there are so many of them available everywhere, but even that is beginning to change.  There are now some high quality reds coming from Trentino-Alto Adige.  Not a white wine drinker?  You are really missing out on some of the very best white wines that you can taste.  Don’t be afraid………branch out a bit and give them a try.  You may just become a convert! 

    That wraps up our three part adventure through Tre Venezie.  These three regions have a very long historical relationship as they were all a part of the Republic of Venice.  In addition to being connected geographically and historically, they can all boast about producing some of the most elegant high-quality white wines in Italy.  The Veneto is the best known of the three and is famous for Soave, Valpolicella and Amarone, and of course we cannot forget to mention Prosecco!  Friuli Venezie Giulia is a heaven for white wines many of which are produced from native grapes like Friulano and Ribolla Gialla and international grapes Pinot Grigio, Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Bianco and Chardonnay.  Last but not at all least is Trentino-Alto Adige where some exceptional Pinot Grigio is produced, but do not neglect more exotic grapes like Gewürztraminer and Müller-Thurgau, sparkling “Trentodocs” and unique reds Schiava and Teroldego.  My parting words of advice to my fellow winelovers is as usual…………be adventurous and try every new grape or wine region that you can possibly find.  There is such an amazing world full of tasty wines that I can’t imagine not taking the opportunity to try them.  Forkandcorkdivine will be hosting a wine dinner in the very near future to taste a number of wines from the regions of the Tre Venezie all paired with foods we have appropriately selected and lovingly prepared.  You can be sure to read all about it and see numerous pictures of the food and wine.  Ciao!

    All of the information that I used to prepare this article is available on the internet and the following books: “The Wine Bible” by Karen MacNeil; “Vino Italian: The Regional Wines of Italy” by Joe Bastianich and David Lynch, “Wine Folly: the Master Guide” Magnum Edition by Madeline Puckette and Justin Hammack and “The World Atlas of Wine” by Jancis Robinson and Hugh Johnson. Please accept my apologies if there is any incorrect data or information; I try to verify from several sources. 

    LFRakos@gmail.com

    Forkandcorkdivine.com

    5.26.19

  • 04Apr

    There’s a little slice of heaven – white wine heaven, that is – in the northeastern corner of Italy tucked in between Austria, Slovenia, the Adriatic Sea and Veneto.  It’s only about 3,000 square miles in size which is smaller than the metropolitan area of Los Angeles, but my oh my is it a wine region you should know about and come to love!  Just be prepared – there are seven different DOCs all with Friuli in their name.

    “WINES BY STANKO RADIKON – A PIONEER OF THE NATURAL AND 
    ORANGE WINE MOVEMENTS ”  has a cult-like following. 

    Friuli Venezia Giulia (Free-oo-lee Ve-ne-tsyah Joo-lyah) or often referred to just as “Friuli”, produces some of the best aromatic white wines in Italy and some other countries in my opinion.  This is a very quiet region, no big palatial villas or estates like some other regions – just a lot of small farmer producers making outstanding wine.  While the tourists are all in Tuscany, you could be here tasting authentic wine made by quality-driven winemakers using unconventional methods.

    Many years ago Friuli was the Mediterranean port province of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, becoming part of the country of Italy in 1866.  Even today, Friuli seems to have more of a resemblance to Austria than Rome. There is significant Slavic and German influence due to the geographic location, and even though Venezia is in the name, Venice is not a part of this province.  About 1.2 million people call Friuli home.  There are also a number of large enterprises here such as Fincantieri (builder of some of the world’s largest cruise ships), Zanussi-Electrolux (electrical appliances) and Illy coffee.  The port of Trieste plays a key role with trade in northern and eastern Europe.

    Friuli is also cross-cultural land.  Slovenia is right next door.  In fact, the borders between Slovenia and Italy changed so many times throughout history, people who live there used to have trouble keeping up with what country they were in!  Many of the same grapes grow on both sides of the border.  Some of the vineyards actually cross the border. 

    The Pinot Grigio, Sauvignon Blanc and Ribolla Gialla are excellent here, but the Friulano grape is to Friuli like Cabernet is to Napa.  White wines here have even been compared to those of Alsace and the Loire Valley.  Even though white wines have become so successful, there are some excellent reds.  In fact more than 40% of the region’s wines are red.  Red wines in Friuli used to be single varietal with little body and not designed for cellaring.  Now winemakers are making some very good red blends, often aged in oak barrels, giving depth and complexity that ensures they can age.  Most of this is Merlot, but there are three local red grapes that stand out: Schioppettino, Tazzelenghe and Pignolo. Two of Italy’s most exquisite sweet wines are made in Friuli: Verduzzo di Ramondolo and Picolit. 

    Friuli is also known for its quantity of premium wines produced – wines with DOC and DOCG designation make up almost two-thirds of the total.  And you can expect to pay more for those successful whites of Friuli than other Italian whites.  That is due to vineyard yields being some of the lowest in Italy. Winemakers here are on a quest for high quality over quantity.  

    The grapes and wines of Friuli

    Since the Alps form the northern border of Friuli, the northern half of the region is very mountainous. This leaves the southern half of the region to claim most of the vineyards amounting to about 50,000 acres.  Most of the vineyards are on the plains going inland from the Adriatic Sea and they do make some great wine on the plains, but if you are looking for the very best grapes, head for the hills – the Alpine foothills, to be exact. Two of the most prestigious wine districts are Colli Orientali del Friuli and Collio (Collio Goriziano), and they are in far eastern Friuli almost to the Slovenian border.  The soil here is well drained, calcium rich and sandstone.  The terraced hillsides are called ronchi or ronco for singular.  Ronco is often the first word of the name of a vineyard or wine estate.  Colli means “small hills” and Colli Orientali refers to eastern hills.  Once again – the very best vineyards are on the south facing slopes of those Alpine foothills where they get the most direct sunlight and night-time cool breezes from the Adriatic Sea. 

    There are four provinces of Friuli.  Here is how they are divided:

    Udine is in Mideast Friuli bordering Austria on the north, Slovenia on the east and the Adriatic Sea on the south.  You can go to the beach here at Lignano Sabbiadoro or you can go skiing in the Alps at Forni di Sopra.  Grapes grow in the southern half of Udine.

    Gorizia is located in southeast Friuli bordering Slovenia and the Adriatic Sea.  It is a very small area showing the influence of Germanic, Slavic and Latin culture.  Here you will find the Karst plateau with calcareous rock and rocky terrain, the scene of some terrible battles during WWI and the Collio, a series of vine covered hills and home of some of Friuli’s most outstanding wine.

    Trieste is the capital and largest city of Friuli. The province is situated towards the end of a narrow strip of land in the southeast, between the Adriatic Sea and Slovenia.  It is characterized by steep karst, rocky moors and inland hills with hollows and scrubs.  The Habsburg influence is quite noticeable in the city of Trieste, and it is a major tourist area.    

    Pordenone can be found in western Friuli bordering Veneto.  It’s between the Carnic Alps and a wide valley between the Tagliamento and Livenza Rivers. You can see signs everywhere of its very complex history, local food traditions and a wide variety of wines.

    The grapes

    Over 30 different grapes varieties are grown here including local plus international grapes, but the Friulano grape is the most well-known and important of all.  This is the land of the varietal – 17 different grapes are permitted to be bottled as “varietals” which means that the name of the grape on the bottle is what you will taste!  That does not mean you can’t find good blends, too.

    Local varieties

    WHITES

    White wines generally have a pear or apple aroma, range from light to medium bodied, have an acidic undertone and are very fresh and fruity. 

    Friulano (free-oo-lahn-oh):  Makes crisp floral wine (9% of production) with notes of nuts and fennel as it ages.  Tocai Friulano is now commonly known as just Friulano following a European court ruling to avoid confusion with Hungarian Tokaj.  The wine mixes fruit flavors with hints of almond and citrus.

    Glera:  Once named the Prosecco grape, the name was changed to Glera in 2009 when Prosecco di Conegliano-Valdobbiadene was promoted to DOCG status in the Veneto.  It was decided that the name “Prosecco” should be reserved for wines produced in Italy’s official Prosecco appellations, and not for the name of the grape itself.  Just to complicate the situation even further, Glera/Prosecco is actually several varieties.  The three key forms are Prosecco Lungo, Prosecco Tondo and Prosecco Nostrano now all legally changed to Glera.  And some more complications – Glera goes by local synonym Serprina in the Colli Euganei.  In any case, no matter what you call it this green-skinned grape has been growing here for hundreds of years.

    Picolit: Is used to make interesting rare and elegant dessert wines that are floral with a dry finish. Picolit is prone to diseases and mutations which cause the vine to lose flowers and grape clusters.  Often less than half of a vineyard will survive and be able to make wine which increases its demand.

    Pinot Bianco (Pinot Blanc):  Often blended with Chardonnay but makes good wine on its own.

    Pinot Grigio (26% of production) (Pinot Gris):  Well-made Friuli Pinot Grigios are known for fuller body and delicate peach, almond and green apple flavors.  There’s an entire DOC for them!

    Ribolla Gialla: These are full bodied grapes grown in Rosazzo and Gorizia regions. First written documentation of Ribolla Gialla was in 1289.   This is a very acidic grape once used primarily for blending until winemakers started to use malolactic acid and other techniques to make a softer more buttery wine with a floral, acidic, fresh, fruity flavor.  Mature wine has distinctive nutty taste.  This aromatic delicious exotic wine is very important in Friuli.

    Verduzzo:  A very special native grape that makes a wine with peach and nutty flavor with more honey flavors as it ages.  It works well in sweet wine production and is often dried to make passito wine, the most important dessert wine being Verduzzi di Ramandolo. 

    Vitovska:  This is a hearty rugged vine found mainly in the Carso region near the Slovenian border where it is often compared to Albarino if not made in the orange style.  It makes an elegant dry white that is briny and citrus-driven with strong minerality and snap.

    RED

    Nearly 40% of production is from red grapes with Merlot being the leader.  The reds are typically light bodied and fruity as most of them don’t rely on aging and oak. 

    Pignolo: A grape from the Middle Ages; found in Udine countryside and was almost extinct. Today it’s a tasty red wine with elements of cherry flavor.  You can find it at the vineyards of Abbazia di Rosazzo, one of the oldest abbeys in Friuli. 

    Refosco: Also known as Terrano; a versatile red grape that takes well to aging in oak. 

    Refosco dal Peduncolo Rosso:  Best known local red; different from regular Refosco and makes an herbal bodied wine that ages well. 

    Schioppettino (“gunshot”): Makes a dry red wine with aromas of violets and red berries, spicy, earthy taste.  Early mention of Schioppettino can be traced back to 13th century; then it was almost erased by phylloxerra and wars. By 1960s, the number of vines was less than 100 until Paolo Rapuzzi’s Ronchi di Cialla winery brought it back to life.  This is the most sophisticated local red variety. 

    Tazzelenghe: A native grape meaning “tongue cutter” due to its high acidity levels and prevalent tannins; production is very limited to areas around towns of Buttrio, Manzano, Rosazzo and Cividale.  Wines are bright, fresh and fragrant with aromas and flavors of violets, blackberries and currants. 

    Terrano:  A genetic relative of Refosco dal Peduncolo Rosso and produces wines that are deep colored, fresh and bright with blueberry and blackberry flavors with high minerality.  This is a grape you will typically find in Carso. 

    International grapes

    Cabernet Franc: The second most popular red variety in Friuli. 

    Cabernet Sauvignon: Usually makes lean tight wines.

    Carménère:  Carmenere is considered one of the original six red grapes of Bordeaux.  Now you don’t find it so much in France, but its many other places including Friuli and the eastern Veneto.  It was authorized in 2007 to be used in those Italian DOC wines, but since 2009 it has been permitted to be specified on the wine label.

    Chardonnay: It’s an important grape in Friuli.

    Franconia: Known as Blaufränkish in Austria where it is the second most popular red grape.  It is also grown in Germany (Lemberger), Hungary (Kékfrankos), Serbia and Slovakia (Frankovka) and other eastern European countries as well as the US.  In Italy it’s used in a variety of DOC wines and is called Franconia.   It is a black skinned grape that makes fruit forward wines with aromas of spiced black cherries.

    Gewürztraminer: This is the German/Austrian/French/USA name associated with these grapes, but in the Friuli and Alto Adige part of the wine world, it is more often known as Traminer or Traminer Aromatico.  Yes, Tramin is the name of a village in Alto Adige.  They are pink skinned grapes classified as a “grey” grape since it is somewhere between a black and white grape varietal.  Whatever the name, it makes opulent intense wines with exotic aromas like lychee, rose petals, Turkish delight, tropical fruits and perfume.  On the palate there should be flavors of stonefruit and spice.

    Merlot (15% of production):  The most widely planted red grape in Friuli. The wines range in quality.

    Pinot Nero:  The Italian name for Pinot Noir and is primarily found in northern Italy regions such as Lombardia, Trentino and Veneto, but it is also planted in Friuli.

    Sauvignon Blanc: More like Sancerre wines with smoke, herbs, honey and hazelnut and a very popular variety here. 

    The wine-growing regions

    Just when you think you have Friuli all figured out and know a thing or two about the region, well think again!  There are now seven different DOCs or wine-growing regions all with “Friuli” in their name!  Number seven – better known as “Friuli DOC” or “Friuli Venezia Giulia DOC” was established as a DOC in 2016.

     Friuli is divided into 4 top wine-producing regions and has 12 DOCs and 4 DOCG areas with 3 IGPs growing some 30 different grape varieties.   In 2017 Friuli produced over 18 million cases of wine and 77% of it was white.  Friuli has the highest proportion of white to red wine produced in any of the Italian regions.  Much of this is from small producers. 

    Most of the Friuli vineyards are located in the southern half of the region, including the large wine DOC regions of Collio Goriziano, Colli Orientali del Friuli, Friuli Isonzo and Carso.  The Lison–Pramaggiore region is shared with the Veneto.  Friuli Annia, Friuli Aquileia, Friuli Grave and Friuli Latisana are in the central and western part of the region around the city of Pordenone.

    Friuli / Friuli Venezia Giulia DOC – All of Friuli

    DOC #334 Friuli was added in 2016 as a region-wide denomination that did not replace any of those other “Friuli-s” but serves as an additional alternate denomination for ALL of the already existing DOCs, even including Colli Goriziano and Carso who really did not want to be included.  Therefore everything in the southern half of Friuli is included – the northern half is not, being in the Alpine mountains too high for growing grapes anyway.  Those include: Carso, Collio Goriziano or Collio, Friuli Annia, Friuli Aquileia, Friuli Colli Orientali, Friuli Grave, Friuli Isonzo, Friuli Latisana, Lison-Pramaggiore, and Prosecco.

    The principal white grapes are Chardonnay, Friulano, Gewürztraminer, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Grigio, Ribolla Gialla, Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc and Verduzzo.  Principal reds include Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Carmenère, Merlot, Pinot Nero and Refosco.  They can be made into white, red or sparkling wines.  Most of the allowed wines under this massive DOC were already allowed in the previously existing ones.  The biggest change came with the addition of a sparkling Ribolla Gialla, which was not permissible in existing DOCs.  However there are some styles missing: Frizzante, Rosato and dessert wines nor provision for Superiore or Riserva, nor the lesser-known grapes Schioppettino or Tazzelenghe.  It is Pinot Grigio and Prosecco that primarily contributes to the high proportion of white versus red wine in Friuli. 

    Delle Venezie DOC – All of Friuli, Veneto and Province of Trentino

    DOC #335 Delle Venezie – the Pinot Grigio DOC – was added in 2017 and approved for the use of these principal white grapes: Chardonnay, Friulano, Garganega, Müller-Thurgau, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Grigio and Verduzzo.  Pinot Grigio wines must contain a minimum of 85% Pinot Grigio grapes.  The primary purpose of creating this DOC was obviously to elevate the status and quality of Pinot Grigio wines coming from this entire area of Friuli Venezia Giulia, the Veneto and the province of Trentino.  About 85% of the Italian production of Pinot Grigio comes from this area.  What was once the IGP delle Venezie is now a DOC!  The only permissible wines are white Bianco and Pinot Grigio, and sparkling Pinot Grigio Spumante.

    Prosecco DOC – All of Friuli and 5 Provinces of Veneto

    Prosecco was granted its own DOC status in 2009 and applies to five provinces of the Veneto plus the entire Friuli Venezia Giula region.  That is really appropriate considering the name came from the little village of Prosecco near Trieste, where the grape and wine was thought to come from.  Prosecco is made from the Glera grape which must make up a minimum of 85% of all grapes used to make it.  The other 15% may include local grapes Verdiso, Bianchetta Trevigiana, Perera and Glera Lunga and international grapes like Chardonnay, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Grigio and Pinot Nero (when vinified as white wine).  It can only be made into a white blend or Spumante sparkling and must meet all of the regulations for grapes and percentage for use.  Prosecco reigns supreme in this part of the world.  Almost 37 million cases of the fizzy stuff were produced in 2017. 

    The two most respected DOCs of Friuli are Collio Goriziano and Friuli Colli Orientali.  The standard of winemaking is very high here and yields are relatively low.  There is a competition between these DOCs and the Alto Adige over who makes the most excellent fresh fruity white wines.

    Collio Goriziano (Collio) DOC – Gorizia Province

    Usually just known as “Collio”, this is one of the most exceptional DOCs of the region.  Collio grapes are grown in the southeastern province of Gorizia and just over the hills of Gorizia on its northern border is Slovenia.  Collio is almost indistinguishable from Slovenia.  In fact part of the regions vineyards are actually in Slovenia, but none of the Slovenian wines can be labeled with a Collio designation. The slopes are much steeper here near the Alps foothills and the cool wind brings freshness and acidity to the grapes. Fine, increasingly fruity, interesting acidic whites are made here.  The wine is full bodied and rich; with fresh flavors of apples and apricots; aroma hints of smoke, vanilla and hazelnuts.  It is made as a varietal or a blend of Friulano, Ribolla Gialla, Malvasia Istriana, Chardonnay, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Grigio and Sauvignon Blanc.  Red wine is designated Collio Rosso and made from a blend of Merlot, Cabernet Franc and Cabernet Sauvignon.  The Collio Bianco designation can also include white grapes Müller-Thurgau, Picolit, Riesling, Traminer and Welschriesling. It can also have white juice from red wine grapes of Cabernet Sauvignon and Pinot Nero.

    Collio is famous for age-worth Chardonnay and local white wine blends. Little more than 5% of Friuli wine comes from Collio vineyards but it usually receives the highest accolades and awards.  There is very little if any oxygen contact during fermentation and the wines are aged longer in oak and barriques.  The Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay and Pinot Grigio are generally more concentrated and powerful and can easily reach 14.5 ABV.   

    The Collio Bianco is a general term referring to a white blend entirely of the producer’s choice.  Collio wines pair perfectly with savory first courses or to Frico (free-co) a cheese tart and one of the signature dishes of Collio.  Prices are higher for Collio wine ($20 – $50).

    Colli Orientali del Friuli DOC– Udine Province

    (Co-lli Oryen-tally) Orientali extends northwest of the Collio Goriziano along the Slovenian border to Tarcento and east of Udine (oo-den-eh) where winemaking dates back to Roman times.  As we said before, the best wine comes from the hills, and there are plenty of them here. After all, Colli means “hills”.  Ribolla Gialla, Picolit and Verduzzo play an important role growing right next to Sauvignon Blanc, Chardonnay and Pinot Grigio.  This is a great area for white wines – they do really well here. The hillside vineyards have a mix of clay and stones which is a wonderful terroir for whites; reds also do well in the calcium-rich terraces.   There is a lot of stone fruit, white flowers and ripe apples with long finish on these wines.

    Local varieties are the most important: Friulano is the signature grape of the region. Taste one of these and you’ll get notes of thyme, apricot, Meyer lemon, and ripe gooseberry with a bitter almond finish.  

    Ribolla Gialla (Jal-la) is high acid, rich and full of apricot, tangerine and Asian pear flavors.  And then there is Malvasia which is often made into aromatic dry wines. Picolit has 2 DOCGs in Orientali dedicated to producing dessert wine. 

    Red wine is more prominent in this region although it’s still less than half the production of white.  Reds include Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon, and the local Pignolo, Refosco, Refosco dal Peduncolo Rosso, Schioppettino and Tazzelenghe.  The best reds are from the south-western corner of Colli Orientali which is in the foothills of the Dolomites and mostly alpine. 

    Yes, you may consider wine prices to be higher here, but they age longer and are usually more complex.  The wines pair well with their local Prosciutto di San Daniele (similar to Parma) and other regional cold cuts, risottos and seafood.

    Bastianich Winery

    The Bastianich’s have been connected to winemaking families since the 1970 and 80s, and have promoted the wines of Friuli in their restaurants in New York City and beyond.  Eventually they decided to create great wines in their own vineyards by acquiring 90 acres of Bastianich vineyards in 1997.  The original vineyard is located in in the southernmost zone of the Friuli Colli Orientali in the communes of Buttrio and Premariacco. The terraced vineyards were replanted and reterraced in 2000-2002.  Now at the height of quality production they grow the grapes for Vespa Bianco, Vespa Rosso, Plus and Calabrone wines.  The vineyards in Cividale, just 10 miles north produce the grapes for the fresh aromatic Vini Orsone wines.  Just in case you missed it, the Bastianich family is quite famous with their restaurants, cooking shows, and cook books! 

    BASTIANICH VESPA BIANCO IGT VENEZIA GIULLA


    Bastianich Vespa Bianco 2015 IGT Venezia Giulla (Colli Orientali)

    Bastianich “Vespa” IGT Venezia Giulla is the flagship wine of the estate and was born with the winery in 1998. It’s a blend of Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc – the Chardonnay gives it elegance and the Sauvignon Blanc gives it structure.  This “super white” is considered one of the best white wines in Italy.  When young it has nuances of yellow and gold hues, with brightness and clarity.  On the nose you will find hints of beeswax, apricots and honey.  It is complex, rich and balanced on the palate.  You can age it for 5-10 years or more.  Vespa Bianca is fermented 50% in stainless steel and 50% in oak casks of either 500 or 4000 liters.  13.5% alcohol.


    Orientali is further divided into 3 DOCGs, two of which make sweet wine. You will definitely pay the price for these wines – if you can find them!  

    Ramondolo DOCG – Udine Province

    One of the best known wines of Friuli is made here.  It’s a white sweet dessert wine made from 100% native Verduzzo grapes grown on hills north of Udine, and the first to be awarded this status.   After receiving DOCG status in 2001 the Ramondolo name can only be used for wines made in Nimis and Tarcento in Udine. This is a late harvest wine made by drying the grapes in racks; some years even undergoing Botrytis. The wine is an intense golden yellow color, intense aroma, sweet velvety tannic and full-bodied taste with a possible hint of wood. 

    Colli Orientali del Friuli Picolit DOCG –Udine Province

    Picolit is a sweet dessert wine made of Picolit grapes. It has an intense golden color, distinctive aromatic sweet scent, delicate honey flavor and sometimes hints of wood from two years in the barrel. The Picolit grape is named after its tiny yields (“piccolo” means small), is very difficult to grow and very delicate requiring harvest by hand.  This wine is generally consumed as a “meditation” wine – vino da meditazione -which means it is to be enjoyed without food after the dinner table has been cleared. Expect to pay $100 for the meditation.  This was one of Friuli’s first internationally successful wines and at one time was bottled in handmade Murano glass.  Picolit first became a DOC in 1979 without much success until it was elevated to DOCG in 2006. 

    Colli Orientali del Friuli Cialla DOCG – Udine Province

    The specific location of “Cialla” will appear on Colli Orientali del Friuli Picolit DOCG wine produced in the “Cialla” prestigious parish subzone.  Here you will find Cialla Bianco Picolit and Riserva made from 100% Picolit and with 16% alcohol. 

    The Ronchi di Cialla estate was founded in 1970 by the Rapuzzi family.  Cialla is a small valley in the Colli Orientali del Friuli area officially recognized with a Ministerial Decree as Cru CIALLA only for the cultivation of native wines from Friuli: Picolit, Ribolla Gialla and Verduzzo for whites and Refosco dal Peduncolo Rosso and Schioppettino for reds. The Rapuzzis won a prestigious award in 1976 for saving the Schioppettino vines from disappearing.  They found about 70 surviving grapevines in the valley and bottled their first vintage – 35 hectoliters – in 1977.  Ronchi Di Cialla is now certified by the World Biodiversity Association and they remain committed to using natural practices.  They work with relatively low yields of 115,000 bottles per year from a 28 hectare estate.  Picolit di Cialla comes from about 2 hectares, spends 12 months in oak barrels and 24 more months aging in bottles.

    Colli Orientali del Friuli Rosazzo DOCG – Udine Province

    Rosazzo is an elegant, fruity, floral dry white wine made from a blend of Friulano, Sauvignon Blanc and Pinot Bianco and/or Chardonnay grapes.  The Rosazzo DOCG is in the province of Udine and includes Manzano, San Giovanni al Natisone and Corno di Rosazzo.  The Abbey of Rosazzo was built in Manzano around year 1000 and is surrounded by vineyards that were in use during the Middle Ages. The Monastery was founded by the Augustinians, held for a long time by the Benedictines, and then by the Dominicans. It’s a religious center but also a major reference point for winemaking in Friuli.  The Abbey was restored and completely reopened in 1995 for worship.  The Sdricca wine route takes you right through the abbey’s grounds.

    Friuli Grave DOCUdine and Pordenone Provinces  

    Friuli Grave (Free-oo-lee Gra-veh) is a very large agricultural area in the center-west accounting for more than half of the production and became a DOC in 1970.  The valley is made up of flat land with very stony soil.  The stones get hot during the day and cold at night which is a great thing for ripening those grapes. Pinot Grigio and Prosecco reign supreme here. You can also find red wines made from grapes such as Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Refosco dal Peduncolo Rosso.  Friuli Grave white wines are great with sushi, veggies and light cheeses or alone as an aperitivo.  Wines are light and zesty; gentle herbaceous notes, citrus-like aromas and high acidity.   Drink them young (2-3 years).  Prices are $10 – $15 compared to Alto Adige; a good value! 

    Friuli Isonzo DOCGorizia Province

    Isonzo is located in far southeastern Friuli bordering Slovenia along the Isonzo River and receives a greater warming influence from the Adriatic Sea.  This region is known for its sparkling Pinot Bianco and dry white wines made from Chardonnay, Malvasia Istriana and Sauvignon Blanc.  It also produces excellent quality dry, off dry and sparkling wines from Gewürztraminer, Moscato Gialla, Pinot Grigio, Riesling, Friulano, Verduzzo  Excellent reds are made from Cabernets, Refoscos and Pinot Nero as well as sweet Vendemmia Tardiva late harvest wines as either single varietal whites or blends. 

    Carso DOC – Gorizia and Trieste Provinces

    Carso is south of Isonzo and in the hills near Trieste (tree-est-the).  It is on the Istrian Peninsula and makes excellent red Terrano wines plus highly regarded Malvasia Istriana whites.  Other grapes are Vitovska, Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Merlot, Pinot Grigio, Sauvignon Blanc, Traminer and Piccola Nera. 

    Carso is quite small and most famous for its orange wine.  Yes, the same “orange wine” that forkandcorkdivine talked about and served for our wine dinner experience in Slovenia.  No, the wine is not orange!  It is made by letting the juice of white grapes keep in contact with the grape skins during fermentation, a process typically used only for making red wine.  Flavors of orange or “amber” wine range from dried fruit to tea-leaves and sweet spices with a touch of nutty oxidation.  Wines from Carso are high in acidity with interesting mineral tones, soft tannins and a long tart tingly finish.  They are also oxidized which allows them to be stable enough to age longer.  It is best to decant an orange wine from Carso for several hours before serving.  Carso orange wines are made from Pinot Grigio, Ribolla Gialla, Malvasia, Vitovska or a blend of the winemaker’s choice. 

    The red wine called Terrano tastes of cherry fruit and forest floor with moderate tannin and very high acidity.  This grape is often confused with Refosco, but you will only find Terrano in Carso and just across the border in the Kras region of Slovenia.  Terrano wines pair really well with Slavic cuisine. 

    Some lesser known Friuli DOCs to the south and you can find good wines in all of them.

    Friuli Annia DOC – Udine Province

    Annia is a small DOC established in 1995 including the coastal vineyards around the Lugana di Marano.  The lagoon is a big help to the terroir here – it takes the heat out of summer afternoons and frost out of winter mornings.  The typical grapes of this area make white, Rosato, red and sparkling wines.  Over 7000 cases were produced in 2016. 

    Friuli Aquileia DOC – Udine Province

    Aquileia has a maritime climate due to being in the lowlands by the Adriatic Sea.  The soil is excellent for viticulture and the wines have exceptional distinctive aromas.  Wines here are a little less structured and meant to be drunk young.  Aquileia was established as a DOC in 1975 for the commune of Aquileia and 16 communes in the province of Udine. They make white, Rosato, red and sparkling wines and produced over 250,000 cases in 2016. 

    Friuli Latisana DOC – Udine Province

    Latisana was also established as a DOC in 1975 and consists of 170 plus acres of vineyards on the Adriatic coast.  Annia is to the east, Grave to the north and the Lugana di Marano on the south.  The alluvial sandy clay soil here is excellent for viticulture.  Latisana produces white, rosato, red and sparkling Spumante and semi-sparkling Frizzante wines.  Passito and Superiore and Riserva Passito wines can also be made here.  Just under 25,000 cases were produced in 2016. 

    Lison-Pramaggiore DOC – Pordenone Province….and Venice and Treviso (Veneto)

    This is a DOC originally created in 1971 in the Veneto wine region which merged in 1985 to include the Chions, Cordovado and Pravisdomini communes in the Pordenone Province of Friuli.  Lison and Pramaggiore joined forces to reflect the future needs of Italian winemaking and marketing.  Lison-Pramaggiore Bianco is based on the Tocai Friulano grape, now known as Tai to avoid confusion with Tokaj wines of Hungary.  The final blend must be 50-70% Tai.  Lison-Pramaggiore Rosso must be 50-70% Merlot and can be a Riserva if aged for two years.  They also grow the Bordeaux grapes plus Pinot Nero and Refosco.  Other whites include the Pinots Bianco and Grigio, Verduzzo, Riesling, Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc.  They also make sparkling and dessert wines.  The DOC produced over 147,000 cases in 2016. 

    Lison DOCG – Pordenone Province….and Venice and Treviso (Veneto)

    Lison was upgraded to a separate Lison DOCG in 2011 with a Classico subzone and makes a white Bianco blend of 85% Friulano.

    Friuli Venezia Giulia IGT/IGP wine appellations

    There are three IGT (Indicazione Geografica Tipica) or IGP (Indicazione Geografica Protetta) that include Friuli since the elevation of IGT Delle Venezie to DOC in 2017.  They are Alto Livenza, Trevenezie and Venezia Giulia.  “IGT” is a wine classification introduced in 1992 as part of the DOC (Denominazione di Origine Controllata) Italian wine laws.  Its official purpose was to create a category for wines that don’t meet the DOC requirements but have regional character, and unofficially to squash the revolt by big name producers who didn’t want to follow the DOCs, and especially didn’t want their wine to be labeled as table wine (Vino da Tavola)! 

    Alto Livenza IGT – Pordenone Province and Treviso Province of Veneto

    This cross-regional wine producing area was officially created in 1995 to include one province of Friuli and one in Veneto. The defining factor for this geographical area is the Livenza River which crosses through it.  This was the first Italian district for furniture production; it has also been famous for its wines which were labeled “Alto Livenza” since 1977.     Wines are permitted in the following styles:  White Bianco (blends) dry and frizzante; Rosso dry, frizzante and Novello; Rosato dry and frizzante.    They are made from these grapes: Chardonnay, White Manzoni, Malvasia Istriana, Müller-Thurgau, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Grigio, Glera, Italian Riesling, Sauvignon, Gewürztraminer, Verdiso, Verduzzo, Tai, Marzemina Bianca, Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Franconia, Malbech, Marzemino, Merlot, Petit Verdot, Pinot Nero, Raboso, Refosco, Carménère, Syrah, Rebo and Manzoni Rosé. It is interesting to note that none of the wines can contain more than 80% of the main grape variety – thus NO varietal wines permitted under this IGT.

    Trevenezie IGT – All of Friuli, Trentino-Alto Adige and Veneto

    This geographical area was originally established as IGT delle Venezie in 1995 but renamed when Delle Venezie DOC was split off in 2017.  It is the same zone as the old IGT and the new DOC.  There are many Italian and international grapes permitted; however the exact list varies by province.  IGT Bianco, Rosso and Rosato wines are allowed to use any proportion of permitted grapes.  Those labeled as Varietal must have at least 85% of that grape on the label.  Wines can also be labeled in Slovenian as Tri Benečije.  Over 12,000 acres of vineyards are included with production well over 18 million cases in 2016.  It’s hard to tell how much wine will continue to be made under this classification since the new Delle Venezie DOC focuses on Pinot Grigio which used to account for a major part of production here.

    Venezia Giulia IGT – All of Friuli

    Venezia Giulia was established as an IGT in 1996 and includes over 7000 acres.  It produced 1.3 million cases of wine in 2016.  You will find these principal white grapes: Chardonnay, Friulano, Gewürztraminer, Glera, Malvasia, Manzoni Bianco, Moscato, Pinot Bianco, Pinot Grigio, Ribolla Gialla, Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc, Verduzzo, Vitovska and Italian Riesling.  Red grapes are: Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Franconia, Merlot, Pinot Nero, Refosco, Schioppettino and Terrano.  Bianco, Rosato and Rosso wines can be made from any proportion of grapes approved for the region; varietal requirements are indicated by province.  There are specific requirements for dual varietals.  For example: Chardonnay and Pinot Bianco or Sauvignon Blanc must contain 50-85% of first-named variety and 15-50% of the other.  There are no minimum aging requirements. 

    Winemaking in Friuli

    Winemaking didn’t get much attention in Friuli after the scourge of phylloxerra until the 1980s and 90s international popularity of Pinot Grigio.  Prior to that, vineyard owners sold their grapes to co-ops and négociants who blended all of the grapes together, and sold their mass-produced wines for local consumption.  Thanks to some Friulian producers like Mario Schiopetto, Livio Felluga, Collavini, Pasini and Dorigo, their commitment to make high-quality wine that highlighted the grapes and then sell it all over Italy was an entirely different business model. Mario Schiopetto gained a lot of technical knowledge and expertise from some German winemakers, then put it into practice and made wines that were unbelievable to other Friulian winemakers.  These were clean, clear lively wines with enticing up-front fruity aromas. This was the beginning of the first modern-style whites to be made in Italy. How did Mario do it?  He used temperature-controlled stainless steel tanks for fermentation, pneumatic presses and more reliable laboratory produced yeast strains.  In 1965 Mario brought out his first “Tocai” thus giving birth to the era of modern white wine making in Friuli.  He transformed the future of white Friuli wine forever.  It took a while for his innovations to be accepted, but eventually he became part of a group of Collio producers that worked together to improve and modernize Italian wine production.  With Mario’s success at producing, bottling and marketing the product of his own vineyards, other farmers and vineyard owners decided to follow suit and began to open their own small wineries. Friuli had survived two world wars, famines, population drain, poverty and a major earthquake and now was about to latch onto winemaking as an opportunity to save the region.

    So it seems that winemakers in Friuli are known for being forward-thinking and pioneers of modern techniques during this first revolution of Friuli winemaking, but there is quite a different other side to this story.  Without access to all of these modern techniques and laboratory products for avoiding oxidation and controlling fermentation, winemakers had to rely on the “old ways”.  One of them in particular was “long skin maceration”.  It was quite common in the Collio area and Slovenia to macerate white wines on their skins for days and or even weeks.  Here are some of those history-making pioneer winemakers.

    Joško Gravner – Collio

    The leader in the second revolution of Friuli winemaking was Jožef Gravner to be followed by his son, Joško who many consider to be the father of modern day amber, orange macerated winemaking.   A group of winemakers with similar interests including Stanko Radikon and Edi Kante gravitated to Joško Gravner between 1985 and 1999.  Gravner and their wines reaped many praises.  However Gravner now wanted to go back to the roots of winemaking in Georgia where wine has been consumed for 8000 years and where wine was made in qveri or Georgian amphorae.  He started fermenting white grapes on their skins just like his father and grandfather had done before the new wave of modernization came to Italy.  In 1997 he managed to get a terracotta qveri vessel from Georgia, made an experimental batch of wine in it that fall, and he was so happy with the results that he started selling off his stainless steel tanks and began to make skin macerated wines.  These wines were quite different from anything else being produced – dark amber in color, slightly hazy since they were unfiltered, but with wonderful aromas of spice, herb and honeyed fruit.  The Collio “wine police” failed to consider these wines as meeting Collio DOC regulations and in 1998 downgraded them to IGT Venezia Giula status.  Gravner’s wines were not accepted and by 1998, he broke off from his colleagues.  Today Gravner’s wines are some of the most highly sought out from Collio.  Josko also decided that Ribolla Gialla was his favorite and the best grape, producing his last vintage of Breg in 2012, a white blend of Chardonnay, Sauvignon, Pinot Grigio and Italian Riesling.  The Breg will be sold in 2020.  Now he concentrates on Ribolla Gialla. The Breg and the Ribolla Gialla are both made with about six months skin contact in qveri and released after seven years ageing. 

    Stanko Radikon (Collio)

    Stanislao “Stanko” Radikon has a family home and winery just 400 meters up the hill from Gravner in the town of Oslavia near the border of Slovenia. There are just 27 acres of vines.  Radikon took over his family vineyard in 1979.  Radikon and Gravner worked together closely for two decades before they parted ways.  Radikon made his Ribolla Gialla in the new modern way until one day he decided the wine lacked the flavors and aromas that the grapes were so known for.  It was then that he decided to try making the wine just like his grandfather did 50 years before – he put some grapes in an oak barrel and left them to ferment for a week on their skins.  The resulting wine was such a revelation that he decided to convert his entire production of whites to skin maceration, just like Gravner sometime during that same year.  He continued to experiment and eventually decided that two to three months was optimum. He also stopped adding sulphites in 2002 when he realized that it was no longer needed due to the long skin contact. Radikon has been making entirely orange wines since he first macerated that Ribolla Gialla in 1995.  His Oslavje, Ribolla Gialla and Jakot wines are now famous around the world. Stanko died from cancer in 2016 at age 62 after making 36 vintages of wine.  His son Saša is now in charge to carry on the legacy.  The winery’s philosophy is still to make natural organic wine with the least human intervention possible and with maximum respect for the soils and nature.  All vinification is done in Slavonian oak barrels – first in wood vats, then in large barrels in which the wines are aged for about 3 years before bottling.  Radikon has cult wine status worldwide!  

    Radikon Jakot is made from 100% Friulano which had always been known as Tocai Friulano until the EU banned this name in 2008.  It seems the Hungarians complained that it might be confused with their Tokaj wines.  So what did the rebellious Radikon do?  He named his Friulano wine “Jakot” which is Tokaj spelled backwards!  Since then Dario Prinčič and many other winemakers have adopted the name Jakot.

    Here’s another one of Radikon’s forward thinking ideas which he had together with Edi Kante.  They thought that the traditional 75 cl bottle size was too much for one person, but not enough for a whole meal for two people.  From my experience, he was definitely right about that!  So they started bottling premium wines in 500 cl and 1 liter bottles.  They needed specially made corks to make this happen.  Supposedly Edi Kante jokes that “the one liter bottle is perfect for two people if only one of them is drinking”! 

    RADIKON JAKOT IGT VENEZIA GIULIA (COLLIO)


    Radikon Jakot 2012, Venezia Giulia IGT (Collio)

    2012 Jakot is 100% Friulano orange wine that was organically farmed, hand-harvested, placed in old Slavonian oak vats and fermented with native yeasts.  It macerated with skins for around 3 months with no temperature control and no sulfur.  It was then racked and aged on the lees in huge Slavonian oak casks for 3-4 years, then bottled and aged for several more years.  The “current” vintage is always 7 years ahead of today.  We expect it to have a nose of dried fruits, flowers and minerals; elegant with huge concentration, texture and layers of flavors.  And it comes in a 500 ml bottle!



    Edi Kante (Carso)

    Edi Kante decided that macerated white wine was not his thing, and went on from this original group of experimenters and history makers to make white wine from the stony Carso region just outside of Trieste. Today he is a well- known cult organic producer.  Edi took over from his father and began to bottle the family estate’s wines separately by varietal in the late 1980s.  After his experimentation with orange wine, he went on to make pure consistent wines that reflect the region.  His white wines are aged in older barrels for a year, then 6 months in stainless steel on the lees, and then bottled unfiltered.  All of this takes place in his incredible three-story cellar carved out of solid stone beneath his house.  His red wine is made from the local grape Terrano, and Pinot Nero when conditions are favorable. He makes Metodo Classico sparkling wine as well as selezione wines released in small quantities from select vintages.  They are typically aged between 8-10 years before release.  A quote from Edi: “I was born on the border and I have no borders”. 

    Doro Prinčič (Collio)

    Doro Prinčič is a 25 acre vineyard in the municipality of Cormòns in Collio.  Alessanndro (Sandro) Prinčič is in charge of this tiny estate that is named after his father Isidoro, a farmer who worked hard to make this one of Friuli’s finest wine producers.  Isidoro was among the first winemakers to believe in Collio wines and began bottling his first wines in 1952. Sandro is already passing along his knowledge to the next generation, his son Carlo who works with him in the cellar to ensure that his grandfather and father’s legacy continues.  The vineyard is divided up into 30-odd parcels producing 60,000 bottles annually of Friulano, Malvasia, Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Bianco, Cabernet Franc and Merlot.  Sandro doesn’t use oak for his whites – he prefers stainless steel tanks; reds are vinified in 20 hectoliter barrels.  Prinčič wines have lots of concentrated fruit and are slightly higher in alcohol. 


    Doro Prinčič Pinot Bianco Collio DOC


    Doro Prinčič Pinot Bianco 2017 Collio DOC


    This is a 100% Pinot Bianco wine from Prinčič estate vineyards that was entirely vinified in stainless steel and aged for one year in stainless steel before release.  The first vintage of Pinot Bianco was released in 1960.  Winemaker tasting notes tell us to expect bread crust and fruity aromas of pear, lime and orange.   Alcohol level is 13.5%. 


    Orange wine

    Since the orange wines of Collio, Carso and their neighbors in Slovenia are so unique, here is the information published in the forkandcorkdivine article about Slovenia – just in case you missed it!

    You have probably seen articles about orange wine for the past few years, but just in case it passed you by, here are the “quick sips and tips”.  Orange wine, aka amber wine, is actually a white wine – having absolutely nothing to do with oranges – made by leaving the juice in contact with the grape skins and seeds resulting in an orange-colored wine.  Juice can be left in skin and seed contact from a few days to a year.  Winemakers who use this method usually tend to be more artisanal as it is a more labor-intensive and riskier way of making wine. 

    This non-intervention style of wine tastes different from the traditional winemaking process – it may actually taste sour and nutty.   While modern day orange winemaking has only been on the radar for 20 years, it could possibly date back as far as 8000 years ago in the country of Georgia in the Caucasus Mountains where wines were fermented in large subterranean vessels called Qvevri (Kev-ree) that were closed with stones and sealed with beeswax.  Winemaking in Qvevri is so unique that in 2013 UNESCO granted the status of intangible cultural heritage (ICH) to the tradition.  Even though this style is still not prevalent worldwide, orange winemaking occurs frequently in Friuli Venezia Giulia, northeastern Italy; Slovenia and Georgia; some on several other continents and even a few US winemakers.  If you would like to learn more about orange wine, you can read all about it in great detail in a 250 page newly published book “Amber Revolution: How the World Learned to Love Orange Wine” by Simon J. Woolf, an award winning English wine and drinks writer.  “Amber Revolution” was released by Amazon.com in October 2018. 

    Here is some specific production information about the winemakers we highlighted in Friuli:

    Radikon ferments their de-stemmed Ribolla Gialla grapes in open top Slovenian oak.  It ferments naturally with the cap punched down about four times a day.  The cap consists of the solid mass of skins that rise to the top.  The fermenter is sealed and made air-tight when fermentation is complete, and the wine stays with its skins for three more months.  Then it is racked into large oak “botti” for about four more years before bottling. (Note: A botti is a large old barrel usually made of Slavonian or Austrian oak with capacity for 100 liters or more.)  After bottling, it gets about two more years before release to the market.  At no time does Radikon use any sulfites and does not fine or filter the wine. 

    Gravner leaves the stems on the grapes, gives them a bit of sulfur, and then ferments them 100% in Georgian qveris buried in the cellar.  The grapes are punched down every three hours between 5 AM and 11 PM.  They do put some cardboard over the qveri open tops to keep the flies out!  They are lightly sealed after fermentation is complete.  The Ribolla Gialla is in the qveri with its skins and stems for about six months.  Then it gets racked off the skins and put in another qveri for five months more.  After one year, wine is racked into Slavonian oak botti that can hold as much as 2000 – 5000 liters of wine, and aged for six more years.  The wine is finally bottled unfined and unfiltered and released for market a few months later.   

    Ramato wine……..rosé Pinot Grigio?

    The Pinot Grigio grape is a clonal mutation of Pinot Noir grapes and has pink skins. The resulting wine will get a copper color or at least a pink hue after just a few hours of fermenting with the skins.  The Venetian name for these wines is “Ramato” from the Italian word for copper, “rame”.  Ramato wine was usually made with a very short maceration time of from eight to thirty-six hours.  You could still find this style of wine even after skin contact was abandoned for other white wines in the 1960s, but then it declined in popularity since the 1990s.  But just like everything else, what is old once becomes new again, and you can now find Ramato wines as a tribute to its origin.  For example, Scarbolo  of Friuli makes a Ramato as does Channing Daughters winery on Long Island make wine in this tradition.

    Look for the Frasca! 

    It’s always good to have a little food in hand while we are “traveling” around Friuli learning about all of these very special and intriguing wines.  Just reading about them makes me want to have a glass of wine in hand paired with some delicious traditional food of Friuli!  If you are lucky enough to actually be in Friuli and particularly the province of Trieste, keep an eye out for red wooden arrows along the road that are signposts pointing you to the local vineyards offering “osmize” – a pop-up open-air café or maybe just some long wooden tables in the farmhouse basement.

    “Frasca” is a generic term in Friuli meaning casual restaurant that is often attached to a winery.  The word frasca means “branch” or “bush” which refers to a very old tradition from the Austrian Habsburgs of hanging a wreath of branches above the doorway of a farmhouse to signify that food and wine was for sale.  Now the term frasca is somewhat interchangeable with “osteria” which is a sit-down restaurant one step down in price and formality from a “trattoria”. 

    Today some small wineries in Friuli practice the tradition of osmize which allows the sale of local foods tax-free (originally just for eight days a year) if there is a red sign hung to signify their participation.  The farmers of Trieste keep their basements open to customers depending upon when and how much wine they have to sell.  This gives them the opportunity to offer fresh cheeses, charcuterie and wine to locals and anyone passing by.  They still hang the traditional frasca and the red arrow to lead you to them.  But these are modern times now and the age of the internet, so you can even do a Google search for Osmize.com to keep in contact with the owners.  I checked it out today, and there are 10 of them open if I can make the trip on time!

    Need something a little more substantial than salami, cheese and hard boiled eggs?  As you can imagine, food in Friuli is cross-cultural.  It merges together the cooking of Venetian, Slavic and Austrian culture and prepares it in both peasant fare as well as with a sophisticated flair. Polenta is a staple across northern Italy and often comes with stewed meat, game and cheese dishes.  Bread is a staple but as Chef Emanuela Calcara, a native of northern Italy, will tell you, it is not served with butter.  There are many delicious pastas here but in this part of Italy quite often you will find gnocchi and rice dishes……and you won’t find any of them with heavy tomato or Alfredo sauces.  Spaghetti and meatballs in tomato sauce is an American thing!  Along the coast especially you will be served seafood dishes such as shrimp, mussels, scallops, tiny spider crabs, sardines, smoked trout and squid.  Soups are very popular and often with beans, vegetables and meat.  Prosciutto di San Daniele DOP is the most well-known pork product.  There are some excellent local DOP protected cheeses like Montasio which often appears in the very popular dish called frico.  And just as one would expect, you will find a number of these foods on an upcoming forkandcorkdivine wine dinner featuring the foods and wines of Friuli Venezia Giulia and the Veneto.

    Friuli: the only constant here is change!

    There are so many excellent and diverse white wines to be found all over Italy.  The country has so many white varietals to choose from; it is hard for me to pick a favorite!  However, then there is the region of Friuli Venezia Giulia which some consider to make the very best white wines of Italy. 

    Winemaking in Friuli has been evolving for many years.  Some articles refer to the first, second and third revolutions, or the first, second and third wave.  But one thing we know for sure is that Friuli is a real study in constant change.  If you didn’t like what was happening in the first or second revolution, wait awhile…………it will probably come back in favor a few generations away.

    The region has been ruled by many different empires.  In fact it almost seems that Friuli is more like its northern Austro-Germanic-Slavic neighbors than it is like Italy.  After it emerged from wars and disease, a lot of bulk wine was made but of dubious quality.  Then along came young forward thinking winemakers that introduced better more modern techniques already used by their German neighbors.  Wine quality and marketability improved.  The next revolution brought winemakers who preferred to go back to the old ways.  This is especially evident with the rise of orange wine, which is now a well-known wine category pioneered by some Friuli/Slovenia wine makers but originated many generations before.   The natural wine movement claims many winemakers of this Italian wine area in particular.  Other winemakers in Friuli have decided to fit into both styles. 

    Along the way, Italian legislation started adding DOCs and DOCGs that focused on very specific areas, grapes or production methods.  Now this trend is in reverse.  Several very large DOCs were added in the last few years that cross a number of regions – like the Friuli DOC that includes the entire region of Friuli, and even on a grander scale, the 335th DOC, Delle Venezie, that includes all of Friuli, Veneto and the province of Trentino.  Pinot Grigio is the star of that DOC.  And then there is the Prosecco DOC that includes all of Friuli and five provinces of Veneto.  Prosecco of course takes the starring role here! 

    The bottom line to all of this is that Friuli does not have one particular style or recognizable identity, and it will be interesting to see where the next generation of winemakers takes it in the future, but in the meantime I think it is definitely a heaven for white wine lovers right here in this little corner of paradise in northeastern Italy.  My advice is to try as many of them as possible and see for yourself!  That is my plan!

    What’s our next stop on the Tre Venezie tour?  Trentino-Alto Adige, of course!  See you there…………… Ciao!

    All of the information that I used to prepare this article is available on the internet and the following books: “The Wine Bible” by Karen MacNeil; “Vino Italian: The Regional Wines of Italy” by Joe Bastianich and David Lynch; “Wine Folly: The Master Guide” Magnum Edition by Madeline Puckette and Justin Hammack, “The World Atlas of Wine” by Jancis Robinson and Hugh Johnson and “Amber Revolution” by Simon J. Woolf.  Please accept my apologies if there is any incorrect data or information; I try to verify from many sources, but there is a lot of conflicting information out there!

    LFRakos@gmail.com

    Forkandcorkdivine.com

    4.4.19

  • 19Oct

    Vranec holds the key to prosperity in the future of wine in Macedonia.  Vranec (Vran etz) is a red grape brought here from Montenegro, and it represents 50% of red wine produced in Macedonia.  I have never been to Macedonia and as of yet have never tasted any of their wines, but I have a great interest in learning about any wine producing country unfamiliar to me. Read on if you would like to learn about the rest of my wine story……. and the significance of “rice and beans”!

    The Republic of Macedonia is another one of those former Yugoslavian states in the Balkan Peninsula of southeastern Europe that gained independence in 1991. It is distinct from ancient Greek Macedonia although the two do share a border for more than 100 miles.  The Macedonian Republic is landlocked, separated from the Adriatic Sea by Albania and the Aegean Sea by Greece.  It borders on Kosovo to the northwest, Serbia to the north, Bulgaria to the east, Greece to the south and Albania to the west.  This country is home to over 2 million people and is just slightly larger than Vermont.   The climate ranges from plenty of sunshine and Mediterranean to continental breezes.

    “Macedonia” is the oldest surviving name of a country in the continent of Europe.  There has been an ongoing dispute over the name of the country between Greece and Macedonia for many years which was officially settled with an agreement in June 2018.  Both countries signed the historic Lake Prespa accord that changed the official name to the “Republic of (Northern) Macedonia”.   There is still major confusion between the two countries; i.e. Greek Macedonia and the Republic of Macedonia, especially in the wine world.  As I was internet searching for Macedonian wine, one had to be very careful to check for country of origin – Greece or Macedonia – as they are sometimes both listed under Macedonia.

    The current country geographically corresponds to the ancient kingdom of Paeonia, which was just north of the ancient kingdom of Macedonia. It has bounced back and forth from Persian to Roman rule, then Byzantine to the Ottoman empires.  After World War I, it became part of the Serbian Kingdom of Yugoslavia until republic status in 1945 as the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1963.  The country’s ethnic groups consist primarily of Macedonians and Albanians, then Turks, Serbs and others.

    Macedonia is popularly called “the Pearl of the Balkans” and has scenery equal to many of its picturesque European neighbors.  It is a natural paradise of vineyards, mountains, lakes and rivers among historical ruins and villages that have been practically unchanged for centuries. There are three large lakes – Ohrid, Prespa and Dojran – each divided by a frontier line, and the Vardar River bisects the country.  Major wine production takes place in the Vardar River Valley.

    Rice and beans

    Tavče-gravče or Macedonian baked beans is considered the country’s national dish.   You will find it on most restaurant menus.  It goes well with cheeses, fish, salads and classic local meat dishes. Macedonian food is strongly influenced by Turkish and Mediterranean cuisine which includes lots of fresh vegetables.    This is the land of ajvar (roasted red pepper spread), stuffed bell peppers, burek, goat cheese and freshwater fish.  Turkish coffee reigns supreme.

    Macedonia is also famous for its rice crop.  The “white gold”, produced in Kochani in eastern Macedonia, is the first protected product since 1999 marked as “Made in Macedonia”.  It is also the only crop exported from the country.

    Winemaking in Macedonia

    Macedonian wine culture has ancient roots in the Greek and Roman empires.  According to Ivana Simjanovska, Macedonia’s premier wine expert, there is archaeological evidence that proves people were growing grapes here in the 13th century BC!  Wine growing is thought to date back 4000 years, making it ONE of the oldest wine producing regions in the world.  Documents dating back to the time of Alexander the Great can attest to this theory.  During the Roman Empire, rulers preferred Macedonian grapes for their wines.

    Thirteen large wineries were created in the Republic of Macedonia during the socialism regime, started with barrels and equipment nationalized from different families.  There were also more than 30,000 families that owned small vineyards.  They sold their grapes to the thirteen large wineries.  Privatization of the old wineries began once the Republic of Macedonia separated from Yugoslavia.

    Macedonia has 16 administrative districts which are also named as wine regions. There are three main wine regions further broken down into the sixteen districts.   The various microclimates, soils and winemaking philosophies allow Macedonia to produce crisp, fresh whites, luscious sweet reds, roses and even some sparkling.   There were 84 registered wineries in 2014 up from just 28 in 2003.  European Union countries received 66% of the total wine exported.  The rest went to southern European non-EU countries.

    Macedonia is a PGI Protected Geographical Indication for wine in the EU.  The districts are protected through labeling regulations. Wine is produced on 55,000 acres with an additional 74,000 acres devoted to growing table grapes. Private wineries are what have brought up quality of Macedonian wine due to sophisticated technology, highly educated enologists, and working hard to be in a competitive market.  Marketing and advertising has been improving, and they are now embracing sustainable eco-tourism.

    What is the biggest problem with the Macedonia wine industry?  Probably that Macedonia is not well known as a country, let alone as a wine country.  They sell bulk wine, but it is hard to get the high-quality wine out to consumers of higher quality wines.  98% of wine made during Yugoslavian time was poor quality bulk wine thanks once again to socialism. Macedonia accounted for about two-thirds of wine production when it was part of Yugoslavia. 80% of Macedonian grapes were exported in bulk and bottled somewhere else in Yugoslavia or other countries.  Winemakers have been trying to get rid of that image during the past 10 years with their quality instead of quantity wine.

    The eighty-four officially registered wineries in Macedonia have a total capacity above 220 million liters with the majority of wineries located in the Povardarje region.  About 30% of grapes are still harvested by families for their own home production and consumption of wine and grape brandy.

    Some wineries in Macedonia date back more than a century, but here are a few of the most notable wineries currently in operation         

    Bovin –  The first privately built winery.

    Tikves – The biggest winery on all of the Balkans and oldest in Macedonia.

    Stobi – The newest and most modern winery in the country.

    Skovin (Skpoje) – One of the oldest and second largest in Macedonia.

    Chateau Kamnik – Most award winning winery.

    Popova Kula – It’s a combination of old design and style with modern facilities plus it is known for rescuing the grape Stanušina from near extinction.

    Grapes in Macedonia

    Macedonia has 28 grape varieties, according to winesofmacedonia.mk.  A large number are indigenous varieties plus varieties common to Central Europe and Balkans and some international varieties.  Vranec and Kratoshija are the primary red grapes to know.  Smederevka is the primary white grape.  Currently red wine makes up 80% of production.

    Macedonia white wine can be fresh and fruity ideally consumed young but there are also heavier whites with tropical flavors.    Reds are spicy and full-bodied with some similarity to Bordeaux and California.  These are the main grapes you will read about in each wine region.

    White grapes

    Smederevka is the leading white grape variety for production in Macedonia. It is one of the oldest varieties in the Balkans with unconfirmed origination in Serbia.  Smederevka is planted in almost all Macedonian wine districts where white grapes are grown. The grapes are big with oval shape and thin translucent and hard skin with greenish-yellow color.   It makes wine with a delicate aromatic fruity profile, low in alcohol and best drunk young. It pairs well with light appetizers, white meat, cheese, fish and green salads.  Rakija, Macedonian brandy, is also made from Smederevka. 60% of white grapes grown in Macedonia are Smederevka.

    Žilavka is planted in the warmer regions of Veles, Tikves, Ovche Pole and Strumica-Radovish.  The grapes are sweet and refreshing with a fruity flavor and aroma and produces top quality wines with intense smell and taste.  This dry white wine can be paired with seafood, pasta, white meat, cheese and desserts.   It is also used as a blending grape and for making brandy.

    Temjanika is highly aromatic with Muscat-like character grown mainly in Tikvesh and Veles wine districts. Temjanika (named after temjan or frankincense) makes both sweet styles of wine from raisined grapes as well as dry single varietal wines.  It makes highly prized and structured complex wines with spicy aromas, fruit scents of peach, apricot, plum and orange at the beginning with flavor of incense following later.  A great pairing is a white meat, seafood or dessert.

    Zupjanka is a cross between Prokupec and Pinot Noir, originally from Serbia, but grown throughout Macedonia.  It is characteristic for a highly acidic content that make fresh, full wine with a gentle wine bouquet.  Fresh seafood, oysters on the half shell and grilled Mediterranean vegetables are perfect pairings. It is great for blends but some single varietal wines are now being made.

    Rkaciteli (ree kaht see TELL ee) is a peppery spice, floral aroma and peachy fruit grape from Georgia widely planted throughout the Balkans. It was introduced into Macedonia around the 1950’s and was mostly planted in the Vardar River Valley.  The wines are characterized by fresh and distinctive flavors of apple, pear, apricot, mango, peach, grapefruit and pineapple.  Pair it with some neutral cheese, prosciutto, white meat or a green salad.   It can be very expressive when grown in cooler areas of Macedonia.

    Traminer – An intensely aromatic grape also known as Savagnin Blanc and is a variant of Gewurztraminer.   No, that is not a typo for Sauvignon Blanc – it’s an entirely different grape.

    The international varieties of Welschriesling (Laski Rizling), Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc and Grenache Blanc (Belan) are also grown in Macedonia.

    Red grapes

    Vranec, (Vran etz) the black stallion grape, probably originated in nearby Montenegro but is the most common variety in Macedonia.  It is THE most important and leading variety for red wine in Macedonia.  Vranec also means raven colored or black which is why the wine is also known here as “black wine”. Wines made from Vranec are recognizable and distinctive in color and make a unique brand for Macedonian wines exported on a global level.  Over 50% of the reds produced here come from this grape. Vranec makes wines that are dense, deeply colored red, full-bodied with red fruit, and aromas ranging from sour cherry, blackberry and blackcurrant to chocolate, mint, licorice, and vanilla.  Its high tannin content and good levels of acidity make Vranec wine a good candidate for oak aging. It is often mistaken for but closely related to Primitivo. Vranec is also a blending grape with Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, and Syrah.  All Macedonian dishes as well as red meat, game, BBQ and smoked meat pair well with Vranec.

    Kratoshija (Krat oss SHEE yah) is the second most important Macedonian red grape. It has been grown here since ancient times.  The genetic origin of Kratoshija is supposedly the same as Zinfandel, Primitivo and Crljenak Kashtelanski or Tribidrag in Croatia.  It is quite a versatile variety and can make easy fruity wine like the Beaujolais style or it can make more complex wine in the Bordeaux style.  The best wines are light red color and violet hue, relatively high alcohol, reasonable acid, and fruit aroma eventually becoming spicy.  It pairs really well with BBQ meat and piquant cheese.

    Stanušina Crna is a unique variety capable of producing very high quality wines, and is very popular on the domestic market. This is the only variety proven to be indigenous solely to the Tikvesh region of Macedonia.  You will not find it anywhere else!  It was the main variety in Tikves before phylloxerra, and its existence has been threatened by the planting of international varieties.  Thank goodness, the Popova Kula winery has made it their mission to give this grape all of the attention it deserves. They produce rosé wine from Stanušina.  The wines are usually pale with rich extract and high acidity and people who know about it, make sure to buy it when visiting Macedonia.  It has an intense aroma of strawberry and raspberry and pairs well with light and creamy puddings, lettuce, and other light dishes.

    Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Pinot Noir, Plavec Mali and Syrah are also grown here.

    Macedonia’s three wine- growing regions:

    Povardarje, Peinja-Osogovo, Pelagonija-Polog

    Povardarje (Central Region)

    Povardarje, or the Vardar Valley, is the most important region of Macedonia.  It is located in the valley of the Vardar River and produces 83% of the country’s grapes and wine.  This is the heart of the Balkans and a major transit zone of the Balkan Peninsula.  It is influenced by both Mediterranean and Continental climate and has 260 sunny days during the year making it perfect for viticulture and winemaking.    There are currently 21,000 hectares of vineyards and over 26,000 families dedicated to producing grapes.

    The Indigenous white varieties of Smederevka, Temjanika, Belan, Zupjanka, Zilavka and reds Kratoshija, and flagship Vranec all are grown here.

    There are seven districts in the Vardar River Valley: Skopje, Veles, Tikves, Ovche Pole, Kochani, Strumica, Gevgelija.  Sixty-nine officially registered wineries (out of 84 total) annually produce 850,000 hl of wine in Povardarje.

    Tikves District

    Tikves is the most well-known wine district in Macedonia.  It is also the top producing wine area and yields the highest-quality wine.  Tikves District is in the central part of the country near the Vardar River, the wine heartland of Macedonia, and has been making wine since the fourth century BC.  The Tikves district is on the same latitudes as Rioja and Ribera del Duero.  Grape growing conditions are ideal here.

    Tikves has nearly 13,000 hectares of vineyards and grows one-third of Macedonia’s grapes. 80% of Macedonia’s wineries are in Tikves District and many offer wine tasting. They grow at least 20 different grape varieties including Vranec, Kratoshija, Kadarka, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Merlot, Pinot Noir, Syrah, Zilavka, Zupljanka, Grasevina, Plavec, Smederevka, Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, Muscat Ottonel, Rkaciteli and Riesling.  There are 37 wineries in Tikves.

    Tikves Winery is the largest winery in Macedonia and named after the Tikves wine district. It has over 500 hectares of vineyards and yields up to 20 million liters a year of red, white, and sparkling wines plus non-alcoholic beverages. Tikves dates back to 1885 making it the oldest winery in the country.  It was known for T’ga za Jug wine, a once famous export of Macedonia.  T’ga za Jug is a semi-dry red wine made from late-harvested Vranec, and was once the most popular and most sold wine throughout the Balkans.  All this changed when private investors purchased Tikves in 2003 and changed the focus to making quality wines, not mass produced juice.  You can still buy T’ga za Jug! Tikves is also the biggest winery in Southeast Europe.

    Tikves has been defining site-specific locations to make elegant premium wines.  For example, the Barovo site is high up in the Kozuf Mountain and produces elegant wines from Kratoshija and Vranec from 40 year old sustainably grown vines.  There are also whites Belan (Grenache Blanc) and Chardonnay making very distinctive complex wines.

    The Bela Voda single vineyard is nearby and grows Vranec, Plavec, Belan and Chardonnay.  Bela Voda wines have been receiving critical acclaim by Robert Parker and other well-known wine critics –  94 points in 2011 and 91 points in 2013.  According to Robert Parker, the 2013 tastes “like a Southern Rhone blend with its spicy, licorice and black raspberry/cassis-dominated bouquet” and is inky-colored “medium to full-bodied, supple and sexy, with good acidity and a great finish.  Made from equal parts Plavec and Vranec that was aged in 75% new barrels”.

    Bovin, the first boutique and privately built winery in Macedonia, was established in 1998. Brothers Kiril and Gjorgji Bogevski own the winery and have taken it from 120,000 bottles of high quality award winning wines to its current capacity of 1.5 million bottles and over 34 wines.  Their percentage of wines exported has continued to climb and can now be found on five continents and 36 countries including USA.  However, that still does not mean you can easily find a bottle to taste.  As usual, I find that internet searching is generally required for wines from “exotic” wine countries and with that, few options can be found.

    Bovin produces 80% from their own 60 hectares of prime Tikvesh vineyards and 20% from other vineyards using only environmentally friendly practices. They use carefully controlled fermentation and modern production equipment.  Bovin wines are considered some of the most exclusive and highly valued wines in Macedonia.  They have won over 100 regional and international awards.  Bovin grows Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Vranec, Cabernet Franc, Shiraz, Sangiovese, Petit Verdot and Tempranillo reds and Chardonnay, Muscat Temjanika, Pink Traminer whites.  Approximately 70% of production is red wine and 30% is white.  All Bovin wines are high quality and most bottled in .75 liters.  They produce reds, whites, rosés, late harvest dessert wines, and brandies.  Bovin offers tours of the vineyards and has a bed and breakfast.

    Stobi Winery is one of the more modern and was established in 2009.  It is located near the ruins of the ancient city of Stobi in the Tikves wine district where the Vardar and Crna Rivers cross paths.  It has over 600 hectares of land and produces up to 4.5 million bottles of wine per year from Riesling, Chardonnay, Muscat Ottonel whites and Pinot Noir, Vranec, Merlot, Cabernet Franc and Shiraz reds.  Stobi was a huge cooperative when purchased by the Jordanova family.  They were the first winery in Macedonia to start producing wine from their own grapes.  They have 600 acres of grapes split into two different wine regions.  They pick grapes manually to keep with the old traditions, but once the wine gets to the winery, it’s all about a modern high tech system of production.  This keeps the mix going between traditional and modern ways.  There are more than 280 sunny days in this part of Macedonia, with a very hot summer that has a wind that protects the grapes from disease.

    Their vineyards are 25 or 40 years old depending on the grape.  Stobi likes to accent the indigenous grapes Vranec and Zilavka, Smederevka and the Georgian grape Rkatsiteli and produces more than 25 different labels.  Other varieties include Temjanika, Chardonnay, Zupljanka, Muscat Ottonel, Italian and Rhine Rieslings, Cabernet Franc and Sauvignon, Merlot, Pinot Noir, Petit Verdot, Syrah and Prokupec.  They divide their wine into four different categories: premium, classic, elite and traditional. The winery can produce 5 million liters, of which 220,000 liters are aged in oak barrels. Lucky for us, they export to the USA!

    Popova Kula Winery was established in the mid-2000’s by Jordan Trakov, a former investment banker, who modeled the vineyard after CA wine country.  It produces rich reds and fresh, dry whites. Popova also has a restaurant, hotel and wine tasting cellar.

    The winery is named after a very important tower, the Popova Kula “Priest’s Tower” which served as a checkpoint on the old Roman road that passes next to the winery. They use small stainless tanks for fermentation and barrels of American, French, Hungarian and Macedonia oak with different degrees of toasting for aging. Their first harvest was in 2005 and most of the wines produced were award-winning.

    Popova produces wine from eleven different grape varieties including Vranec, Prokupec, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Sauvignon Blanc, Temjanika, Chardonnay, Zilavka, Muscat Ottonel and Muscat Hamburg.  Their most famous grape is the Stanušina, which Popova Kula resurrected from near extinction.  While they believe in the values of globalization of grapes such as Chardonnay, Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot, they strongly feel that wine consumers all over the world should have the opportunity to taste and enjoy some of the near-extinct and more exotic grapes that exist.  We applaud them for that effort!

    Stanušina grapes belong to the Black Sea family of varieties, and they have been cultivated since ancient times.  The name can be translated as “old sprout”, “yellow sprout” or “grandfather’s sprout” and the grape itself is rust-colored, of medium size and form medium-to-large bunches.  They are usually harvested late, hand-picked, and then traditionally crushed by foot in copper basins before being moved to large wooden vats for fermentation.  It ferments with grape solids until ready to be consumed.  Stanušina grapes are also used to make madzun, another beverage used to cure liver problems and respiratory infections and as a sugar substitute in cooking.

    Since the risk for extinction of Stanušina grapes is very high, the Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity is working with producers to develop a production protocol that will ensure the high quality of the grapes and promote them on the national and international market.

    Slow Food? 

    According to their web page, the Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity was inaugurated in Florence, Italy in 2003 for the purpose of coordinating and promoting Slow Food’s projects for food biodiversity across the world.  The Foundation is active in over 100 countries and involves thousands of small-scale producers in their projects by giving technical assistance, training, producer exchanges and communication.  It explores themes such as sustainable agriculture, raw milk, small-scale fishing, animal welfare, seeds, and GMOs.  “The Foundation’s projects are tools to promote a model of agriculture that is based on local biodiversity and respect for the land and the local culture, is in harmony with the environment and aims to provide food sovereignty and access to good, clean and fair food for all communities.”

    Is “Slow Food” new to you?  No, it is not when your restaurant staff is on “slow speed”!  We may joke about it, but it really was a movement born in Italy in the 1980’s when Carlo Petrini and a group of activists wished to defend the good unhurried life against the fast life and fast food of a McDonald’s Restaurant that was about to be built on the Spanish Steps in Rome.  Their goal was “to defend the regional traditions, good food, gastronomic pleasure and a slow pace of life”.  Today there are millions of people involved in thousands of projects in over 160 countries.  The Foundation for Biodiversity is just a part of it. After two decades, the movement now embraces the connections between “plate, people, politics and culture”.  Just like all other organizations, they depend upon membership fees and contributions from sponsors and institutions.  A recent internet search of Slow Food USA listed 6 chapters in Florida.  The SW Florida group has been active off and on through the years, and while once a local member, I am unaware of their current status.

    Skopje District

    Skopje is the capital of Macedonia, the largest city and a busy wine center.  Grapes grow outside the city and several wineries have tasting rooms in historical areas of the city.  The vineyards are influenced by a continental and sub-Mediterranean climate with hot summers and cold winters.  The soil is mostly clay with stony sub-soils.  Grape varieties growing here include Vranec, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Syrah, Prokupec, Chardonnay, Smederevka, Sauvignon Blanc and Muscat Ottonel. There are six wineries in Skopje with a total of 1,100 hectares planted.

    Chateau Kamnik, founded in 2004, is the country’s most award-winning winery. Located in the Skopje Wine District, the estate owns 15 hectares of vines and has invested substantially in innovative winemaking researching techniques and development of new grape clones.  Kamnik also owns a hotel and restaurant called The Hunter’s Lodge Kamnik.  Grape varieties from Kamnik may include Arinarnoa, Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Carménère, Chardonnay, Grenache Blanc, Merlot, Montepulciano, Pinot Grigio, Pinot Noir, Sangiovese, Sauvignon Blanc, Syrah, Temjanika and Vranec.  Annual production is 100,000 liters and most wines age in American and French oak barrels.

    Arinarnoa is a dark wine grape bred in 1956 in Bordeaux.  Recent DNA testing reveals it to be the crossing of Tannat and Cabernet Sauvignon grapes. The name arin comes from the Basque dialect word “arin” meaning “light” and “arno” meaning  “wine”.  Not surprisingly, Arinarnoa makes wine with firm tannins and herbaceous flavors.

    Skovin was founded in 1979 and produces 17 million liters of wine. They make more than 45 different wines, all of them classified in several production lines, each having different flavors and price tags. Skovin vineyards are well known for providing unique wine aroma and producing high quality wines. They also have a wine tasting cellar.

    Brušani Winery is a small boutique winery in Skopje with vineyards in Tikves.   It’s a very young winery, just 8 years old, and they crafted the first bottle of their wine from the indigenous varietal Stanušina.  The owner’s grandfather planted that Stanušina over 75 years ago in the family vineyards in the village of Brušani.  They now make just two wines, Stanušina and a Vranec Barrique.

    Veles District

    Veles vineyards lie along the Vardar River and between the mountain ranges.  The warmer climate is slightly more sub-Mediterranean than continental. The terrain is hilly with wavy mild slopes and soil ranges from diluvial to brown.  You will find Vranec, Kratoshija, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Chardonnay, Smederevka, Sauvignon Blanc, Riesling and Temjanika growing here.   There are six wineries with 1,500 hectares of vineyards.

    Chateau Sopot is a boutique winery in the Veles District founded in 2006.   They make white, red and rosé wines including an excellent Cabernet Sauvignon.  Capacity is 70,000 liters, focusing on quality and not quantity.  Their mission is “the crafting of exclusive wines for wine lovers’ indulgence” and their wines are available only in elite restaurants and hotels in Macedonia and abroad.

    Ovche Pole District

    “The windiest place in the Balkans” is under the continental climate, but also has some sub-Mediterranean influence.  It plays a significant part in Macedonian wine production with grapevines growing around cities like Sveti Nikole, Stip, Probishtip and Kochani north from the river Zletovo.  Strong winds are blowing most of the year.  Vranec, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Kadarka, Chardonnay, Grenache Blanc, Smederevka, Sauvignon Blanc, Muscat Ottonel and Zilavka grapes are grown on 2,000 hectares by eight wineries.

    Imako Vino, the International Macedonia Company, was established in 1989 and built a winery in 2002 just outside of Štip by the Bregalnica River.  Imako Vino continues with the ancient wine making traditions of many years ago.  Now it is the third largest producer of wine in Macedonia with 10 million liters.  Imako has a very interesting motto and guiding principle: “Any winemaker is able to produce good wine in little quantities. To make fine, quality wine for a vast number of people is the real challenge. In our opinion, it is winemaking in the true sense.” Not so sure I agree with their principle, but we certainly prefer to have quality wine whether for just a few or vast numbers. They have a non-industrial creative approach.

    Their premium line of wines features Temjanika and Vranec, showcasing the 3000 plus years of Macedonia wine heritage.  The Ultra Premium Line offers Graševina, Muscat white, Macedonia Port, Kagor, a dessert wine made of late-harvest Vranec and Vranec Black Diamond, a full-bodied dry red wine.

    Ezimit Winery has owned and operated 400 hectares (988 acres) of vineyards in Štip since 1994.  The winery has an annual capacity of 5 million bottles of which the main line features whites from Chardonnay, Muscat, and Sauvignon Blanc, a rosé and red wines from Cabernet Sauvignon, Kratoshija, Merlot, Pinot Noir, Plavec, Shiraz and Vranec.  They also offer a premium selection of wines and a Limited Edition Series .

    Strumica-Radovish District

    This region is on the southeastern part of Macedonia and has a Continental sub-Mediterranean climate.  It is hilly with alluvial mostly clay soil.  There are three wineries with 2,200 hectares planted.  Vranec, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Syrah, Chardonnay and Smederevka grapes grow here.

    Grozd Winery cultivates 700 hectares of vineyards in Strumica.  It can produce 12 million liters with most of the exports going to Serbia, Germany and Russia.  They also make wines for the local market.

    Tais is a sweet red wine made from Muscat Hamburg with intense and fragrant Muscat aromas and long taste and finish.

    Mastika is a wine distillate made from select varietals with the flavor of anise and honey.  Grozd use a recipe that dates back to 400 BC and their Mastika is award winning.

    Dalvina Winery is just northeast of Strumica.  The founders Delco and Lidija Baltovski established Dalvina in 2007 with the vision of an eco-friendly and sustainable system from vine to bottle.  Grapes are hand-harvested by workers from nearby villages.  A gravity feed system then carries the grapes from sorting, cleaning, destemming and crushing.  This system saves on electricity, increases efficiency and decreases “handling” of the grapes.  Dalvina uses the délestage (rack and return) wine making process for red wines.  Full tanks of crushed grapes naturally allow the pulp, skins and seeds to gravitate to the top of the tank and form a cap.  Wine is then pumped from the bottom and put into another tank, leaving only the “cap” in the first tank.  The cap is then filtered to remove grape seeds, wine from temporary tank added back in, and wine, pulp and skins now ferment.  This allows for more stable wines with enhanced color, less harsh tannins and fruitier flavors.

    Dalvina owns and operates over 914 acres of vineyards with a winery capacity for 4.2 million liters of wine.  They make white wines from Chardonnay, Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc, Zupljanka and Rkaciteli.  Dalvina’s premium line of red wines from single varietals, called Tiver, is made from Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Vranec.  An extra special selection is the cuveè, Ar-magedon, a superb blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Vranec that is aged 18 months in oak barrels.   A favorite is their Godsin line of wines made from the Muscat Trollinger (Black Muscat) grape.  Normally, this varietal is used as a table grape or for making rakija in Macedonia.  Dalvina has mastered a process for making two wines from the Muscat Trollinger, one is a semi-dry rosè and the other is an astounding ruby red.

    Gevgelija-Valandovo District

    This district has more climatic influence from the Aegean Sea than others of Macedonia making it typical for a sub-Mediterranean zone.  Vines grown here in alluvial and diluvial, mostly dry clay soil rich with minerals, and enjoy hot summers and mild winters.  There are a number of micro growing locations and you can find Vranec, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Smederevka and table grapes growing here.

    Rigo Impex Winery was built in Gevgelija in 2000.  They produce dry, semi-dry and sweet wines with an annual production of 14 million liters.

    Kochani-Vinica District         

    The valley of Kochani is surrounded by high mountains from south, north and east, but the Vardar River makes low open areas from the west.  The continental sub-Mediterranean climate makes for excellent rice growing conditions.  Kochani, “the town of rice”, is situated here in this eastern part of Macedonia.   Supposedly Alexander brought rice back from his 300 BC campaign in India.  Wine production has moved farther southwest leaving behind a small amount of traditional wine production.

    About 8 miles from Kochani, you will find Vinica (Vinitsa) which was once an important center for wine production.  It was so important the name of the city comes from the word “wine”.  While the wine industry has moved on, about 3% of Macedonia vineyards can still be found here. Vranec, Prokupec, Plovdina, Smederevka and Zilavka are grown on just 600 hectares.                                        

    Pčinja-Osogovo (Eastern Region)

    Pčinja-Osogovo is located in the northeast of the country near the border with Bulgaria.  It is the most mountainous part of the country with vines growing on mountain slopes.  The weather is colder here with strong northern winds.  Grapevines grow in alluvial and brown soil on limestone rocks.  About 4% of the countries wine production happens here.

    Pčinja-Osogovo is made up of three districts: Kumanovo, Kratovo and Pijanec.  Kumanovo is the third largest city in Macedonia.  Kratovo, “the City of Towers and Bridges”, is located in a volcanic crater on the western slope of the Osogovo Mountain.  The three vineyards commonly grow the dominant red grapes Cabernet Sauvignon, Gamay Noir, Gamay Teinturier, Pinot Noir and Vranec and the white grapes Muscat Ottonel, Sauvignon Blanc, Šipon, Riesling and Žilavka.

    Teinturier grapes are red wine grapes with dark skins and flesh unlike the usual red wine grapes that have clear flesh.  Teinturier grapes are very uncommon.  “Teinturier” is French for “to dye or stain”.   In most cases, the squeezed grape juice is clear even from the most dark-skinned grape variety because the anthocyanin pigments are in the outer skin tissue of the grape only.  The red color comes from the crushed skins of the grape over a period of days during the fermentation process whereas anthocyanin pigments are in the pulp of the grape itself in Teinturier grapes.  Winemakers typically add a small amount of one of these grapes (Gamay Teinturier is one; some others are Alicante Bouschet, Chambourcin, Saperavi) to boost the color of a wine blend.

    Pelagonija-Polog (Western Region)

    Pelagonija-Polog is situated in the south and southwestern side of the country near Albania.  It produces 13% of Macedonian wine.  It is predominantly made up of plateaus and small mountains with a climate that is cold and humid winters with hot dry summers.

    There are six wine districts: Prilep, Bitola, Prespa, Ohrid, Kichevo and Tetovo, and they commonly grow Cabernet Sauvignon, Gamay, Merlot, Pinot Noir, Prokupec and Vranec for red grapes and Riesling, Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, Žilavka and Smederevka for white grapes.

    Bitola is the second largest city in Macedonia and Prilep, fourth in size, is known as “the city under Marko’s Towers”. Marko was a Serbian medieval prince from 1371 – 1395.  Lake Prespa is shared by Macedonia, Greece and Albania and is most famous for the agreement signed here in June 2018 officially recognizing the “Republic of (North) Macedonia” as a completely separate country from Greece.  The Prime Ministers of Greece and Macedonia signed the accord on the Greek side and then – for the first time ever since the independence of 1991 – a Greek Prime Minister entered Macedonia where he had lunch with the Prime Minister of Macedonia!  I hope they enjoyed wine from both Macedonia and Greek Macedonia!!

    Ohrid District

    Ohrid is a historic town on Lake Ohrid which is surrounded by mountains.  It is a beautiful sight and the town and lake are one of 28 sites worldwide on the UNESCO World Heritage list.  The famous Ohrid pearl is crafted from shells coated with very thin layers of emulsion from the scales of the local Plashica fish.  You can buy these beautiful manmade handcrafted pearls from the Talevi and Filevei families.  Supposedly the Queen of England wears pearls designed by the Talevi family.  Or you can buy some knock-offs!

    When you are not enjoying the town of Ohrid or looking for pearls, visit some wineries.  Wineries line the shores of Lake Ohrid.  We hear there is hardly a household in the region without a barrel full of wine and “Tsipouro” brandy which is distilled according to old family recipes and contains 40-45% alcohol.

    KM-Vin is the smallest winery in Macedonia.  It’s located in the Vevchani area of Lake Ohrid and produces red and white wines.  You can definitely taste the difference in terroir between Tikvesh and Ohrid wine regions.  Tikvesh is home for most red grape varieties, but Ohrid is perfect for whites.  Milovan Kalanoski is attempting to showcase white wines here at KM-Vin.  He is building a new winery and putting his stamp on wines from Lake Ohrid.

    Help to tell the story of one of Europe’s last undiscovered wine countries.

    The Republic of Macedonia is another one of those Eastern European Balkan countries that has been making wine almost since the beginning of time.  For centuries it seemed to be part of some other country, but finally gained independence in 1991 as did Croatia, Slovenia, and several other ex-Yugoslavian Socialist countries.  It has especially been a struggle for Macedonia to break free from the socialist mentality of cooperative vineyards and wineries that made bulk wine of poor quality and lots and lots of it to send off to other countries.  While Croatia and several other countries have been making in-roads with international wine marketing, Macedonia is still known mainly for bulk wine that goes to British and German supermarkets.  I thought this quote from Jovanka Cvetkova, winemaker at Winery Grkov, fairly well sums up the current status: “There’s a huge wine culture here, but we take it for granted. We’re not market oriented, we’re ex-socialist.  So we’re modest and not good at marketing”.  This quote appeared in a NY Times 2010 article, but my internet search for Macedonian wine proves that it is still true. Lucky for us and other winelovers of the world, some forward thinking winemakers are making world-class Macedonian wines and attempting to get them out onto the world stage for us to taste.  Thanks to the larger, modern and most innovative wineries like Tikves and Stobi, Macedonian wine is now becoming available for adventurous winelovers to taste and enjoy.  Should you have the desire to buy and taste some Macedonian wine of your own, it is going to be difficult but not impossible.

    Several sources that I have found:

    wine.com had several labels from Tikves available on my most recent search.

    wine-searcher.com – You can find some bottles on this site from various stores across the US, but you cannot always find a store that will ship to you.

    nextbottle.com – I have successfully ordered online from nextbottle.com.  Prices and shipping were reasonable and they had several wineries that I was interested in.

    I have not seen any Macedonian wine on the local big box wine store inventory and have not searched the boutique wine shops of Naples, but I believe that Stobi Macedon Pinot Noir is available at Whole Foods.

    All of the information that I used to prepare this article is available on the internet, and there was very little of it at that.  Wine research can be really challenging!  Please accept my apologies if there is any incorrect data or information; I try to verify from several sources.  Cheers………or as they say in Macedonia  – ovacii

    LFRakos@gmail.com

    Forkandcorkdivine.com

    10.16.18

     

  • 29Sep

    Yes, Öküzgözü,………and Boğazkere…………and Narince just to name a few of the grapes indigenous to the country of Turkey.  Here is their story!

    Turkey’s wine history may date back to 7000 BC, and it may be home to between 600-1500 indigenous grape varieties (depending upon which source you use), but Turkey is an overwhelmingly Muslim country and many of the people who live there have never touched a drop of wine in their lives.  Alcohol is considered “haram” or prohibited to them.  80% of Turks don’t drink alcohol at all and many of those who do prefer beer or raki, an anise-flavored clear brandy made from grapes and raisins.

    The hot humid climate makes Turkey ideal for viniculture.  According to a “Viticulture in Turkey” 2018 report, Turkey is the sixth top grape-producing country in the world; however most of them are eaten as fresh table grapes or raisins.  There is a long tradition of winemaking, but unfortunately high taxes and government regulations significantly hamper the wine business. In 2013 President Erdoğan’s Justice and Development Party placed restrictions on alcohol sales between 10 pm and 6 am, no sales are allowed near schools or mosques, and advertising was banned.  It is also illegal to order alcohol over the internet, and there is a special consumption tax in addition to purchase tax on alcohol in Turkey.  Doesn’t sound very promising for a wine producer!  In fact it is amazing that wine production even continues to exist in Turkey.  Despite all of this bad news, the government has supported the export of its wine, and there is some Turkish wine finding its way out of the country to Belgium, Turkish Northern Cypress, the UK, Germany and the US.  Turkish winemakers have even won gold medals in international wine competitions.  Where there is a will, there will be a way!!! Turkey has excellent grape varieties, vineyards and producers that would be perfect for this modern time when winelovers are actively seeking wines from all corners of the world. Croatia, Hungary, and Slovenia are some recent examples of how wine production and marketing has taken a positive turn and improved our wine drinking options.  Sadly this may all change under the current regime of President Erdoğan if it has not already done a complete 360 degree about face.  The country appears to be in financial and economic crisis.  Censorship is at the discretion of the President – you can’t even use Wikipedia in Turkey!

    Winemaking in Turkey

    Turkey has gone unrecognized for wine making for centuries.  Fortunately the 21st century has brought some welcome changes when the wine industry became privatized and regulated in 2001.  The domestic market is still taxed, but wine quality has greatly increased drawing attention to the possibility of importing Turkish wine by wine enthusiasts and importers around the world.

    There are over 1.1 million acres planted under vine for wine production as of the 2017 International Organization of Vine and Wine (OIV) report.   (Numbers always seem to vary depending upon your source!)  Turkey is the world’s sixth top producer of grapes with around 4 million metric tons; however they are mainly grown for fresh table grapes and raisins. (“Viticulture in Turkey” International Horticultural Congress 2018).  According to the 2017 OIV report, the number of hectares under vine has been steadily decreasing for the last four years.

    Between 30 – 60 of those indigenous grape varieties are grown commercially, about 30 of which are outstanding wine grape varieties.

    Turkey became a republic in 1923. Turkey’s first president Mustafa Kemal (Ataturk – father of Turks) established the country’s first commercial winery in 1925.  In 1935 Kemel charged two French viticulturists with the task of studying Turkey’s indigenous grapes and determining which ones were suitable for growing in any particular regions of the country.  Under Kemal all alcohol production was run by a state company called Tekel and as a result of the Frenchmen’s study, 28 wineries were created. Their mission was to make large quantities of wine; quality was unimportant!   The largest of the wineries was Tekel which eventually became privatized in 2004.  The wine division operates under the Kayra brand, now owned by Diageo, a large international beverage company.  Kayra has two wine making facilities – one in Sarkoy and one in Elazig.

    Turkey may have a great climate for winemaking, but there are a couple of agricultural challenges.  First, there is too much water in the form of underground springs.  This means that the grapevines do not have to struggle, thus creating thinner wine.  The second challenge is how to obtain the right kind of grapes.  Muslim farmers are reluctant to sell grapes for end-use alcoholic purposes, and if they do sell them, it is often done in secrecy.  Also most farmers are used to growing for quantity to make table grapes and raisins and don’t understand limiting the yield to achieve grapes better suited for wine production.

    Turkey has no system for wine regulations or appellations.  There are no overall wine production standards.  Enotourism is basically non-existent in Turkey.  So unless you are drinking wine from a well- known winery, this is truly a case of “let the buyer beware”.

    Today there are 31 export-driven producers making up Wines of Turkey, a strategic partnership group supported by the Turkish Ministry of Economy, established in 2008 to represent the Turkish wine sector and promote the country’s top 25 wineries internationally.  Its mission is “to develop the wine market and culture of Turkey and to increase exports by making Wines of Turkey a generic brand associated with quality wine.”  That sounds like a challenging mission when their country makes it so difficult for wine producers, and such a large percentage of the population does not drink wine!

    Tekel and Kayra

    Tekel was the Turkish state-owned tobacco and spirits monopoly founded in 1852 by its Ottoman rulers.  It operated the largest winery of Turkey until 2004 when the alcoholic beverages section of Tekel was privatized by a block sale of 100% of shares. Now Tekel produces wine under the privately owned Kayra brand.

    Kayra Wines, once a part of Tekel, is now privately owned by Diageo, a large international beverage company.  A native Californian, Daniel O’Donnell has been overseeing the wine production for over 10 years.  O’Donnell got his prior experience at Ravenswood in Sonoma, then moving on to Italy, China, Chile and New Zealand.  He was given the challenge at Kayra to take a previously government-run operation then reported to be losing $6 million a year to a profitable business making and exporting quality wines.  He started out by closing down five wineries leaving just two (in Elazig and Sarkoy) and throwing away 16 million liters of wine that were then stored in large concrete tanks.  O’Donnell had his work cut out for him – there was no history of previous wines made, no standardized production practices, no back vintages were kept for comparison sake – in fact previous winemakers didn’t even taste their wines!  Around 80% of the workers here don’t drink or taste the wine.  And to think wine has been made in this part of the world for 7000 years.   For those Turks who do drink alcohol, wines have to be made with lots of tannins.  Turkish palates call for strong, bitter coffee, spiced meat dishes and tea that has been brewed for several hours.  They need big powerful reds.

    Kayra is most known for promoting native Turkish grapes such as Kalecik Karasi, Öküzgözü, Boğazkere, Narince and Emir.  O’Donnell says the Öküzgözü (bull’s eye) is most similar to a Barbera while the Boğazkere (throat burner) is much more tannic and needs proper handling to soften those astringent tannins.  According to O’Donnell “Öküzgözü is the grape with the biggest potential to make fine wine in Turkey”.  He has spent a lot of time trying to create a quality benchmark for it and uses a small amount of American oak.  He has also worked hard to tame the tannins of the “burn the throat” grape Boğazkere to make it a little more winelover friendly!  O’Donnell says it’s a “rustic grape that makes you want to dip a cigar into the wine and chew it”.  That probably requires a lot of getting used to!!!!

    Grapes in Turkey

    Wine is called Şarap (sha-rup) in Turkish; red wine is Şarap kirmizi (kuh-muh-zuh), white wine is Şarap Beyaz and rosé is Şarap Roze.

    These are some of the major indigenous grape varieties.  As mentioned earlier, there are many others some of which will be identified as we learn about a particular region.

    Öküzgözü (Oh-cooz-goe-zue) is one of Turkey’s oldest native grapes.  It is native to the Elaziğ province of Eastern Anatolia north of the Taurus Mountains where grapes supposedly have been cultivated back to 8000 BC.  Öküzgözü takes its name from large dark berries that look like a “bull’s eye” or literally “ox eye”.  The color is light ruby red similar to Pinot Noir.  The taste is spicy and medium bodied with a delicate bouquet of red autumn fruit, medium tannins and high acidity.  You can expect some notes of cloves and licorice.  It is usually blended with Boğazkere. This is the Turkish grape that may have the biggest fine wine potential.

    Boğazkere (Bow-aahz-keh-reh) is THE most tannic Turkish grape.  The name translates to “Throat Scratcher” or “burn the throat”.  Boğazkere is also native to Elaziğ province.  It has a dark ruby to purple color, full-bodied palate, high dense tannins, medium acidity (similar to Tannat) and dark berries.  It is usually blended with Öküzgözü.

    Emir (Eh-mere) is a native white grape from Cappadocia and has been made into crisp, refreshing wines since Roman times.  Its name means Ruler/Lord and that is who it was originally made for.  The color is straw-yellow with a green hue, a light to medium bodied palate with lively acidity dominated by green apple, citrus, minerality and a bit of pine.  It is not aged in oak and does not go through malolactic fermentation.  Sometimes it is aged in volcanic caves.   It makes sparkling as well as unique and creamy still wines.

    Kalecik Karasi (Kah-le-djic-car-ah-ser) translates to the “black from Kalecik” which is a small village 65 km northeast of Ankara in Central Anatolia but can be found all over Turkey.  The grape is ruby red and medium bodied on the palate with low tannins, lively acidity, cotton candy aroma and dominated by red fruits.

    Karalahna (kah-rah-lah-h-nah) is a native red grape from far western Turkey mainly used as a color enhancer for blending.  Some believe it to be the same grape as the Greek Xinomavro.

    Kuntra (koon-tra) is a red grape native to the Aegean Island of Bozcaada.  It gives a slightly sweet flavor to wine and is also used in making Turkish brandy.

    Narince (Nah-rin-djeh) means “delicate” in Turkish.  The color is straw yellow with a green hue, a medium to full-bodied palate and well balanced with good acidity and citrus aromas.  It is usually aged in oak and a Chardonnay-like flavor profile.  It is made into dry and semi-dry wines and the bouquet becomes more complex with aging.

    Sultaniye (Sool-tah-nee-yeh) or sultana grape is also straw yellow with a green hue and medium to full-bodied with well- balanced acidity and citrus aromas.  It is usually consumed as table grapes and raisins but can make dry and semi-dry light fruity easy drinking wines.  It’s often known as Izmir üzümü (grape of Izmir) since it is grown extensively around Izmir.  And yes, it is the same as the Thompson seedless grape grown in the US!  William Thompson, a California grape grower, is sometimes credited with introducing it to the US.  On a side note for our foodie friends, most raisins in the US are made from this grape.

    Vasilaki (va-see-la-ka) is also native to the Aegean Island of Bozcaada. It produces crisp white wines with floral and fresh green herbal notes and is not found anywhere else in Turkey.

    Turkey’s wine-growing regions:

    Matthew Horkey and Charine Tan, two winelovers who established “Exotic Wine Travel” in 2015, toured the countries of Turkey, Armenia and Georgia in 2015 and 2016.  Their first wine travel book is called “Uncorking the Caucasus: Wines from Turkey, Armenia and Georgia”.  They traveled across Turkey for seven weeks and tasted a lot of wines, then wrote down their experiences to share with us.  You can buy the book like I did from Amazon.com.  If you have a keen interest in learning about lesser known wine-producing countries and their wines like I do, I highly recommend this book as well as all of their other wine travel books. I also gathered a lot of information about Turkey’s wine regions from winesofturkey.org website as well as many others!

    Here is a quick lesson in geography which I find really helpful when learning about “exotic” wine regions.  According to the worldatlas.com (4.25.17), the country of Turkey is made up basically of two parts on two continents:

       5% in Southeast Europe representing Thrace in the Balkan Peninsula

       95% in Asia which is known as Anatolia, Asia Minor, Asiatic Turkey or the  Anatolian Plateau.

    For our purposes, we divided up the wine-growing regions into four as follows:

    Marmara – notably the Thrace wine route and the Sarkoy wine route,

    Aegean made up of Gallipoli, Bozcaada, the Aegean Coast, Denizli (in Southwestern Anatolia), Mediterranean which are generally coastal regions and

    Anatolia, the interior Asian area which is 95% of Turkey.

    Marmara wine region

    The Marmara Region is bordered by Northeast Greece, Southern Bulgaria, Northwest Turkey, the Aegean Sea and the Black Sea. At the center of the region is the Sea of Marmara, which gives the region its name.  Among Turkey’s seven geographical regions, the Marmara Region has the second-smallest area, yet the largest population; it is the most densely populated region in the country. In 2013 14% of Turkish wine was produced in this region.

    Thrace makes up a large portion of the Marmara Wine Region.  It is located in Southeastern Europe between the Aegean Sea and Black Sea and has a slight Mediterranean climate similar to southwest Bulgaria and northeast Greece.  The region of Thrace is known as the birthplace of Dionysus, the Thracian god of wine. 40% of Turkish wine production comes from here.  These are the most elegant and balanced wines in Turkey, and the region receives the most international acclaim.  Most wines of Thrace are made from international varieties.  According to “Uncorking the Caucasus”, this is the only Turkish region mentioned in the Lonely Planet book Wine Trails.  During my internet research about the Thrace Wine Route, I came across an article that said 12 boutique wineries established in 4 different regions of Thrace: Tekirdag, Sarkoy, Kirklareli and Gallipoli developed a project called “Thrace Wine Route” and opened a website called www.thracewineroute.com.  I have not been able to access it.  The development and promotion of the wine route was in response to the fines put into place for tasting events, writing about wine, and marketing of any kind which no one knew how much fine they would receive unless accused.  I did find these 12 wineries on the internet, some with pages easy to access and some with no pages.  In fact I even Facebook be-friended some of them!  Here they are……………

    Tekirdag

    Here are six modern day family run wineries in Thrace that are worth knowing about:

    Arda Winery: The first boutique winery in Edirne, a historic town in the center of Thrace.  The winery resembles early 20th century architecture and concentrates on low yield, high quality Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot that have been cultivated since 2007.

    Barbare Vineyards: Can Topsakal, the owner of Barbare, teamed up with Xavier Vignon in 2000.  The winery focuses on organic, biodynamic and sustainable viticulture and produces Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Syrah, Grenache and Mourvέdre grapes.  Xavier travels to Barbare once a month to oversee the winegrowing and winemaking activities at Barbare.  Note: we forkandcorkdivine.com winelovers had the pleasure of drinking one of Xavier’s Chȃteauneuf- du-Pape wines several months ago at our Southern Rhone wine dinner.

    Barel Vineyards is a small boutique winery established in 2010 just a few miles from Tekirdag.  The Akin family uses modern techniques to make their wines from Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Syrah, Cabernet Franc and Chardonnay.

    Chateau Nuzun is located one hour west of Istanbul and makes only red and rose wines from Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Syrah, Pinot Noir, Zinfandel and Öküzgözü grapes.  Nuzun was established in 2004 and certified organic in 2010. I googled their website and it said that due to a recent Turkish law, they are no longer able to present visuals or descriptions of their wines. I hear their Chateau Nuzun Cabernet Sauvignon and Shiraz blend is quite pleasing, but we will probably never know unless we go to Turkey!

    Umurbey Vineyards are located outside Tekirdag in Yazir Village; they have also opened a wine bar in Tekirdag city center where you can try some of their wines on the main road in front of the seashore.

    Sarköy is on the Marmara Sea coast line about 1 hour from Tekirdag.  Once a major wine production area, there are now 3 wineries in the Sarköy region of the Thrace Wine Route: Melen, Gulor and Chateau Kalpak.  Many of the old vineyards have been converted to olive trees.

    Gulor Winery is the first boutique winery in Turkey, founded in 1993 by a Turkish businesswoman and philanthropist Guler Sabanci.  Gulor is a modern winery with 12 hectares of estate vineyards on the north shore of the Marmara Sea just outside the town of Murefte which was once the historical center of Turkish wine production.  The estate grows Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Petit Verdot, Malbec, Syrah, Sauvignon Blanc, Sangiovese and Montepulciano.  The indigenous grapes like Öküzgözü and Boğazkere come from vineyards in Elazig in the Euphrates River valley and from the right bank of the Tigris River.  Gulor brought international grapes to Turkey with the planting of Cabernet Sauvignon on the Tekirdag estate in 1993.

    Gulor is one of those rare boutique wineries offering high-quality blends of international and local grapes.  Upon founding Gulor, Professor Nicolas Vivas was brought from the University of Bordeaux to assist. and has continued to direct all phases of production and winemaking for the last two decades. A seventh-generation winemaker from Languedoc has been at the winemaking helm since 2012.  Approximately 200,000 cases are produced annually with three tiers out of the five produced currently imported to the US – Rouge, Silver and Sayeste.  Sayeste bottles Öküzgözü and an Öküzgözü- Boğazkere blend; Silver label bottles blends of Öküzgözü with Cabernet Sauvignon and Petit Verdot; Bordeaux varieties and blends make up the Rouge label wines.  Gulor is credited with Turkey’s first commercial Bordeaux-style production.

    Gulor G Silver Öküzgözü-Cabernet Sauvignon 2012 is known as Bull’s eye for its large dark fruit Öküzgözü which makes up 60% of the blend.  This wine promises red and black fruit and spicy black pepper aromas on the nose, followed on the palate by medium acidity and tannins with expressive fruit on a lengthy finish. Awards won by this wine: IWC 2015 Bronze, San Francisco International Wine Competition 2014 Bronze.

    Melen Vineyards, one of the oldest in the region, is located at the small fishing village of Hoskoy.  They make elegant Papazkarasi, spicy Shiraz and aromatic fresh rose. 

    Chateau Kalpak looks out over the Marmara Sea and makes great Cabernet Franc as well as a really good Bordeaux blend. 

    Chamlija Winery (chahm-lee-zjah) is 30 km south of the Black Sea near where Turkey meets Bulgaria and produces around 100,000 bottles from 85 hectares of certified sustainable vineyards.  It is a young winery (first vintage 2011) producing promising wines from Narince, Papazkarasi, Karaoglan and Mavrud plus international varieties like Sauvignon Blanc, Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon. The daughter of Mustafa Camlica, Chamlija’s owner, is a renowned Turkish artist and her psychedelic labels can be seen on their wine bottles. This is a winery to watch!

    Papazkarasi is an ancient blue-black grape native to Turkey grown in the Marmara region, central Anatolia, central Turkey and the Thrace region near Greece.  The name translates to “black bishop” and it makes medium bodied wine with high acidity and firm tannins.  It is often blended with Cinsault, Pinot Noir, Cabernet Sauvignon and Syrah. 

    Aegean wine region

    The Aegean region is situated in western Turkey along the Aegean Sea near the Greek islands.  It has a Mediterranean climate in the coastal part and a continental climate as you move inland.  In 2013 about 53% of Turkish wine was produced here.

    Gallipoli is in the southern part of east Thrace with the Aegean Sea to the west and the Dardanelles strait to the east.  Most wineries in this area concentrate on international grape varieties.

    Gali Winery is a family owned winery surrounded by magnificent views of the Aegean and Marmara Seas, the Dardanelles and the Gulf of Saros.  The owner focuses on making “truthful and natural” wines made from Merlot, Cabernet Franc and Cabernet Sauvignon without the addition of additives.  The winery and wine cellar are made from local stones with a gravity-fed winemaking system instead of pumps.  They follow the philosophy that “a passion does not compromise”.

    Sarafin imported Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot wines from French vineyards in the early 90s and planted them in the Gallipoli Peninsula.  They also brought the latest in technology which paid off in 1996 with the production of their first wine which went on sale in 1998.  Sarafin is part of the DOLUCA family of wines.  DOLUCA has been making wines for three generations and currently has over 47 different products in various locations of Turkey with 14 million liter production capacity and exports to 23 countries.

    Suvla is a family owned wine producer located on the Dardanelles on the Peninsula of Gallipoli.  They use state-of-the art technology to make elegant and exquisite wines.  Since the winery began in 2009, Suvla has been awarded over 250 medals in several national and international wine contests.  Suvla has been certified organic since 2013 and make about 30 different labels of white, rosé and red from international varieties such as Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, Cabernet Sauvignon and Cabernet Franc.  Wine is also made from the indigenous grapes Kinah Yapincak and Karasakiz.

    Kinah Yapincak is a white indigenous grape from the Gallipoli Peninsula region.  It makes an elegant fresh white wine with a pale straw-yellow color, white peach and white flavors on the nose with hints of wet flint stone.  The palate is creamy and crisp.

    Karasakiz is an indigenous grape also unique to the Gallipoli Peninsula region.  It is a bright red with flavors of strawberry, plum, rose petal and earthy caramel. 

    Bozcaada is an island in the Aegean Sea that was under Greek rule until 1923.  There is easy access to wineries that grow quality grapes. The wineries are: Amadeus, Ataol, Ҁamlibağ (the oldest winery on the island), Corvus, Gulerada and Talay.  You will need to take a ferry there from the mainland to get to visit them.  International grape varieties are grown here plus a few local varieties such as red Kuntra and Karalahna and white Vasiliki.

    Amadeus is a young winery.  Austrian winemaker Oliver Gareis and his family settled here on Bozcaada in the 1990s and started making wine for their own consumption.  When their wines became known as some of the best on the island, they decided to go into business and sold their first wine in 2011.  They planted the first Cabernet Sauvignon grapes on the island and soon other people were grafting Amadeus Cabernet onto their grapevines.  Now Cabernet flourishes on the island, and Amadeus makes some of the best wine with it.

    Corvus (Latin for crow) also a young winery, is named after the crows of Bozcaada.  Grapevine seedlings were planted on the small uncultivated island of Bozcaada in 2002 by its founder, Resit Soley, an architect.  The first grapes were harvested in 2004.  Now they produce more than 20 different types of wine, are the largest in volume and also have a tasting room in Istanbul.

    Aegean Coast and Denizli

    About half of Turkish wines come from the Aegean Coast, and most aren’t that memorable.  However there are some promising wineries like LA Organik Wines and Sevilan.  Further inland in Denizli, the international varieties are blended with indigenous Turkish grapes like Öküzgözü, Boğazkere, and Kalecik Karasi resulting in some more pleasing wines with big fruit flavors.

    Domaine Lucien Arkas was the first organic vineyard certified by Ecocert in Turkey.  With 200 hectares and 18 grape varieties, Arkas is the leading Turkish producer of Chenin Blanc, Montepulciano, Tempranillo, Sangiovese and Tannat.  They also grow Öküzgözü and Boğazkere.

    Çal Karasi (Çalkarasi) is a lightly colored red wine grape variety indigenous to and grown only in Denizli.  It is used primarily in the production of juicy, moderately acidic rosé wines. These typically show straightforward flavors of strawberry and raspberry, with a slightly floral perfume. Çal Karasi may also be made into a sparkling rosé wine called Pembe Köpük.  It’s a hardy versatile vine well suited to the Mediterranean climate, sandy soils and high altitudes.  It is different from the red Kalecik Karasi grape also grown here. 

    Hierapolis/Pamukkale (cotton palace) with all of its mineral forests, petrified waterfalls and terraced basins has been designated an UNESCO World Heritage site.  Pamukkale winery is located here near those famous mineral-rich waters flowing down white travertine formations on the hillside.  Pamukkale exports up to one-third of its production to Europe and other parts of the world, but I could find little or no information about it or its wines on the internet.  According to “Uncorking the Caucasus”, this winery makes many different wines that are “drinkable to solid”.  One of them is Pamukkale Trio, a blend of Shiraz, Kalecik Karasi and Cabernet Sauvignon.

    Mediterranean wine region

    The Mediterranean region is located in southern Turkey bordering the Mediterranean Sea.   It makes up about 15% of Turkey and runs parallel to the coastline.  The share of wine produced here is minimal.

    Likya Winery is an award winning vineyard and winery in Antalya up in the Taurus Mountains on the Mediterranean Coast. Their wine consultants are from Bordeaux and they make good wines from both international and local varieties.  Likya found some unfamiliar grapevines a few years back and upon DNA testing discovered they were rare indigenous Acikara grapes. Aci kara means “bitter black” grape, and Likya is now the only producer in Turkey cultivating it.  Acikara is dark, inky red-purple with notes of tart berry pie, pepper, spices, chocolate, earth, leather, cigar box and its 15% alcohol.  You can see Matthew Horkey taste a bottle of it on his Exotic Wine Travel YouTube channel Episode 156 “Turkish Wine from the Rare Grape Acikara” 12.13.16.

    Anatolia wine region

    Anatolia is a vast rectangular peninsula between Europe and Asia, and is often considered synonymous with Asian Turkey, which makes up most of the country. About 34% of all Turkish wine was produced here in 2013.  The primary indigenous grapes of Anatolia are Öküzgözü, Boğazkere, Kalecik Karasi for reds, and Emir and Narince for whites. International varieties such as Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Malbec, Shiraz and Tempranillo are also grown here.

    Eastern Anatolia   is an area where few international travelers visit.   The vineyards of Elazig, Malatya, and Diyarbakir are located in the Euphrates Valley, one of the world’s oldest wine regions.     The vineyards of Elazig are rumored to be descended from vines planted by Noah.    Who knows – Noah may have been the world’s first vintner after his Ark came to rest on Mount Ararat!  Mount Ararat is Turkey’s tallest mountain with an elevation of 16,854 feet.   It is somewhat possible that Öküzgözü and Boğazkere might be the very earliest form of modern-day varieties of Vitis vinifera, but DNA evidence would be required to prove that.  Right now these indigenous varieties make wild and rough wines – the Boğazkere is highly tannic and peppery and the Öküzgözü is full of acidity and fruit – but show great promise for the future of winemaking in Eastern Anatolia.  The Kayra winery makes 14 different wines in this region including Buzbağ.  Buzbağ has been made here since 1944, the year the winery was founded.  Buzbağ is  a blend of these two grapes which according to their tasting notes “complete one another and the harmony of this blend truly reflects the nature of Eastern Anatolia –  Öküzgözü with its plum- like dark skinned grapes and generous acidity complements Boğazkere with its intense tannins, fruit driven, spicy and tar-like aroma character. A rich wine, with sour cherries, blackberry through to a well-balanced and softly structured palate.”

    Central Anatolia is the most climatically difficult region to produce wine. Most vineyards are near 4000 feet above sea level, and winter frost is a serious hazard.  Ankara is located in Central Anatolia and is the capital of Turkey.  The population of around 4.5 million makes it the second largest Turkish city after Istanbul. It is famous for being home to Kavaklidere, the first privately owned winery in Turkey.

    Kavaklidere is a 4 generation family-owned company founded in 1929 and now a leader in Turkish wine production.  They produce wine reflecting the Anatolian terroir and have won nearly 900 awards in international competitions.  Kavaklidere makes 58 different wines from 645 hectares of vineyards and exports almost 20% of production to Europe, US and Far East.  Local grapes are Kalecik Karasi, Boğazkere, Öküzgözü and Narince but a number of international varieties are also found here.

    Cappadocia is a major tourist area in central Anatolia south of Ankara where everyone comes to see the tall cone-shaped rock formations or “Fairy Chimneys”, and the homes carved into valley walls by cave dwellers known as “troglodytes”.  There are a few wineries here – Kocabağ and Turasan are two of them.  Emir is an indigenous grape grown only in Cappadocia.

    Kocabağ is a family owned wine producer and considered one of the best in the region.  Their first bottle of wine was marketed in 1986; today they produce up to 1.5 million liters.  They grow indigenous grape varieties Kalecik Karas, Öküzgözü, Boğazkere, Narince and Emir on 35 hectares of vineyards and have also won many medals in International and National wine contests.  According to the WinesofTurkey.org website, Kocabağ exports to US and Canada; however I didn’t see any signs of it when doing an internet search.

    Turasan has been family owned in the heart of Cappadocia for three generations. Emir thrives in Cappadocia’s volcanic soils and benefits from its unique micro-climate: high altitude, hot days and cool nights. Here is Wine Enthusiast magazine’s description of the 2015 Turasan Emir:  “Aromas of white peach and apricot set the scene for flavors of white peach, freesia and thyme. This wine is full in the mouth, with a floral flourish on the bright finish.”  Emir is similar to Pinot Grigio and Albarino.  Turasan also makes some very good international blends.

    Will there be more Öküzgözü Turkish wine in my future? 

    My time spent learning about the country of Turkey and its wines has been most interesting and enjoyable although there was rather limited information available.  Currently it is quite difficult to have the opportunity to taste Turkish wine, and sadly I must say that I have not yet tasted any. But that will soon change!  I have acquired a few bottles for my inventory, and plan to share with some fellow winelover foodie friends. And yes, there will be Öküzgözü grapes!

    There are some importers of Turkish wines in the USA: Blue Danube Wine located in California sells online and had 4 different wines from 2 different wineries at my last check; Compass Wine located in Washington State had 13 different wines available online.  My greatest success came from online purchases of Chamlija and Turasan from nextbottle.com located in Oregon.  I have recently discovered a few other wine store sources online, but selections are quite limited. I am sure that in large metropolitan areas, there are restaurants and wine bars offering Turkish as well as other lesser known wines.  The Babylon Mediterranean Kitchen & Bar located in the South Beach area of Miami Beach turned up during my last internet search.  As of this date, they actually offer seven different Turkish wines on their wine list to pair with their Turkish food.

    LFRakos@gmail.com

    Forkandcorkdivine.com

    10.17.18

     

  • 26Sep

    Slovenia is a country in Southern Central Europe that displays a culture influenced by the many countries it borders on: Italy to the west, Austria to the north, Hungary to the northeast and Croatia to the southeast. It sits between the Alps on the north and the Adriatic Sea to southwest.  The Drava and Sava Rivers of Slovenia connect to the Danube River. It is at the crossroads of the main European cultural and trade routes.   Once one of those former Communist countries in central Europe that suffered under 20th century political upheaval, Slovenia gained independence in 1991 (the first to declare independence) through the Ten Day War with Yugoslavia. Slovenia joined the European Union in 2004.  With a population of 2 million plus people, it is about the size of New Jersey and just half the size of Switzerland at 7827 square miles.  Slovenia may be small, but some people think it is one of the most beautiful countries in the world – after all what other country has “love” in its name?  Onward to sLOVEnia.  Show us the LOVE!!!

    Winemaking in Slovenia

    Wine has been made here since 500-400 BC.  Sadly prestigious and historic fine wine producing vineyards were dismantled and used to produce bulk low-quality wines during Communist control, but like Hungary and Croatia, it has emerged and is now rededicated to making fine wine.  In fact the wine industry here is the most developed of the former Yugoslav republics, and Slovenia now ranks 27th among wine producing countries world-wide. Slovenia has more than 28,000 wineries producing approximately 80 million litres (22 million gallons) annually from 22,300 hectares (55, 104 acres) of vineyards.  Slovenia is the same latitude as Napa, Bordeaux, and Piedmont, so we should expect some excellent wines to be made here! With 20 wine routes to explore, it’s most likely you can find some wine that you really enjoy. You can find briny deep mineral reds and whites in the Kras region near the coast, very structured whites and reds in the foothills of the Alps Vipava Valley and Goriška Brda, and pure refreshing white wines in the northeast just south of Austria’s Styria.

    Sometimes called the Green Treasure of Europe, Slovenia is known for its dense forests and over half the country is covered in trees.  Grapevines grow best here on steep slopes above the river soils; many of the vineyards are along slopes or hillsides in terraced rows on the Julian and Kara Vanke Alps and the Pannonian Plain. Vines were historically trained in pergola style but are now moving towards Guyot or cane pruning vine training.

    Slovenia wine is sourced from 52 grape varieties of which 37 are white and 15 red.  More white than red is produced – about 75% of production – and most of it is consumed domestically.  In fact Slovenians drink an average of 11 gal wine/per person/year.  Slovenian wines have traditionally followed the Austrian preference of single varietal over blends but production of blends is on the rise.  Wines were historically aged in large Slovenian or Slavonia wooden casks; the trend has been to use small and varying sizes of French and Slovenian oak barrels.  No wonder Slovenian oak was used – after all half of the country is covered in trees!

    All wine made in Slovenia must be submitted for testing and assigned a quality level according to a system similar to the EU’s Quality Wines Produced in Specified Regions (QWPSR):

    Table wine – namizno vino

    Country wine with certified geographic emblem PGO – delželno vino

    Quality wine with protected geographic origin ZGP – kakovostno vino

    Premium quality wine with protected geographic origin ZGP – vrhunsko vino

    Most wine produced is classified as premium (vrhunsko) with less than 30% as basic table wine (namizno vino).

    Special designation wines

    There is also a “Special Traditional Name Designation” – tradicionalno poimenovanje (PTP) which is applied to traditional Slovenia wine from a specific region.  These are PTPs as of 2009:

    Kras (Karst) Teran wine from Primorska

    Cviček wine from the Lower Carniolan area of Posavje

    Bela Krajina White Carniolan wines Belokranjec and Metliska Crnina

    Red and white Bizeljcan wines from Bizeljsko-Sremič

    Grapes in Slovenia

    Laski Rizling (Welschriesling/Italian Riesling) is a white grape and the most widely planted grape in Slovenia. It is often used in inexpensive blends. It is followed by the red Refošk (Refosco) known as Teran in the Kras district, Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc and Merlot. The red Žametovka (Blauer Kölner) is the sixth most common grape in Slovenia and grows on the oldest vine in the world.  You can also find these grapes, but don’t expect to be familiar with many of them!  Quite often the same grape has a different synonym in different countries and often even in different regions of the same country.

    Whites – Beli Pinot (Pinot Blanc), Bela Žlahtnina (White Chasselas), Dišeči Traminec (Gewurztraminer), Glera, Kerner, Klarnica, Kraljevina, Malvazija, Muškat Ottonel, Neuberger, Pergolin, Pikolit, Pinela,  Pokalca (Ribolla Nero), Poljšakica, Prosecco, Ranfol, Ranina (Bouvier), Rdeča Žlahtnina (Red Chasselas), Rebula (Ribolla Gialla), Renski Rizling (Rhine Riesling), Rizvanec (Mὒller-Thurgau), Rumeni Muškat (Muscat Blanc à Petits Grains), Rumeni Plavec, Scheurebe, Šipon (Furmint), Traminec (Gewurztraminer), Verduc, Viognier, Vitovska Grganja, Zelen, Zeleni Sauvignon and Zeleni Silvanec (Sylvaner).

    Reds – Cabernet Franc, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cipro, Gamay, Maločrn (Piccola Nera), Merlot, Modra Frankinja (Blaufränkish), Modri Pinot (Pinot Noir), Portugalka (Portugieser), Syrah Šentlovrenka (St. Laurent) and Zweigelt.

    Many different grapes have been identified in this article, many with hard to pronounce names, and long lists for each region.  If any of them cross your wine path in the future, or even better – you actually visit Slovenia – at least you will have some knowledge of them and make your wine friends jealous!

    Some unique wine styles defined

    Orange wine

    You have probably seen articles about orange wine for the past few years, but just in case it passed you by, here are the “quick sips and tips”.  Orange wine, aka amber wine, is actually a white wine – having absolutely nothing to do with oranges – made by leaving the juice in contact with the grape skins and seeds resulting in an orange-colored wine.  Juice can be left in skin and seed contact from a few days to a year.  Winemakers who use this method usually tend to be more artisanal as it is a more labor-intensive and riskier way of making wine.

    This non-intervention style of wine tastes different from the traditional winemaking process – it may actually taste sour and nutty.   While modern day orange winemaking has only been on the radar for 20 years, it could possibly date back as far as 8000 years ago in the Republic of Georgia in the Caucasus Mountains where wines were fermented in large subterranean vessels called Qvevri (Kev-ree) that were closed with stones and sealed with beeswax.  Winemaking in Qvevri is so unique that in 2013 UNESCO granted the status of intangible cultural heritage (ICH) to the tradition.  Even though the orange winemaking style is still not prevalent worldwide, it occurs frequently in Friuli-Venezia Giulia, northeastern Italy; Slovenia and Georgia; some on several other continents and even a few US winemakers.  The Batič Winery in the Vipava Valley of Slovenia makes some excellent examples of orange wine.

    If you would like to learn more about orange wine, you can read all about it in great detail in a 250 page newly published book “Amber Revolution: How the World Learned to Love Orange Wine” by Simon J. Woolf, an award winning English wine and drinks writer.  “Amber Revolution” was released by Amazon.com in early October 2018. I’ve got my copy!

    Natural wine

    Natural wine is a very subjective term but generally speaking refers to any kind of wine made with minimal intervention throughout the whole process of growing and winemaking.  This includes hand picking from sustainable organic or biodynamic vineyards; no additives, little or no sulfites, and only native yeasts for fermentation. Any impurities in the wine will end up in the bottle.  Also sulfite-free wines are much more unstable in the long term which means that if your natural wine wasn’t handled properly, it is far more likely to spoil.  You can read up on best handling practices on the winefolly.com website. The majority of wines made “a la natural” are known for being gamier, funkier, yeastier, sour, and cloudier.  Natural wines can be orange, white, rosé or red, and orange wine can be natural if made by the minimal intervention process, which dictates using little to no additives.   Many producers of orange wine just happen to be natural wine producers as well.  The Slovenian Batič Winery is a good example of a natural wine producer that also makes orange wines.

    Amazingly enough, for a style of wines that doesn’t even have any legal definitions or standards, it continues to become more widespread and is creating quite a stir among wine producers of the world.  For example in July 2018 a right-wing French politician filed a motion to launch an investigative committee to seek to legally define the term “natural wine” in France.

    Some very credible winemakers are attempting to set some standards for natural wines.  VinNatur is a wine association founded by Angiolino Maule, an Italian winemaker, in 2006.  The association has grown from 65 founding members to 190 producers representing nine countries: Italy, France, Spain, Portugal, Austria, Germany, Czech Republic, Slovakia and Slovenia.  As recently as July 2016 VinNatur has not only defined “natural” but specified what is allowed and not allowed in the vineyard and in the cellar.  To be a part of this association, all wines produced must be officially certified annually by outside labs verifying that no pesticides, herbicides or chemical fertilizers have been used.  Some very experienced people in the world of natural wine feel that wines made by members of this association have made tremendous strides in quality over the past few years.

    You can find natural wine bars in all of the trendy hipper wine drinking areas of the world.  For example, ny.eater.com website lists the TOP 22 places to drink natural wine in New York City where the “wine director is consistently making a choice for natural wines”.

    If you are looking for some natural wine recommendations, you might start with an article in the May 2017 issue of Decanter magazine entitled “it’s only natural: the 31 wines you need to try”.

    Pet Nat wine

    Pétillant Naturel (Pet Nat) is a type of sparkling wine made by the oldest sparkling method “Méthode Ancestral”.  Wine is bottled in this ancient technique before having completed its fermentation thus finishing the process in the bottle.  Sugar is converted into alcohol which then produces the light bubbles of carbon dioxide.  It is not disgorged like “Méthode Traditional” and may be cloudy.  It is low in alcohol and may have a touch of sweetness.  Štoka Teranova Peneče is an example of a Pet Nat sparkling.

    Predicate wine

    In addition to meeting a quality level, Slovenian wine labels must also include the sweetness level of wines ranging from Suho (dry), Polsuho (medium-dry), Polsladko (medium-sweet) and to Sladko (sweet). Prodravje, the northeastern wine region, is well known for producing late harvest sweet predicate wines.

    Predicate wines are sweet natural quality wines which must meet some special requirements.  In good years depending upon appropriate weather conditions for the ripening of grapes on the vine, and depending on the degree of overripe and time of harvesting and processing, achieve a special quality. The predicate style of wines was started by accident back in 1775 when a wine maker was unable to pick his grapes at the usual time of harvest and discovered they had been attacked by mold.  Fortunately the result was an enriched wine.  Late harvest wines were born!  Botrytis, better known as “noble rot”, is a fungus that shrivels up the grapes and causes them to rot.  In this case, rotting grapes is a very good thing!  It adds sweetness to the wine and intensifies the flavors and the end result is usually a fairly costly rich, complex, honeyed wine.  Slovenian botrytis wines are produced from Laški Rizling, Renski Rizling and Šipon and classified in a similar way to the German system based on sweetness ranging from: pozna trgatev (Spätlese), izbor (Auslese), jagodni izbor (Beerenauslese), ledeno vino(Eiswein) and suhi jagodni izbor (Trockenbeerenauslese).  Slovenia’s neighbor to the south, Croatia, has five type of predicate wines labeled: late harvest, selected harvest, selected harvest of berries, selected harvest of dried berries and ice wine.  I can understand these labels a little better!

    Slovenia’s three wine- growing regions: Primorska, Posavje, Podravje

    Primorska (Littoral)

    Primorska can be found in the southwestern part of Slovenia on the Italian border, the Adriatic coastline, and Croatia’s Istria region, and is the most progressive of the three regions.  It is renowned for making strong dry wines.  Forty percent of Slovenian wine is made here.  Primorska means “the one by the sea” and you will see vineyards spread from sea level to an altitude of 1180 plus feet. Limestone and flysch soils make different brown earth including Terra Rossa. The climate here is Mediterranean with hot summers and mild winters.  Primorska is further divided into four districts: Goriška Brda, Vipava Valley, Kras and Slovenska Istra.

    Vipava Valley is the corridor between Central Europe and Northern Italy and a one hour drive south from Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia.  Wine has been made here since the Romans, and it is still one of Slovenia’s main wine regions.  The Vipava tourist office houses a Vinoteca wine museum where you can taste 160 wines from 45 different wine makers.  Mostly white wine is made in Vipava from the local varieties Pinela, Zelen and Klarnica.

    Batič Winery:

    Batič is a very important winery to know in Vipava. The Batič family owns 19 hectares of vineyards in three villages, use both indigenous and international grape varieties, and they make amazing wine including orange.  They are biodynamic, Demeter-certified and produce about 70,000 bottles a year, a lot of which is exported making us happy here in the US!  The winery is located in an old house that has been in the Batič family for over 400 years.  The winemaking philosophy of Miha and his father Ivan is to emulate and get closer to nature.  They do highly selective hand harvesting, extended maceration, ferment in open topped Slovenian wooden vats without temperature control and use indigenous yeast.  Wines are unfined and often unfiltered. 

    The Batič Angel Grande Cuvee 2010, named after Miha’s son, is a blend of 9 grapes spanning 3 vintages.  Wine Enthusiast Magazine described it as amber colored orange-style wine with aromas of canned peaches and apricots on the nose, fresh stone fruit on the full bodied palate and a long creamy finish.  Here are those 9 grapes: Pinela, Rebula, Zelen, Sauvignon, Chardonnay, Pinot Gris, Klarnica, Fruilano and Vitovska.  It was aged 34 months in Slovenia oak.

    Slovenska Istra (Slovenian Istria):  There is a 28 mile long stretch of Slovenia bordering on the Adriatic Coast between Italy and Croatia.  It is the warmest area of Slovenia and is known for Mediterranean views and food on the coast but when you head inland, they make some excellent wines from red Refošk and white Malvazija.  Refosk is the leading red grape of Slovenia and is known as Teran as you go further inland.  Coastal Refosk is richer in color with slighter acids than its “continental” counterpart of Teran.  Teran is heavier with more acids and a very distinctive character.

    Kras (Karst): The Kras wine district is a limestone plateau across the border of southwestern Slovenia and northeastern Italy.  Also known as Classical Karst, the landscape was formed from the dissolution of soluble limestone, dolomite and gypsum rocks.  Sinkholes, caves and underground drainage systems are in abundance here.  Research into karst actually began right here in the Kras (Karst) district of Slovenia due to the high level of its development.

    Teran is the wine here which is the denser, more tannic and acidic wine made from Refošk.  Teran makers usually produce Slovenian prosciutto known as pršut; they hang it over a vat of fermenting Teran to get deep red color.

    It is most interesting to point out that in 2017 Slovenia sued the European Union Commission over Croatia’s permit to use the Teran red wine brand.  In Slovenia, Teran is the name of a wine made from the Refošk grape variety, but Croatia uses it as a red grape and wine. Slovenia considers Teran to be a national treasure!  Slovenian Refošk is not the same as the Refosco dal peduncolo rosso cultivated in nearby Italy. Grapes can get very complicated!!!  EU regulations stipulate that the Slovenian Refošk from Kras is allowed to be labeled as Teran. Many believe that Teran wine is rich in iron and biologically active anthocyanins derived from the earth it’s grown in and its tannin structure which in turn gives additional properties which contribute to the prevention of cardiovascular ailments and cellular aging.

    Kras is home to very unique wine cellars called “hrami”, some of which are cut into stone and some carved into caves by nature. You can also find hams dry curing in these wine cellars.

    Štoka Winery:

    Kras is also home to Tadej and Primož Štoka’s farm where their family has worked with the native red Teran and white Vitovska iron rich “terra rossa” soil for over 200 years.  They are located northeast of Trieste about 5 miles from the Adriatic Sea.  People have to build stonewalls (griže) here to keep the topsoil from blowing away in the famously strong winds called “burja”.   They also made small lakes to gather enough rain to keep crops alive.  This terroir of sinkholes and underground caves is one of the most severe and unique in the world.  The Štoka family also raises cattle and pigs.  Slovenia is famous for pršut or air-dried ham.  Primoz bottled his first wine in 1989 while still under Yugoslavian rule.  The high content of aluminum and iron oxide in the soil gives the wine its characteristic red color and unusually high iron content.  The Štokas farm about 25 hectares half of which is Teran.  The rest is Vitovska, Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay and Merlot.  They dry-farm, fertilize only when necessary (cow manure) and work by hand.  In the cellar they use native yeast and macerate both white and red during fermentation.  All Teran is aged in large used oak barrels so as not to disturb the delicate perfume of each variety.  They do typically fine and filter the wines. 

    Štoka makes red, rosé and white Peneče or sparkling wine using the Pet-Nat (Pétillant Naturel) or méthode ancestral technique of bottling wine before completing its fermentation.  Therefore, the process continues in the bottle.  Since it is not disgorged like Champagne, it can be cloudy. 

    Štoka Teranova Peneče 2016 is 12.3% alcohol made from Teran, one of Slovenia’s only wines of protected origin.  It is also bottled under a crown-cap – something we are definitely not used to seeing!  We can expect it to be dry and quite tannic with inky color and dark berried fruit flavors.  It should be a quite exciting wine to serve! 

    There are many beautiful sights and places to visit in Slovenia, but I must mention that Kras is home to the noble white Lipizzaner horses. Their original stud farm has been in Lipica in Kras since 1580. This oldest European stud farm, the Lipica Stud Farm, that has been breeding the same horses without interruption, is a cultural and historical monument. Tour the oldest barn and see all the classic Lipizzaner lines, visit the Lipizzaner and horse carriage museum and then go visit some Kras vineyards.

    Goriška Brda (Brda) (Gorica Hills) is Slovenia’s most acclaimed wine region. It has been nicknamed the “the Tuscany of Slovenia” with all of its vineyards, rolling hills, cherry orchards, olive trees and medieval villages.  Covering 72 km from the northeastern Italian border, Goriška Brda is basically an extension of Italy’s Collio DOC in Friuli-Venezia Giula.  It runs from the Alps to the Adriatic Sea.  This region is best known for white wines made from Rebula and Cabernet-Merlot red blends.

    Kabaj Winery:

    Kabaj is among the best of Goriška Brda’s producers.  Generations of Kabaj (Ka – bye) have tended vineyards but it was not until 1993 that the first vintage of Kabaj was released.  Katja Kabaj met and married Jean-Michel Morel, a French enologist, in the late 1980s. Morel brought with him a desire to make world class wines and that is exactly what he does.  Wine & Spirits Magazine has named Kabaj a Top 100 winery in 2013 and 2015.  Three generations of family now maintain the business.

    Morel’s motto is “Quality must go up” and he continually experiments for improvement.  He utilizes the ancient practice of macerating white grapes in buried Qvevri to make Amfora, the flagship wine of Kabaj.  His red wines are primarily from Merlot, Cabernet Franc and Sauvignon made in the typical Bordeaux method. 

    Kabaj maintains 29 acres of mainly terraced marl soil vineyards, 70% planted in whites and all farmed sustainably.  Between 60,000 and 70,000 bottles are produced annually.  Their modern wine cellar has large oak barrels and some French “barrique-style” barrels but the most unique part of the cellar contains nine 3500 liter Qvevri (amphorae) vessels made of Georgian clay in the Georgian village of Imereti and buried in the ground.  Completely ripe grapes are placed in the Qvevri, a cap pushed down through an opening on top of the vessel, and then the vessel is closed airtight to be untouched for nine months.  The wine and the lees are poured into large oak barrels for one more year of aging.  The Amfora wine (mostly Rebula) is filtered and placed in bottles for another year of aging.  This means that a bottle of 2013 Amfora wasn’t released until at least 2016. 

    Fermentation takes place in a large oak tank with native yeast and macerated with the skins between 1 and 30 days.  Malolactic fermentation takes place after that in barrique.  White grapes are macerated for at least a day except for Rebula which gets its fruitiness, minerality and golden color from 30 days of maceration.   Our bottle of 2013 Kabaj Rebula orange wine scored 93 points from Wine & Spirits Magazine and is distinctively spicy and orange hued with aromas more like a red wine.  We expect it to have flavors of juicy pineapple and tangerine, scents of dried flowers and saffron, notes of chai tea, anise and truffle. 

    The grapes and wines of Primorska

    Zelen and Pinela are two white varieties currently only known to be grown in the Vipava Valley district of Primorska.  Zelen was written about in 1844 and Pinela was mentioned in 1324.  They make fresh full-bodied wine that is straw yellow in color with a greenish hue and subtle floral fruity aromas, sometimes with a hint of Mediterranean herbs.

    Vitovska Grganja (the Knight’s Grape) originated in Italy and is now grown in Slovenian Kras (Karst).  There are only 66 hectares growing in Italy and Slovenia combined.  Some believe the name dates back to when knights were paid in wine to defend Trieste.  The wine is gold yellow in color, medium bodied with a honey aftertaste, a floral and fruity aroma like white blossoms, peaches and grapefruit.

    Rebula (Ribolla Gialla), covers 25% of all wine-growing surface in Goriška Brda sub region of Primorska. Recent research shows Rebula originated in Greece; formerly many thought it to be indigenous to Slovenia.  Rebula can make many different styles of wine.  It makes wine that is fresh, full of minerality and has a high acidity level.  The aroma is fruits with a hint of vanilla and an almond-like flavor.  The color is straw yellow with a greenish hue.

    Rebula is sometimes fermented and aged on skins in Kvevri (Qvevri) which are large amphorae sealed closed for many months and buried underground.  The end product is an orange wine similar to Georgian orange wines produced in Qvevri.  Kabaj Amphora wine is a great example which we previously highlighted.

    Other grapes of Primorska are Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, Sivi Pinot (Pinot Gris), Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Modri Pinot (Pinot Noir) and Refosk.  You can also find dessert wines that are made in the “passito” style.  These grapes are partially dried for three to six months, then gently pressed and juice fermented until the desired sweetness and alcohol level is reached.

    Posavje (Lower Sava Valley)

    Posavje, located in south-eastern Slovenia sharing a border with Croatia, is the smallest winegrowing region and the only region that makes more red than white.  It is not as hilly as Podravje but is a land full of narrow valleys and steep slopes.  It has a very diverse terroir with no two vineyards alike.  Grapes range from light red to white to high ranking predicate and sparkling wines.  There is also a lot of inexpensive bulk wine made here.

    Posavje is made up of three sub-regions: Bizeljsko-Brezice, Dolenjska and Bela Krajina.

    Bizeljsko-Brežice is known for making sparkling wine and its acidic white wines made from the Rumeni Plavec grape.  Bizeljsko is a small valley just a short drive north of Brežice on the way to Zagreb. Here you can find the unique Repnice Wine Cellars of Bizeljsko”.  Repnice wine cellars were dug in flint stone by locals to store produce – “repa” is Slovenian for turnips – and other goods from around the turn of the 18th century, but were only “discovered” about two decades ago.  Since the early 1990s they have found a new use:  wine storage.  The Pannonian Sea existed for some 9 million years collecting deposits of flint sand.  When the sea eventually retreated, the flint sand made flint stone.  The cellars have a constant temperature of 5-10 degrees C and humidity that reaches up to 96%.  There are only five official Repnice cellars meeting all of the government requirements.  Vino Graben is probably the most professionally set up for receiving guests, but Repnica Najger has the most aesthetically impressive cellar.

    Bela Krajina, previously known as White Carniola, is known for red wine made from Modra Frankinja and Rumeni Muskat.  Carniola was a state in the Holy Roman Empire, later to be part of the Austrian Empire and Austria-Hungary.  Officially Carniola no longer exists.

    Dolenjska previously existed as Lower Carniola.  It is here you will find Cviček made from a blend of white and red mostly Kraljevina and Zametovka.

    The grapes and wines of Posavje

    Rumeni Plavec is a strong grape native to Bizeljsko-Brezice that makes green yellow colored wine with full and fresh flavor.  It is rarely bottled as a single varietal; it’s usually in a blend like Cviček.

    Modra Frankinja: This area is also a hotspot for Modra Frankinja.  This grape is grown across Central Europe and is known as Blaufränkish in Germany, Franconia in Italy, and Kékfrankos in Hungary just to name a few.  It’s a dark-skinned grape used for red wine, usually late-ripening, and typically rich in tannin and a very spicy character.  It has been called “the Pinot Noir of the East” because it is so widespread in Europe and has a good reputation.

    Red Bizeljcan is a high quality dry red wine of Bizeljsko-Brezice, ruby red in color with a touch of purple, intense fruity aroma and full harmonious taste.  This special designate wine is made from Modra Frankinja and Zametna Crnina as well as whites Riesling Blanc and Rumeni Plavec.  It is low in alcohol and acidity and pairs well with cured meat and meat dishes, salamis, and roast veal.  White Bizeljcan is a high quality dry white wine of light yellow color with greenish shade and pleasant fruity flavor.  It is aromatic, fresh and fruity.  White Bizeljcan is made from Riesling Blanc, Šipon, Sauvignon and Rumeni Plavec.  It has a medium high alcohol content and refreshing acidity and goes really well with poultry risotto, sweet and sour cabbage and homemade sausage.

    Belokranjec (White Carniolan) is a special designation wine of Bela Krajina.  It is made from high-quality white grapes, the primary being Welschriesling and Kraljevina (Grau Portugieser).  The rest are Pinot Blanc, Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, Sylvaner, Rhine Riesling, Chasselas Blanc and Yellow Muscat.  Belokranjec is known by its dry, rich and full flavor, making it a perfect pairing with meat, poultry and fish, cold appetizers, and can also be served as an aperitif.

    Metliška Črnina, a red special designation wine from Bela Krajina, is made from 60% Modra Frankinja (Blaufränkish), which gives the wine its rich flavor.  Zametna Crnina makes up at least 30% and gives it a pleasant aroma which reminds us of forest fruit.  The rest consists of other red grapes such as Portugalka (Blauer Portugieser), St. Laurent and Gamay.  Metliska Crnina is a medium wine with alcohol level between 10.3 and 11.5% and pleasant acidity. It goes well with grilled dishes, mushroom dishes, game meat and dried meat cold cuts.

    Cviček: The area of Dolenjska was once known as Lower Carniola but is still known for its strange, light red, low-alcohol (8-9%), high-acid blend called CvičekCviček is made from at least four varieties. The mixing of red and white is what gives this special designation winerecognized traditional denomination” (PTP) wine its reddish color and pleasant piquant flavor.  Supposedly it helps preserve health if drunk moderately.  It’s generally a blend of 70% red (such as Modra Frankinja and Zametna Crnina, the grape grown on Maribor’s old vine, and 30% whites (Kraljevina, Laški Rizling, Rumeni Plavec, Zeleni Silvanec, Ranfol, Lipna).  These are all old varieties that survived phylloxerra!  Frelih’s 2016 Cviček Od Fare won a 2017 Decanter World Wine Award “commended rating”, a first rating of any kind for this blend.

    Prus Wine Cellar – a world class producer of sweet predicate wines

    A good example of Slovenian predicate wines are those made by the Prus Wine Cellar in the Bela Krajina wine district of Posavje (Lower Sava Valley).  The Prus Family has been producing wine for many years. Three generations currently work together to produce their renowned award-winning predicate wines such as late harvest wines, Auslese wines, Beerenauslese wines, icewine, Trockenbeerenauslese wines, and also their specialty – straw wines made from dried grapes.  They make these wines from Yellow Muscat, Riesling, Welschriesling, Traminer, Sauvignon and a few others. 

    Podravje (Drava Valley)

    Podravje covers the entire northeastern portion of Slovenia near the Austrian border and has rolling hills and a cooler climate with dry summers and cold winters. It’s the largest of the wine regions and is made up of two sub-regions, Prekmurje and Štajerska, and seven smaller districts which include Maribor, Radgona-Kapela, Srednje Slovenska Gorice, Haloze and Ljutomer-Ormoz.  Prekmurje (literally across the Mura River) is in the far northeastern corner, and Štajerska Slovenija or Styria is everywhere else in Podravje. Podravje centers around the towns of Maribor and Ormoz.  There are about 30,000 acres of vineyards which is twice as much land under vineyard than in Posavje. The grapevines of Podravje grow in calcareous and clay soil, perfect for the aromatic dry whites produced here. White wines account for over 95% of the output.

    Podravje is also known for producing some world class dessert wines and Slovenia’s first sparkling wines. In Podravje you will find the country’s oldest sparkling wine producer, Radgonske Gorice, which has been making classic-method sparkling wine since 1852.

    This region is also known for its predicate wines.  If you are looking for a really ultimate experience, Palmieri dessert wines might do the trick! Palmieri is a small Slovenian dessert wine and olive oil producer who has been making fine virgin olive oil for 500 years, but now collaborates with renowned chefs to blend together some truly unique flavors with Refosk wine.  You can choose from dessert wine with honey, dessert wine with vanilla and their most famous dessert wine with white truffle. A 375 ml bottle of the Refosk dessert wine adorned with a 5.25 carat diamond, white truffle bears and ornate design Idrija lace was sold to a wealthy Russian for more than half a million euros in 2015.  I doubt that any Palmieri makes it to the US, but it would certainly be a good conversation maker at your next dinner party!!!!

    Štajerska

    Radgona-Kapela was the first Slovenian wine region to make sparkling (penina) wine using méthode champenoise in 1852.  Radgonske Gorice sparkling wine is a classic for Slovenians.  They make sparkling from a variety of fermentation methods and levels of sweetness.

    Maribor is the second largest city in Slovenia and is home to the oldest living grapevine in the world as certified by Guinness World Records in 2004. The native red Žametna grapevine is more than 400 years old.  It makes less than a gallon of wine a year and is bottled in 100 tiny bottles.  After the celebratory grape harvest, city cellar workers produce the Žametna Črnina (Black Velvet) and bottle it into 250 ml bottles with a special design. Nurserymen also present an annual exhibition of lesser known grapes such as Poljšakica, Pokalca, Pergulin, Planinka, Maločrn and Cipro grapes.

    You can visit wineries on the Maribor wine road by starting out at the Old Vine House along the Drava River then visiting the 200 year old Vinag Wine Cellar to tour some of the 4.9 acres in 3 km of tunnels and underground wine cellars under the city streets.  Also known as the Maribor Wine Tabernacle, it has a capacity of 7 million liters or 1.85 million gallons of wine!  This is one of the largest classic cellars in Europe.  The Tabernacle archive stores almost all of the post-1945 Slovene vintages – over 450,000 bottles.  Rumor has it that only the Master Cellarer knows the location of the fifty most precious bottles.  Do you think he uses Cellar Tracker?

    The Maribor area is famous for Rizling wines both Laski Rizling and Renski/Rhine Rizling, steely and minerally with herbal and citrus overtones.  Also typical grapes grown along the Maribor wine road are Rhine Riesling, Chardonnay, Rulandec, Green Silvaner and Muscatel.  Other successful grapes are Šipon, Sauvignon, and Traminec.  The amount of red grapes produced has been steadily declining here, but Modri Pinot, Modra Frankinja and Zametna Crnina can be found.

    Ptuj is a town in northeastern Slovenia and the oldest recorded city in Slovenia.  Ptuj has been inhabited since the late Stone Age and developed from a Roman military fort. It is home to the Ptujska Klet (Ptuj) Wine Cellars that date back to 1239.   The Ptuj cellars exist under the city streets of Ptuj and house the oldest Slovenian wine, Stara trta( the Old vine ) from 1917.  You can find examples of all the good vintages from the twentieth century stored here between 1917 to 1945 and all of the after-war vintages.  Ptuj now makes Pullus wines which have won awards all over the world.

    The Ljutomer-Ormoz district along with Radgona-Kapela and Maribor produce some of the best examples of Podravje wines. Haloze, Prekmurje, Srednje Slovenske Gorice and Šmarje-Virštanj districts have small production consumed locally.  The Šipon Wine Route runs between Ljutomer and Ormoz and features Šipon (Furmint) and all the great white grapes, but especially Sauvignon Blanc, Riesling, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris, Traminer, and Chardonnay, plus Furmint in sparkling, still and sweet forms, and Laški Rizling as a top dessert wine.  You will find the hilltop village of Jeruzalem while travelling this wine route.  Legend has it that the crusaders stopped here on their way to the Holy Land, drank the local wines and decided never to leave.  It is known for exceptional white wine made from Dišeči Traminec and Ranina.

    Haloze is a 120 square mile wine district bordering on Croatia and one of the most rural places in Slovenia.  Most of the wine made here, stays here.                

    Prekmurje

    The Prekmurje, Lendava and Goričko Wine Routes can all be found in the Prekmurje wine district in the extreme east of Slovenia.  Whites are produced here mainly Welschriesling, then Chardonnay, Sauvignon, Rhine Riesling, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Gris, Traminer and Muscatel.  All the wine cellars make one or more types of blended wines, known as cuvées.  Prekmurje is well known for Prekmurje ham and koline sausages. Koline pork sausages are prepared at slaughtering time known as “koline”.

    The grapes and wines of Podravje

    Podravje is best known for its aromatic dry whites of which grapes like Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, Renski/Rhine Rizling, Laški Rizling (Welschriesling), Traminec (Gewürztraminer), Rizvanec (Mὒller-Thurgau)and its flagship white – Šipon or Furmint –  are common varieties.  Laški Rizling is the most common grape in Podravje and takes up about one-third of all vines growing in Podravje. Reds take up only 3%. Pinot Noir is the most common red wine grape. You can also find good examples of Austrian reds Blaufränkish (Modra Frankinja) and Zweigelt.  There is definitely a Germanic influence here as this land was once part of the Duchy of Styria, a crown land of Austria-Hungary.  Other grape varieties found in the Drava Valley include Chasselas, Gamay, Kerner, Kraljevina, Muškat Ottonel, Portugalka Rizvanec, Rumeni Muškat, Zeleni Silvanec and Žlahtnina.  Predicate wines from the Prodravje region are gaining in acknowledgment at international events.  The quality comes from a late harvest, berry selection and ice wine.  Botyrtized wines are produced from Laški Rizling.

    Ranfol is a white grape typical of the Haloze district in a remote area in eastern Štajerska. It makes medium to light bodied wines that can be drunk as a single varietal wine in the summer or used for blending.

    Blauer Kölner is known locally as Žametna Črnina or Black Velvet.  The wine is high in acidity, has a bright red color and is mainly used in blends.

    Top 10 Winemakers – As selected by “The Slovenia Book”

    “The Slovenia Book” was written by a group of foreign writers who live in Slovenia and are passionate about sharing their knowledge of Slovenia.  They have included their top 100 destinations in the country.  Here are their picks for top 10 winemakers.  These are by no means the only good winemakers in Slovenia!  I’ve already mentioned some of them in this article.

    • Bjana: in the village of Biljana in Goriška Brda district; known for award-winning sparkling wines made according to traditional methods using Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and Ribolla Gialla grapes.
    • Burja: Priomož Lavrenčič makes award-winning Burja wines in the Vipava Valley.
    • Dveri Pax: Decanter and other international award winning winery with full range of whites – including Riesling, Traminec and Šipon.
    • Edi Simčič: Run for 3 generations.
    • Istenič: Largest wine producer in Bizeljsko winegrowing district and one of largest sparkling wine producers in Slovenia.  They were the first private company in Slovenia to produce sparkling wine using traditional methods. Some of their wines feature Rumeni Plavec, a variety peculiar to Bizeljsko.
    • Movia: Dating back more than three centuries; one of oldest in the country; located in Goriška Brda. Aleš Kristančič is frequently credited with helping to establish Slovene wine internationally.  Movia has been biodynamic for 20 years and Aleš says he is the 8th generation to farm organically on the estate.  His wines include a Sauvignon Blanc aged for 2 years in French oak barrels, a red blend featuring Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Pinot Noir and two sparkling wines that come with instructions on how to disgorge them underwater yourself (Puro and Puro Rosé).
    • Prus: Winemaker Jožef Prus known for his specialty – sweet white predicate wines, namely Yellow Muscat and even sweeter late harvest and ice wines.
    • Pra-Vino: In the village of Kog among the hills of Ljutomer Ormož; the Čurin-Prapotnik family has received many Decanter awards and is most noted for their Šipon (Furmint) white wines.
    • Ščurek: Makes some of the best wines in Slovenia and located in Medana, a village in Goriška Brda.
    • Simčič Marjan: One of the most widely known and respected vineyards in not only Goriška Brda or Slovenia, but the entire region. The estate is 16 hectares with about half on either side of the Slovene-Italian border. It’s organic and Marjan makes wine for drinking after 10-20 years. His most famous wine, Leonardo, is made from dried Rebula grapes.

    Let’s share some LOVE!

    Whenever I begin to learn about a wine region unfamiliar to me, I become completely immersed in every aspect of the region, the country, the culture, the wine, the food and of course the wine!  Slovenia was no exception. I have never been to Slovenia and don’t foresee that I will be so lucky as to travel there.  I have thoroughly enjoyed my time spent learning about this country and her wines and cannot wait to get the opportunity to taste some of them.  Lucky for me that should happen in the next few months.  There are a few representative bottles of Slovenian wine in our collection which prompted me to do the research. Of course the wines will have to be paired with my version of Slovenian cooking!  I’ll tell you all about the wine and food in an upcoming forkandcorkdivine.com article.

    I hope you found some LOVE while reading about Slovenian wine and may even have the desire to buy some Slovenian wine of your own.  As with all of the more “exotic” wine regions, that may be difficult but not impossible.  Several sources that I do know of are:

    1. bluedanubewine.com has been in business in the San Francisco area since 2002. I have bought wine from this company a number of times and they are very reputable to deal with.  They import from Austria, Bosnia/Herzegovina, Croatia, Georgia, Hungary, Romania, Serbia, Slovenia and Turkey.
    2. thewineandmore.com is a fairly new company now shipping to the US from Zagreb, Croatia. I have not purchased from them yet, but they have a good list of wines from this part of the wine world – Croatia, Slovenia and a few from Serbia.

    All of the information that I used to prepare this article is available on the internet, “The Wine Bible” by Karen MacNeil and winefolly.com.  I was also inspired by  the internet published articles, YouTube videos, and social media postings of Dr. Matthew Horkey and Charine Tan of “Exotic Wine Travel” as they traveled and tasted their way across Slovenia.  Please accept my apologies if there is any incorrect data or information; I try to verify from several sources.  So let’s go and share the sLOVEnia………wine, that is.   Cheers………or as they say in Slovenia  – Na Zdravje! 

    LFRakos@gmail.com

    Forkandcorkdivine.com

    10.18.18 updated

  • 18Jun

    Doug leads the way on our French journey

    Spring is always a special time of the year for some in-depth tasting of French wines.   Two springs ago  forkandcorkdivine hosted our very own “Judgment of Paris” 40th Anniversary event which was an event I will never forget!  Forty years earlier, May 24, 1976,  Steven Spurrier gathered together a group of distinguished French wine critics and professionals and had them blind taste 12 “unknown” California wines paired with 12 highly revered French wines.  The astonishing results went down in history – the 1973 Chateau Montelena Chardonnay was the highest rated white and the 1973 Stags Leap Wine Cellar SLV beat out the French reds! Forty years later on May 22,2016 14 brave winelover foodie friends gathered together in our home with eager anticipation and some trepidation to participate in a five hour event – 12 courses and 20 bottles of California and French wine, all wineries of which were included in that infamous Paris Judgment. We survived the event and are able to tell the story for many years to come, but how do we top that?  That particular event was one for the record books in our winelover history!

    When I read that Wine Enthusiast Magazine selected the Sud Ouest, Southwest France, as their “Wine Region of the Year” for 2017, I knew that my next wine research project and adventure had arrived. Fortunately a few of our very supportive wine and foodie friends agreed to go on this adventure with Chuck and me — as long as we stopped off in one of their favorite French wine regions on the way — the Southern Rhone Valley and Provence.    Being a lover of most things French, I eagerly agreed. I am always up for a good challenge.  We quickly realized that one wine pairing dinner would not cover all of the wines that should be represented, so we agreed to make it a two-dinner event!  Now that was another first for us.  Our wine and foodie friends, Doug and Anita Jenkins, graciously agreed to host the Rhone event in April, and Chuck and I would follow up with the Southwest France event in May.  Sound like a major undertaking to you?  Yes it was, but with a lot of planning, preparation and passion for the food and wine, it was truly a labor of love.  And that is how 8 friends got to enjoy 24 fabulous French wines paired up with 10 courses of food in the spring of 2018 right here in Southwest Florida.

    After coordinating many wine and food events in my lifetime, my professional food management expertise automatically kicks in.  There has to be a carefully well thought out plan!   My first step always is to research the particular wine region and learn about their wines.  This time I knew would be studying about some old friends (Rhone Valley) and making some new ones (SudOuest).  After the research comes the article about what I have learned.  I had twice as much work to do this time – two articles!   You can read the results for yourself.  Both articles were previously posted at www.forkandcorkdivine.com:    (1) The Southern Rhone and Provence……….If “forkandcorkdivine” went to France (4.15.18) and (2) The Sud Ouest……If  “forkandcorkdivine” went to France. (5.7.18)

    The next task is to select the wines, then prepare a menu that showcases these wines, be representative of each region and use as many authentic ingredients as possible while fitting within the culinary skills of our foodie friends.   Easy to do you say?  Not a simple task.  And then there is the challenge of trying to source those wines and food ingredients.  This is where internet shopping always plays a large role.  Somehow we always manage to pull it off – and amazingly well, I must say!  As one of our guests said “Coming to one of your (forkandcorkdivine) wine dinners is like taking a trip to Disneyland.”  I took that as a major compliment.

    Here are the final versions of our French menus and the wines that paired so well with them.  The Jenkins hosted the Southern Rhone event: Doug sourced the wines while Anita planned and prepared the food items with a small amount of assistance from my culinary skills.  Chuck and I planned, prepared and hosted the Sud Ouest Southwest event with some much appreciated culinary assistance from Anita’s kitchen.   You can read more about the wines in my previous articles.

    French Culinary Conspirators Linda and Anita

    French Wines and Cuisine of the Southern Rhone Valley and Provence

    April 22, 2018

    Welcome

    Clairette de Die Brut Mousseux, Saint Crois, Drome 

                                         

    Foodie note:  The foie gras torchon and ice wine jelly made a perfect amuse bouche for dinner.  A torchon means “dish towel” in French since foie gras was traditionally wrapped in a kitchen towel for cooking.  Today plastic, vacuum seal and sous vide are used by D’Artagnan to make their torchon.

    L’Aperitif

    Domaine Pierre Gaillard “Dans la Neige”  Southern Rhone, 2015

    White blend of Viognier, Marsanne, Rousanne

    Figues Farcies aux Noix  walnut stuffed figs                    

    Olives de Provence

    Morbier Fromage semi-soft cows’ milk cheese

     

    Domaine des Carteresses Tavel Rosé, 2016 93 pts WE

    50% Grenache, 15% Mourvèdre, 13% Clairette, 12% Picpoul, 10% Syrah

    Choux aux Anchois anchovy puffs by Linda

     

    Les Entrées

    Clos St. Magdeleine Cassis Blanc, Provence, 2015

    40% Marsanne, 30% Ugni Blanc, 25% Clairette,  5% Bourboulenc

    Soupe au Pistou Seasonal vegetable soup with pesto

    Foodie note: Use fresh seasonal vegetables and top with fresh basil pesto.  A perfect light soup course.

    Provençal Olive Fougasse Provençal flat bread by Linda

    Foodie note: Fougasse is the French version of focaccia bread.  Add some herbs, make it rustic looking and it is delicious.  The traditional shape is a leaf or a stalk of wheat.

    Secret Vines La Garrigue Rosé, Côtes de Provence, 2016

    40% Grenache, 30% Cinsault, 25% Syrah, 5% Carignon

    Poivrons Farci au Thon  Piquillo peppers stuffed with tuna

     

    La Plat Principal

    Jerome Bressy Domaine Gourt de Mautens, 2011

    Southern Rhone Red, IGP Vaucluse, 96 Pts

    70% Grenache and blend of Carrignon, Mourvέdre, Syrah, Counoise,

    Cinsault, Vaccarèse and Terret Noir

                             

    Domaine Les Palliers Terrasse du Diable Gigondas, 2010

    93 Pts RP     90% Grenache, 5% Mourvèdre, 5% Clairette

    Xavier Vins Châteauneuf-du-Pape Cuvée Anonyme,  2010

     95 pts RP     Southern Rhone Blend of Grenache, Mourvέdre and Syrah

    Famille Perrin Château de Beaucastel

    Châteauneuf-du-Pape, 2010

    96 pts WS/WE & 95 pts RP           #8 Wine Spectator Top 100 of 2013

    30% Grenache, 30% Mourvèdre, 10% Syrah, 10% Counoise, 5% Cinsault

      

                                                     Gigot de l’Agneau

    Haricots Tarbais      

    Tomates au Four            Gratin d’Aubergines           

    Roasted leg of lamb served with garlic and herb white beans,

    baked tomatoes Provence-style and eggplant custard gratin

                                                  Le Dessert

    Domaine de la Pigeade Muscat de Beaumes-de-Venise, 2012

    100% Muscat Blanc à Petit Grains

    Gâteau de Beaumes-de-Venise aux Raisins

    A French grape cake popular in the Vaucluse

    Bleu d’Auvergne Fromage    

    Foodie note: This delicious one layer cake, made with grapes and Beaumes-de-Venise wine, is named after the town in the Vaucluse and the sweet fortified wine produced there.

                              

    www.forkandcorkdivine.com   4.21.18.LR

    Part of the French winelover team

                    Wines and Cuisine of Southwest France                    “Welcome to the Sud Ouest”

    May 20, 2018

    Welcome

    Saint-Hilaire Blanc de Blanc Brut Blanquette de Limoux AOP 2015,   Languedoc-Roussillon Wine Region

    Mauzac 90%, Chenin Blanc 5%, Chardonnay 5%

    Note for our winelover friends:  The Blanquette de Limoux sparkling wine was the perfect bridge from our Southern Rhone/Provence dinner to our Sud Ouest dinner.  This particular AOP is in Languedoc, a wine region we cross over traveling southwest. 

    L’Apέritif

    Mont Gravet Côtes de Gascogne IGP 2016, Colombard

    Pintxos – a Duo of Mini Basque-Style Tapas

    Smoked salmon with a hard cooked egg slice and Manchego cheese with roasted cherry tomatoes on French baguette slices

     

    Foodie note: The French Basque area has a Spanish personality since it straddles the mountain border with Spain making tapas-style small plates a perfect opener.

    L’ Entrέe

    Domaine De Souch Jurançon Sec, Jurançon AOP 2012

    Gros Mansang 70%, Petite Mansang 20%, Corbu 10%

    Coquilles St. Jacques, Sauce Mandarine

    Foodie note:  Find a recipe for this and make it!  Our guests did everything but lick the sauce off the plate.  Absolutely delicious scallop dish that was perfect with the Jurancon Sec.  Tangerine juice is key.  Do not substitute!  If you prefer, contact me and I’ll send you the recipe.

     

    A Taste of Garonne & Tarn

    Seigneurs de Peyreville Côte de Millau AOP 2015

    Syrah, Gamay, Cabernet Sauvignon, Fer Servadou

    Causse Marines Gaillac Peyrouzelles, Gaillac AOP 2015

    Braucol, Syrah, Alicante, Prunelard, Jurançon Noir

    Le Roc La Folle Noire D’Ambat, Nέgrette, Fronton AOP 2015

    Salade à  la Quercy

    Gesiers confit, magret de seche fume, and torchon of foie gras on a bed of greens with walnuts, tomatoes and roasted walnut oil dressing with baguette

    Foodie note:  The ingredients in this particular Quercy salad version make it a perfect representation of the region.  Our wine pairings further confirmed that “what grows together goes together”.

     

    The Winemakers of Cahors AOP

    Three Lot River “Families of the Vine”

    Philippe Bernède  Clos La Coutale Cahors, Malbec 80%, Merlot 20%, 2015

    Jean-Luc Baldès Malbec Du Clos Triguedina, Malbec 100%, 2012

    Yves and Martine Jouffreau Clos De Gamot, Malbec 100%, 2008

    Cassoulet de Toulouse à la Linda

    Petite cassoulet with duck confit and Toulouse sausage

    Foodie note:  Paula Wolfert is a world famous cookbook author who specializes in the Mediterranean area.  Her recipes are authentic and will  bring the food of the region to your kitchen.  Several of our dishes were prepared from her “Cooking of South-West France” cookbook.

    Pyrέnέes

    Domaine Moureou Madiran AOP, 2014

    Tannat 70%, Cabernet  Sauvignon 30%

    Domaine Arretxea Irouléquy AOP, Basque, 2010

    Tannat 66%, Cabernet Franc 17%, Cabernet Sauvignon 17%

    Poulet à la Basquaise

    Chicken with red and green peppers, tomatoes, jambon de Bayonne and rice pilaf

     

    Foodie note: Piment d’Espelette is made from a pepper grown in Espelette in the Pyrenees.  It is almost considered “mandatory” to have it on your table and cook with it in that region.  It’s expensive but you won’t regret having it in your spice collection.  You definitely shouldn’t make Basque chicken without it.  The Jambon de Bayonne is the French version of prosciutto.  It’s in Paula’s recipe, too.  Keeping it authentic!!!!!

    Some of Bergerac’s Best Kept Sweet Secrets

    Domaine de la Guillonie Monbazillac AOP 2013

    Sauvignon Blanc, Sémillon, Muscadelle

    Chateau Richard Saussignac AOP 2013

    Sémillon 70%, Muscadelle 25%, Sauvignon Blanc 5%

                                             Le Fromage et Le Dessert

    Roquefort, Goat Cheese with Honey, P’tit Basque & Fig Jam

    Basque Cake de la Cuisine d’Anita

    Foodie note: Gateau Basque is traditional in the Basque region.  It is usually filled with either pastry cream or jam.  Anita filled hers with a layer of jam and it was delicious.  The top layer surface was scored in a diamond pattern.  My picture does not do it justice!   P’tit Basque cheese is 100% pure sheep’s milk cheese produced in the Basque region of the Pyrenees Mountains.  

    Your hosts Chuck and Linda

     

    www.forkandcorkdivine.com  5.12.18 LR

    Another “forkandcorkdivine” wine dinner event is now history, and this time it was a two night event!  In my opinion the wines were all spectacular. As I predicted, we were reunited with some old friends – the wines of Southern Rhone Valley and Provence – while making a lot of new acquaintances in the Sud Ouest.  It is easy to see why Wine Enthusiast Magazine selected Southwest France as the “Wine Region of 2017”.  The criteria for selection were all met as far as I am concerned – quality wines made by winemakers with vision, authenticity and commitment to sustainable excellence.

    We especially enjoyed Gigondas, Vaucluse IGP and Chateauneuf-du-Papes from Southern Rhone and Madiran Tannat and those fabulous Cahor Malbecs from the Southwest.  They never get old or boring!

    These wines all fell into the “new acquaintance” category for me:  Clairette de Die sparkling wine,  Cassis Blanc (Provence), Beaume-de-Venise dessert wine, Blanquette de Limoux sparkling wine (Languedoc), Jurancon Sec and Irouleguy (Pyrenees), Cote de Millau, Gaillac, Negrette, (all Garonne & Tarn)  and Monbazillac and Saussignac Dessert wines from Bergerac.  I will happily drink all of them again……….and hopefully soon!

    My friend Anita can already cook all things French, but I definitely expanded my culinary expertise!  I made my first fougasse, anchovy puffs, cassoulet and salad Quercy.   The fougasse and puffs were fairly simple and I’ll make them again soon, but I must confess my love for all those duck parts is not huge.  From duck confit, to gesiers confit to magret de seche fume – I prepared them all.  Just because they are not my personal favorites does not mean that I don’t prepare them for my foodie friends who do love them!  The cassoulet took three days to prepare, and I was determined to conquer it.  It was a labor of love! The results were good; however, it will be quite awhile before I give it another go.  Anita’s culinary skills shine brightly – her French dishes are always delicious.  For that matter all of her dishes are delicious!  It was a pleasure to collaborate with Anita and Doug for our trip to France.

    The French spring wine dinners are now just a memory, the pictures taken and recorded for history and my forkandcorkdivine articles complete.  So what is next?  Of course there is another adventure on the way.  Stay tuned………..it will be here soon!

    L.Rakos 6.18.18

    lfrakos@gmail.com

  • 15Apr

    Looking for some quality new wines to try?  If the wine travel bug took a bite out of you like it did me, it left me wanting to search out and drink wines that are totally new to me – either from a more obscure country or a grape variety I have never even heard of let alone tasted.  Traveling to obscure countries or wine destinations is not currently an option for me, but my fingers can definitely travel around the internet researching those countries and grapes. I love a good challenge!

    The thrill of that next wine area to research and enjoy is always on the horizon just waiting for me to latch on and become fully committed to it.  When I read that the “Wine Enthusiast” Magazine selected Southwest France as the 2017 Wine Region of the Year, I knew immediately that my new wine research project had just arrived!  

    Most experienced wine lovers are quite familiar with Bordeaux, Burgundy, Champagne, and even the Loire Valley, but obviously there are many of us quite unfamiliar with Southwest France.  What makes a wine region qualified for this distinction, you ask? According to “Wine Enthusiast”, the nominee “had to prove it had more than wines of good quality; it had to demonstrate its vision, authenticity, and commitment to sustainable excellence.”  Southwest France was in very good company with the other nominees being Galicia (Spain), Margaret River (Australia), Sonoma County (California) and Umbria (Italy). I would certainly have hated to make that decision!

    I invited some foodie wine lover friends to join me on my Southwest France armchair travel adventure, and they eagerly agreed but with one  stipulation: first we need to visit the wines of the Rhone Valley —more  specifically the Southern Rhone and Provence. This region is one of their favorites. They have visited it numerous times and can contribute valuable first hand experience.  So my adventure has just doubled in size and now will be in two parts.  Before reaching our final destination, we are stopping off in another part of France – the Southern Rhone Valley and Provence.   It is time to revisit some old wine “friends” in the Rhone Valley before making new friends in Southwest France.  If I went to France, I would want to be armed with this knowledge. 

    Destination #1: Southern Rhone Valley and Provence

    The entire Rhone Valley has more than 30 different AOPs/AOCs and is the second largest appellation in France – second only to Bordeaux.  There are more than 71,000 hectares (175,000 acres) of vines planted here plus 27,500 more hectares (680 acres) in Provence. More than 400 million bottles of wine are produced here annually.  

    The valley takes its name from the Rhone River which begins in the Swiss Alps, flows through the Jura Mountains, then taking a sharp turn south of Lyon  where it begins its 250 mile journey to the Mediterranean, just west of Marseille. The Northern Rhone Valley, sometimes called the Cotes du Rhone Septentrionales, begins near the village of Vienne 20 miles south of Lyons and continues 45 more miles southward to the city of Valence.  The Cotes du Rhone Meridionales (Southern Rhone Valley) begins south of Montelimar and on for 50 more miles to Avignon. The two parts follow the Rhone River for nearly 125 miles, with a gap of about 30 miles between the North and South. The North is smaller and considered more prestigious, but the South is larger and better known.  

    The wines from each are distinctly different, and close to 95% of all Rhone wines come from the Southern part of the valley.  What makes these two areas of the valley so different? The Southern climate is Mediterranean; the landscape is flatter than the North; mistral winds blow down the valley and vines are kept low to the ground “gobelet style” in order to protect them; temperatures can be very hot during the day and quite cold at night; the range of alluvial soils has sand, gravel, clay, limestone and large pebbles called galets that store heat to warm the vines at night.  This is where we are heading for Destination #1.

    So what should you expect when tasting wines from the Southern Rhone Region?  Wines will generally be lighter, more open and more alcoholic than Northern Rhone wines.  They are much fruitier with red fruit flavors instead of black and often with fresh Provençal herbs, olives and spicy accents.  You can find all types of wine here from sparkling to white, rosé to red plus a few sweet wines. Most of these wines can be enjoyed now without cellaring; however the best wines can be aged for decades.  There are more than 380 million bottles of wine produced annually in the Southern Rhone.

    While Syrah is the only red grape permitted by law in the North, there are 15 red grapes allowed in the south.  Grenache is the most widely planted and leading grape in Southern Rhone. Wines of the Southern Rhone are are all about blending!  And Syrah and Mourvèdre are used frequently in the blend. This is GSM country…….or maybe GMS! Similar wine blends are known globally as “GSM”.  (I still remember the very first GSM I ever tasted, and it was from Australia.) White wines in Southern Rhone are usually a blend, too and you will increasingly find Viognier, Roussanne and Marsanne, grapes widely used in Northern Rhone, working their way into Southern Rhone white blends.   

    Just to keep it really interesting, we can’t forget that France labels her wines by region and not the grape variety.  You can read about the French wine classification system later in this article.  This system can actually be quite helpful since there are so many varieties and many of the regions blend them together, therefore if you learn a little bit about the regions you will have a much better idea of what to expect from a bottle of wine that says  “Gigondas”, for example.  You can be assured that the wine is made from at least 50% Grenache.

    Appellations of the Southern Rhone, their grapes and wines

    There are 27 grape varieties in the Southern Rhone and 31 in the entire valley, North and South.  

    Grapes of the Southern Rhone:

    Reds: Grenache, Syrah, Mourvèdre, Carignan, Cinsault, Counoise, (only in Tavel and Châteauneuf-du-Pape), Muscardin (Châteauneuf – du – Pape),  Vaccarese, Picpoul (Piquepoul) Noir, Terret Noir, Calitor, Red Muscat, Marselan, Grenache Gris and Clairette Rosé

    Grenache typically displays red berries (raspberry, strawberry, cranberry) and peppery spice.

    Syrah contributes dark berry, licorice and black pepper flavors as well as body and structure.

    Mourvèdre displays high levels of tannin as well as meaty aromas and flavors.

    Whites: Grenache Blanc, Clairette Blanche,  Viognier, Bourboulenc, Roussanne, Marsanne, Muscat, Muscat Blanc à Petits Grains, Piquepoul Blanc, Piquepoul Gris, Ugni Blanc, Picardin, Rolle (only in Costieres and Luberon), Macabeu (Costieres only)

    Châteauneuf-du-Pape – “new castle of the pope” is the best known appellation of the South   Even if you don’t remember ever having wine from the Southern Rhone Valley, odds are that you  have had a Châteauneuf-du-Pape at some time in your life, and it surely would have been memorable! Châteauneuf-du-Pape is the undisputed king of Southern Rhone, and it can use some or all 13 grape varieties. These wines typically have notes of fresh cherries, strawberries, kirsch, black raspberries, black pepper, spice, earth and garrigue.  They range in style from elegant and lush to full bodied and concentrated, traditional to modern depending upon the winemaker. Many of the grapes here come from gnarled 100 year old vines that produce the intensity of flavor and concentration that is famous in this region.  It is also famous for the mistrals, 60 mile per hour or more frosty dry winds that help keep the air and fruit clean plus naturally removes insects, disease and excess water.

    Here are the famous “Châteauneuf thirteen”.  How many can you name?

    Reds – Grenache, Syrah, Mourvèdre, Cinsault, Muscardin, Counoise, Vaccarèse, and Terret Noir.

    Whites – Grenache Blanc, Clairette, Bourboulenc, Roussanne, Picpoul, Picardan

    Note: If you count to verify like I do, you will discover 14 grapes.  The official word is that Grenache Blanc is counted independently from the red Grenache.

    Five per cent of the region makes a wonderful dry, white Châteauneuf-du-pape which is also generally quite memorable.  

    This region was granted appellation status in 1936; however, it has really gained in popularity since the late 1990s when its wines were introduced to the rest of the world.  Prior to that there was very little interest outside of Southern France. Some people think that Robert Parker deserves a lot of credit for this upswing in popularity with his continuous writing about the greatness of the wines.  Just a few of the top producers here are Beaucastel, Chapoutier, Guigal, Saint Cosme, Vieux Télégraphe and Xavier. Whether your preference is for traditional wine made in older neutral massive barrels and cement vats or a more modern style made in new oak, the choices are many and you probably won’t go wrong!  

    During the 14th century, the pope didn’t live in Rome.  He lived in Avignon right outside of the vineyards. The Pope may have been relocated back to Rome, however this era in history will always be remembered whenever you look at a bottle of Châteauneuf-du-Pape and see the papal crown and St. Peter’s keys embossed on estate grown bottles.  The original bottle was created in 1937 by the union of the owner of the appellation.  It not only promotes the wines but is also a guarantee of authenticity.

     

    The 8,000 plus acres of Châteauneuf-du-Pape may be THE most important wine producing appellation, but there are  other recognized quality AOC appellations and  adjacent communes in the Southern Rhone that are making great wine.  

    Other appellations of the Southern Rhone

    Cotes du Rhone  produces some of the best wine values of the Rhone. Wine drinkers who recognize good quality value wines love wines from the Cotes du Rhone.  You can drink them early and they don’t break the bank! They are packed with ripe red berries and are meant to be enjoyed when released and are extremely food friendly.  You can pair them with many meats, fish, shellfish and cheeses.

    They come from two different designations: regular Cotes du Rhone (covers 171 communes) and displays only the region or the more prestigious, Cotes du Rhone Villages (allowed for 95 communes).  And even more special is the Cotes du Rhone Village with the name of the village on the label ( allowed for just 21 villages as of 2017). The producer can put the name of the village on the label, and some of these wines are the among the best values in French wine.  Cru are the 16 named appellations which display only the name of the cru and not Cotes du Rhone.  

    The Cotes du Rhone appellation is the largest appellation in the Southern Rhone and is second in size only to Bordeaux producing close to $100 million worth of wine annually.  89% of all wines are red, 7% rosé and 4% white with the dominant red grape being Grenache. Grenache Blanc is the most important white grape. Parts of this appellation have terroir identical to Châteauneuf-du-Pape — some of the vineyards may be just across the road or only a single row of grapevines away! Look for some of these very well known vintners:  Chapoutier, Beaucastel, Vieux Télégraphe and Perrin et Fils.

    Gigondas is a fairly young appellation separated from the Cotes du Rhone and granted AOP status in 1971.  It’s 1233 hectares of vines are located just northeast of Châteauneuf-du-Pape and have three main terroirs: gravel and clay in the flat areas, gravel and sand at the bottom of slopes, and hillsides with rocks, limestone and clay.  Grenache is the most important grape here. The AOP requires at least 50% of it in a Gigondas. These are wines of good quality and extremely well priced. Some vintners to know here are: Saint Cosme, Santa Duc and Perrin et Fils.

    Lirac was created in 1947, has 715 hectares of vines,  and 80% of its wines are red. All wines must be blends and Grenache must be at least 40% of the vineyards plantings. Lirac is located on the border that separates the Southern Rhone Valley from Languedoc-Roussillon.

    Rasteau is just 47 hectares in size and is located north and east of Châteauneuf-du-Pape. It finally became an AOP in 2010 for its dry red wine. Since 1944 Rasteau AOP labelled wines had to be a unique sweet red fortified wine, Vin Doux Naturel Rasteau, which is produced from Muscat grapes.  There are high percentages of Mourvèdre in Rasteau red blends.

    Tavel can only make rosé and was created in 1936 with 902 hectares under vine.  Tavel rosé must be made from the 9 authorized grape varieties, and all wines must be a blend with no more than 60% of any single variety.  There isn’t much on the ground here except rocks, but many wine lovers swear that this is the best rosé in the world! It is often referred to as the “wine of kings”.  Guigal is a big name here.

    Vacqueyras was part of the Cotes du Rhone until granted AOP status in 1990, Vacqueyras has 1406 hectares under vine located slightly east of Châteauneuf-du-Pape and due south of Gigondas.  95% of the region makes red wine with 4% rosé and 1% white.  Grenache is dominant followed by Mourvèdre, Syrah and Cinsault.  

    Beaumes-des-Venise became a red wine AOP with just 27 hectares in 2005.  Beame-des-Venise is the smallest appellation in the Rhone Valley that produces red wine.  “Beaume” means cave or grotto in French, and it is close to a series of caves placed in the neighboring hillsides.  It is not far from Vacqueyras, just east of Châteauneuf-du-Pape and close to the Rhone River. All of its wines must be blends with Grenache being a minimum of 50% and the next 25% coming from Syrah.  

    Muscat de Beaumes-des-Venise has been an appellation since 1945.  Its namesake wine is the sweet fortified dessert wine made from Muscat, the only allowable grape in the appellation, making it the wine to know here.  The French call their sweet fortified dessert wine a VDN or “Vin doux Naturels”.  Dry red wine from this appellation is sold as Cotes du Rhone wine.

    Cote du Luberon is at the tip of the southeastern portion of the South, was created in 1988 and has 3,300 plus hectares of vines.  Rosé is the wine to know here with vineyards planted in a minimum of 60% Grenache and Syrah.

    Cote de Ventoux, with 5700+ hectares and appellation designated since 1973, was classified as a Biosphere Reserve by UNESCO in 1990.  According to UNESCO, “biosphere reserves are areas comprising terrestrial, marine and coastal ecosystems.  Each reserve promotes solutions reconciling the conservation of biodiversity with its sustainable use”. It is located in the southeast part of the valley almost bordering Châteauneuf-du-Pape.  Most of the vineyards are close to the slopes of Mount Ventoux, and it is probably the only appellation in the Southern Rhone to see snow in winter. Wines here are lighter, fresher and less alcoholic than most of the Southern Rhone.  Cote de Ventoux produces 60% red, 35% rosé and 4% white with Grenache being THE red grape and Clairette THE white grape of the appellation. Xavier Vins and Chateau Pesquie are some names you may know.

    Cote de Vivarais is in the northwestern part of the Southern Rhone Valley, has 321 hectares of vines and became an appellation in 1999.   53% of the wine is red, 41% is rosé and 6% is white. Grenache and Grenache Blanc are the grapes to know here.

    Costières de Nimes, previously named Costières du Gard until 1989 and part of Languedoc, was moved to the oversight of the Rhone Valley in 2004.  Located at the border of Provence and Languedoc, it produces mostly red wines  from Syrah, Mourvèdre, Grenache, Carignan and Cinsault.  The resulting wines are generally elegant, well balanced, lightly structured with aromas of red fruit, blackberry, prune and black cherry.  Whites makes up a very small percentage and must be a blend of at least two varieties. Some light, dry, well balanced and delicate rosé is made.   

    Vinsobres was granted AOP status in 2005.  Vinsobres is a village in the northeastern corner of the Cotes du Rhone region.  Most of the reds here have more Syrah than typical due to a slightly cooler climate that Syrah grapes enjoy.  

    Duché d’Uzes was granted AOP status in 2012.  Its 282 hectares under vine are on the far western part of the Southern Rhone Valley.  All wines must be produced from blends and 62% are red, 19% white and 19% rosé. Duche d’Uzes has one of the longest histories in the Rhone as the ancient Greeks may have planted vines here about 500 BC.  

    Grignan – les – Adhémar was renamed from the Tricistan AOP in 2011.  It seems that Tricistan is also the name of a French nuclear power plant.  It is also the northernmost appellation in the Southern Rhone. Locals drink most of the wine right here in the appellation. It is best known for red wines from Grenache and Syrah (80% max either singularly or combined) and white wines from Roussanne, Marsanne, Viognier, Grenache Blanc, Clairette and Bourboulenc.  

    Cairanne is a real newcomer to the list of AOPs  with its 2016 acceptance, making it the 17th appellation to get CRU status and no longer requiring it to put Cotes du Rhone on its labels.  Cairanne borders on both the North and the South and brings together the typical grapes of both.

    Clairette de Bellegarde is probably the smallest appellation in all of France.  It consists of 40 hectares and only 16 are planted in vines.  Clairette Blanc is the only grape allowed.

    Clairette de Die is a natural sparkling white wine made from Muscat Blanc à Petits Grains (75% minimum) and Clairette (25%) maximum.  It was established as an AOC in 1942 and has 300 vineyards. You can find it 20 miles east of the Rhone River in the picturesque Drome Valley.  The wines are produced by a unique method called the Traditional or Methode Dioise Ancestrale, which is different than the Traditional Method of Champagne.  The must is rapidly cooled just after crush, then bottled before the initial fermentation. The wine ferments slowly over a period of 9 months during which the CO2 is trapped within the bottle.   

    Cremant de Die was established as an AOP in 1993.  It is from the same area and producers as Clairette de Die but is made in the cremant style of vinification by the traditional Champagne method of first fermentation in the vat followed by second fermentation in the bottle.  Grapes used include Clairette, Aligote and Muscat.

    An IGP of the Southern Rhone

    Vaucluse IGP includes red, white and rosé wines produced in the administrative department of Vaucluse located in the heart of the Southern Rhone Valley.  It is home to the villages of Châteauneuf-du-Pape, Beaumes-de-Venise, and Vacqueyras and the appellations of Ventoux and Cotes du Rhone Villages.  An IGP allows growers to make wines that fall outside the AOP level requirements of the appellations.  Vaucluse IGP is reserved for still wines, most of which are blended reds.  The usual grapes are Syrah and Grenache along with Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot.  Whites are usually made from Chardonnay.

    The Wine Classification System

    The Appellation d’Origine (AOC) system began in the Châteauneuf-du-Pape area of the Rhone Valley in the early 20th century.  The AOC system guarantees that the wine comes from the appellation or place indicated.  It is intended to establish expectations of quality due to the specific requirements that must be followed by growers and producers. The primary requirement is that only permitted grape varieties may be used in each appellation.

    France began the process of adopting the European Union classification system in 2012.  Here are the three descending quality classifications.  You will still see the previous AOC statements on labels for years to come especially on wines with many years of life.

    1. Appellation d’Origine Protégée (AOP).  Formerly called Appellation d’Origine Controlee (AOC) and still widely used.  Designates the highest quality by laws regarding geographical origin of grapes, minimum alcohol level, amount of wine produced per hectare, and methods of production.  This level covers about 50% of French wines; however, there are still no guarantees!  An AOP can be a large area or a small specific region.
    2. Indication Geographique Protégée (IGP). Subject to regulations about the geographic origin of the grapes and amount of wine produced per hectare.  This covers about 30% of production and quality varies significantly. Formerly called Vin de Pays (VDP). There are now more than 150 IGP/VDP titles on French wine labels, mostly covering locations in the southern third of France.  You might find the grape variety on the label as well as the IGP zone.  An IGP is the same as PGI (Protected Geographical Indication). 
    3. Vin de France.  Wines can be made from grapes grown anywhere in France and can also be a blend.  20% of production falls into this category and quality varies significantly.  Formerly called Vin de Table (VDT).  A Vin de France is often labeled by grape variety.  A wine labeled Vin de France does not necessarily mean it is inexpensive!  
    4. The Vin Delimite de Qualite Superieure (VDQS) category was dropped.  Wines in this category were elevated to AOP or lowered to IGP wines.

    Major appellations of Provence, their grapes and wines

    Provence, another underrated French wine region, is located just south of the Southern Rhone and growing in popularity.  It sits along the Mediterranean coast and is only about 150 miles long and 100 miles north to south. It is also the oldest wine producing region of France and home to “The Center for Rosé Research”, the only scientific organization dedicated to studying rosé wine. 88% of the wine produced here is rosé!  Provence can give some thanks to wine drinkers of United States for their upswing in rosé sales. Provence is the benchmark for Rosé!

    These are the traditional grapes of Provence.  There are other more obscure and unique varieties here.

    Reds: Grenache Noir, Syrah, Mourvèdre, Carignan, Cinsault, Counoise, Tannat and Cabernet Sauvignon

    Whites: Rolle (Vermentino), Ugni Blanc (Trebbiano), Bourboulenc, Clairette, Marsanne, Roussanne and Grenache Blanc

    Grapes love to grow in Provence.  They get a lot of sunshine, not too much rain, warm days, cool evenings and no pests on the vines. There is a diversity in geography from mountains to slopes to sheltered valleys. Soils range from limestone to granite and even volcanic. What more could grapes ask for?  And then there is the very famous Provençal “garrigue” of wild lavender, rosemary, thyme and juniper that grows almost everywhere.

    Rosé wine comes in a variety of colors which is one of the resources of The Center for Rosé Research.  It seems that there is actually a rosé color scale displaying the top six Provence rosé colors to serve as a reference for professionals and consumers.  The colors are officially named: Red Currant, Peach, Grapefruit, Melon, Mango and Tangerine.  The Provence rosé flavor profile typically has bright flavors like sweet berries, watermelon, grapefruit, and freshly chopped herbs.

    There are 9 main regions (AOCs/AOPs) in the wine region of Provence.  

    Cotes de Provence is the largest AOP with 20,250 hectares under vine, and the biggest producer.  About 75% of the wine from Provence comes from this AOP and 89% of it is rosé usually made from Grenache, Cinsault, Syrah, Mourvèdre, Tibouren and Vermentino.  It consists of four “sub regions”: Sainte-Victoire, La Londe, Fréjus and Pierrefeu. Cotes de Provence is home to Miraval wines, made famous by Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie.

    Coteaux d’Aix-en-Provence is second largest in size with 4000 hectares.  It produces red, white and rosé wines and is one of the few regions in the Rhone Valley that allows plantings of Cabernet Sauvignon. Rosé is still king and is usually a blend of Grenache, Mourvèdre, Cinsault, Syrah and Counoise.  The famous Mistral winds heavily influence this region. Chapoutier is one familiar winemaker you will find here.

    Coteaux Varois, “The Heart of Provence” is located in the middle of Provence and makes their rosé from Cinsault, Mourvedre, Grenache and Syrah with Rolle being the dominant white grape.  It’s cooler here and the last Provence region to harvest.

    Les Baux-de-Provence is the warmest part of Provence and home to Val d’Enfer or “Valley of Hell” which allegedly inspired Dante’s poetry.  It is located north of the city of Arles and is named after the fortified 13th century town of Baux. The area is hot and dry thanks to the rugged terrain and the mistral winds, so it is perfect for biodynamic and organic viticulture.  Red wines are predominant here, mainly Grenache, Syrah, Cinsault and Cabernet Sauvignon. Laws of the Appellation require that all wines here must be blends and no two specific grape varieties can make up more than 90% of the blend.

    Cassis was the very  first AOP of Provence (1936) and you can find it along the Mediterranean coast just east of Marseille.  Cassis is THE region of Provence for white wines. Marsanne and Clairette are the primary grapes here that give Cassis wines an elegance and intense aromas of citrus, peach, honey and dried herbs.  And yes, you can taste the salt of the sea!

    Bandol is Cassis’ neighbor to the east and is known for its rich, intense red wines made with up to 95% Mourvèdre (minimum 50%), Grenache and Cinsault and aged in oak for at least 18 months.  Mourvèdre also helps make a very structured flavorful rosé with intense fruit and floral nose. Mourvèdre originated in Spain where it is known as Monastrell. Clairette is blended with Ugni Blanc or Bourboulenc to make some amazing Bandol whites.

    Palette At 100 acres, Palette is the smallest AOP of Provence.  Twenty-five grape varietals grow here (some never heard of ).  Mourvèdre is the main grape in rosé and red wines along with Cinsault, Grenache and a number of unusual grapes. Wines must be aged in oak for 18 months making them similar to wines of Bandol.  Whites make up only 37% of production and are often a blend of Clairette Blanche, Picardan, Bourboulenc and some other unusual grapes. Whites and rosés have to be aged at least 8 months.

    Bellet  is located on the far eastern edge of Provence surrounding the city of Nice.  The main white grape is Rolle (Vermentino) and it’s the only Provence AOP permitted to use Chardonnay.  You can actually distinguish the aroma of rose petals from a glass of Bellet rosé made from obscure grapes like Braquet.  Reds are made from Folle Noire along with Grenache and some Braquet. There are only 150 planted acres here, if that!

    Coteaux de Pierrevert became an AOP in 1998 and the most northerly of Provence AOPs.  Since it is located in the Alpes de Haute Provence, you will find a definite Rhone influence with red blends of Grenache and Syrah and whites of Grenache Blanc, Rolle, Roussanne and Marsanne. Rosé is very important here but it is not your typical Provençal Rosé, as 50% of the wine must be made “saignée” style. This is the only place this method is allowed.

    Some IGPs of Provence

    Méditérranée IGP is an IGP covering wines made in a large area of the southeast coast of France roughly corresponding to the Provence wine region plus Châteauneuf-du-Pape and Bandol  in the Southern Rhone Valley.  The IGP is widely used and many of its wines are rosé made in typical Provençal style from Grenache, Syrah, Carignan and Cinsault.  The small quantity of whites produced are typically made from Vermentino, Viognier and Muscat.

    Bouches-du-Rhone IGP is in the administrative department of the same name within the Provence wine region.  It is also home to Coteaux Aix-en-Provence and Les Baux de Provence AOPs.  Most of the production takes place around the town of Aix-en-Provence in the northeast of the department; however, there is one sub-region specified in the law, the Terre de Carmargue, which lies in the southwest. The IGP allows many grapes and it is interesting to note that typical Bordeaux grapes Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot fair very well here, but are excluded from use in the AOP.  You may see many excellent wines made from these varietals under the Bouches-du-Rhone IGP designation.  Half of the IGP production is rosé and is made from traditional Mediterranean grapes like Grenache, Cinsault and Mourvèdre.

    Some interesting facts about Provence rosé:

    The classic rosé bottle is clear and curved a bit like a corset (sometimes called a “flute a corset”) or a bowling pin “skittle”.  

    There are two ways to make rosé: traditional – crush red grapes and let the skins stay in contact with the juice from a few hours to three days; saignée – some juice is bled off from a red wine fermentation tank to improve the red wine leaving the rosé produced as a sort of a by-product.  There is a third way – mix red with white – but this method is illegal in France. Generally speaking the darker the rosé wine, the longer the grape skins have been in contact with the juice and the more tannic and red wine-like is the taste. Paler rosés are currently more popular and this style is dominant in Provence.

     

     

    Note from the author:

    My major objective has been to introduce you to wines or wine regions that may be unfamiliar to you, or maybe you just have not visited wines from these regions lately.  The article included some basic information about the regions, their grapes,  their appellations and wines hopefully without “information overload”.   All of this information is readily available on the internet along with some excellent books written by several reliable wine authors including Hugh Johnson & Jancis Robinson “The World Atlas of Wine”, Karen MacNeil’s “The Wine Bible” and Wine Folly “The Essential Guide to Wine”.  I just did the research for you.  Please accept my apologies if there is any incorrect data or information; I try my best to verify from several sources.  I am an avid wine lover and foodie who also really enjoys researching and continuing to learn something new.  

    I hope my objective has been met and that you may have a renewed interest in searching out and tasting wines from the Southern Rhone Valley and the Provence.  It is hard for me to write about wine without wishing that I had a glass of it in hand to taste!  To remedy this situation, I’ll be tasting a number of them soon paired with food appropriate for each region joined by some fellow adventurous wine lovers!

    Stay tuned for the following article about our initial reason for taking this wine adventure.  Southwest France was selected by Wine Enthusiast Magazine as the wine region of 2017, and we plan to learn all about the region, the appellation, the grapes and the wines!  

    Destination #2: Southwest France – the “Sud-Ouest”

  • 26Dec

    What IS volcanic wine, you are probably asking?  Here’s the simple definition:  Wine made from grapes grown in soil from an active, dormant or extinct volcano.  A number of years ago when my husband and I were novice occasional wine drinkers and started attending wine classes, we learned about two basic factors that go into making wine – 1) the terroir of the vineyard and 2) the winemaker who makes the wine.   There continues to be disagreement in the wine world over which one claims the most important role. However, since soil plays such a major part of terroir, it came as no surprise to me that volcanic wines deserve special attention. The topic of “volcanic” wines is nothing new — we also learned about the difference in soils during those long ago wine classes and always heard that “volcanic soil” really made a difference to the finished product.  After all, you don’t get much more terroir-driven than by a volcano!

    That was the extent of my interest in volcanoes……..that is until my husband and I attended an “Explosive Wines” Dinner at Palladio Trattoria, an Italian restaurant in Bonita Springs, Florida.  Marcello Palazzi, Regional Manager of The Winebow Group, presented an excellent representation of his company’s volcanic wines which were all paired perfectly with dishes prepared by Chef/Owner Emanuela “Emma” Calcara.  Marcello also displayed a book written by Canadian Master Sommelier John Szabo “Volcanic Wines: Salt, Grit and Power”, and gave us a mini-seminar on the topic as the wines were poured.  I found the wines served to be so enjoyable, intense and different from our routinely consumed wines, and the topic so interesting that I knew my next wine research project was about to take shape.  And that is how it begins………….        I bought John Szabo’s book, of course, and dove into it with a renewed passion about wine!  I’ll try to give you just enough “dirt” to get you to become more interested, read further, and even more importantly to try wines from all of these volcanic parts of the world.

    What should you expect when drinking a volcanic wine?

    As John Szabo best describes these wines, “they are salty, gritty, and powerful”.  Mr. Szabo spent 6 years researching and writing this book which he published in 2016, so he definitely put some effort into his beautiful glossy fact-full tabletop book which I found really fascinating.  Here are some basics he presented about the salty, gritty and powerful wines from volcanic soils that appear as a common thread throughout; however, do not lead to any scientific conclusions:

    • They have a common mouth-watering quality: sometimes from high acids, sometimes from saltiness and sometimes both.
    • Elements of mineral salts are usually involved like potassium, magnesium, calcium, chloride, sulfate and carbonate. This may explain any bitter but pleasant taste.
    • Volcanic wines also have a savory character. Their fruity character is usually accompanied by and often dominated by an earthy herbal flavor.
    • They usually display a density that comes from the wine extract itself and not the alcohol or tannin. This leads to an intense heavy flavor that can be gritty, salty, hard, unmistakable, and may be considered unpleasant by some people, but not to me.

    Some volcano basics

    I know you are thinking this information is not of interest to you.  I know it isn’t as exciting as reading about a great glass of wine!  If so feel free to pass it by, but it does give some helpful insight into the resulting volcano wine regions and the wines that come from them.  I’ll try to keep it simple!

    What’s a volcano?

    A volcano is essentially an opening in the earth’s crust that allows hot gas to escape often spewing out molten or solid rock and ash.  The crust is made up of a number of fractured “plates” that sort of drift around like rafts on ocean currents.  Most volcanoes form on the edges of these plates which can be moving toward each other (convergent boundaries), past each other (transform boundaries) or drifting apart (divergent boundaries).

    There are three main types of volcanism:

    1. Rifting – Submarine volcanism is the result of forming fissures, cracks or breaks at the edges after drifting apart. New sea crust and undersea mountains are formed.  Sometimes these mountains break the surface and form islands like the Azores or Iceland.  There can also be continental rifting that can lead to volcanism as in Alsace, France and Pfalz, Germany.
    2. Subduction – This occurs when the heavier oceanic plate is dragged under the continental plate. The sinking slab can eventually cause an eruption through the weakened continental crust above.  A chain or arc of stratovolcanoes forms parallel to the offshore subduction zone such as the Campanian Volcanic Arc, the Cascade Volcanic Arc and the Andean Volcanic Belt.  Much of the western edge of North America (Oregon’s coastal hills) is made up of reclaimed oceanic crust.
    3. Hotspots – These are areas on the earth’s surface above upwellings of unusually fiery molten rock from the mantle, or that part of the earth between the core and the crust. They are found at or near plate boundaries such as in the Azores, the Canary Islands and Hawaii.

    What are the types of lava?

    • Lava is that hot molten rock generated by a volcano which then solidifies and cools. Lavas are categorized by their amount of silica (silicon dioxide).  Silica is found in nature as sand or quartz.
    • Basalt lava has a high proportion of iron and magnesium and is characteristically dark in color. Its silica content is relatively low and comprises more than 90% of all volcanic rocks.
    • Andesite, dacite and rhyolite are other major types of volcanic rock in order of increasing percentages of silica, potassium and sodium, and decreasing iron and magnesium. This makes rhyolite generally the lightest in color due to high silica content.
    • Tephra is the name for all of the materials ejected from a volcano.
    • Most volcanoes have a main type of lava which is emitted during an eruption; however just to complicate the makeup of the soil, the composition in the magma (molten or semi-molten rock and solids) below can change in composition.

    There are two main types of eruption.   

    Mt. Vesuvius  overlooking Naples

    Effusive eruptions are relatively mild, have gentle lava flows and emit mostly basalt lavas.   This type eruption has occurred at the Kilauea Volcano on Hawaii and Mt. Haleakala on Maui.  Explosive eruptions are by far the scariest!  Pliny the Younger was a Roman statesman who described in great detail the horrific volcanic eruption of Vesuvius in 79 AD.  Since then, Vesuvius has erupted more than a dozen times.  The eruption of December 16, 1631 lasted several days and is one of the 10 deadliest recorded with a death toll of 6,000 people.  Mt. Etna killed more than 20,000 people in 1669.  Tambora in Indonesia is said to be the deadliest volcanic eruption killing 92,000 people in 1815.  Volcanoes are to be feared!!!!

    What are the different types of volcanic soil?

    Volcanic soil is rich in minerals only found in the center of the earth and has an increased water retention.  It is pest and disease resistant and closer to a neutral PH than other soils.

    • Lava has a smoky, earthy, savory, salty “taste and texture”.
    • Basalt, that common volcanic rock formed from the rapid cooling of basaltic lava, exhibits a rich, clean, round and oily taste and texture.
    • Pumice is like a rough textured glass, which may or may not contain crystals. It’s taste and texture exhibit crunch, graphite, earth and dust.
    • Tufo (yes, like Greco di Tufo DOCG in Campania, Italy) is a type of rock made from volcanic ash ejected from a vent during an eruption. The taste and texture are ash, savory, compact and gritty.  I can honestly say that the delightful bottle of Greco di Tufo we enjoyed with last night’s dinner displayed those characteristics.

     There is no universal connection between all volcanic wines and their soils.  There are so many different types of soil with so many various compositions that on top of that, have been moved around by rocks, glaciers, wind, water, and people. We DO know that the soil does influence the wine; winelovers and critics have sung the praises of wines from limestone soils for many years.  While scientists may still be challenged to explain wine taste and flavors in a relevant way, we winelovers know that the taste and flavors of many wines grown on or near volcanoes are especially good!

    Volcanic wine regions of the world

    According to John Szabo, volcanic soil accounts for just one percent of the world’s surface, but a lot of it is used for growing grapes, so he had to put some constraints on what regions to study.  The result is a list of eight wine growing regions reviewed in his book:

    Western hemisphere – The Pacific Northwest, Northern California and Chile

    Eastern hemisphere – Macaronesia – Azores, Madeira and the Canary Islands; Alsace; Germany; Italy; Hungary and Santorini.

    After reading the book, I quickly decided that I needed to focus on a lot less “dirt” especially if planning to taste through a number of these wines with some adventurous winelover friends.  We would need a 2 day seminar to cover that much terroir!  So I made a forkandcorkdivine.com decision to stick with volcanic wines of Europe, specifically the Azores, Madeira, Canary Islands, Alsace, France; Germany; Italy and Hungary.  Santorini is one of my favorite wine regions, but we have already talked about it in two previous forkandcorkdivine.com articles and tasted on two previous occasions.

    Volcanic wine regions of Europe

    MACARONESIA: “The fortunate islands”

    The Mid-Atlantic Mountain Range is as grand as the Rockies and has formed over many years.  It is now the longest submarine mountain chain in the world.  Macaronesia refers to the archipelagos of the Azores and Madeira (Portugal) the Canary Islands (Spain) and the island nation of Cape Verde.  All of them have formed on top of growing lava mounds that have broken through the ocean’s surface as part of the Mid-Atlantic Range.  All of them became wine producers except for Cape Verde as early as the 15th century.

    THE AZORES (AҪORES) – Portuguese

    The Azores are a sub-tropical nine-island archipelago on the 38th parallel about 1000 miles off the coast of Portugal and see a lot of volcanic action.  There is a minor earthquake every day somewhere around the islands and sometimes it’s a major one.  There has been a volcanic eruption every 50 years in the Azores, the last one occurring in 1957.  That should surely make life on the Azores very exciting and stressful!  Think the life of a winemaker is difficult?  Try making wine on the Azores!!!!! That is just what is happening in the three DOPs of the Azores plus smaller quantities on all of the other islands.  Very little wine leaves the islands.  They have suffered through fungal disease and phylloxera and have an extreme volcanic terroir of barren black basaltic stones.  John Szabo described his visit to the island of Terceira and the vineyards of DOP Biscoitos as some of the strangest vineyards he has ever seen.  Grape vines need to ward off the strong north Atlantic winds and are grown in squared-off dry stonewalls called curreletas (or little corrals) made from lump basalt rocks with each square surrounding some wild and bushy vines.  The poorer the ground, the smaller the size of the curreleta.  And is it ever poor!  Most of it is just soil-free crushed rocks. These vines have to really dig deep to come up with any moisture.  Pico is dominated by the Volcano Ponto do Pico, Portugal’s highest mountain.  Pico is also the youngest island in the Azores at just 300,000 years above the sea, and is the main wine producing island. It actually has to have supplemental soil brought in from neighboring islands.  The viticulture here is so unique that it was classified as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2004.

    The Azores Wine Company was established in 2014 and is the best hope for exporting Azorean wines.  Azores Wine Company produces a red wine “a Probidia” sourced from old field blend varietals primarily if not entirely made from American grape varietals.  The 2014 tech sheets about the wine list the grapes as the Isabella varietal which was planted following phylloxera. Isabella is phylloxera-resistant.  It is related to the American “fox grapes” and has an intoxicating savage quality on the nose.  According to Filipe Rocha, Founding Partner of the Azores Wine Company, “Proibida is a wine made with grapes from old vines which have a profile that reminds (us of) the ones made from Isabella. It’s our tribute to history and local culture.”

    Only 166 cases were made of the 2015 vintage. It no longer names the varietal as Isabella but is described as both “simultaneously delicate and powerful” with food-friendly acidity, profound minerality and terrific concentration.  It should be a good pairing for seafood, mushrooms and game. 

     Three white varietals to know about are Arinto dos Acores, which is the most widely planted and displays an acid and citrus flavor; Verdelho which is aromatic, botanical and fruity and Terrantez do Pico, with herbal, floral, green citrus notes along with mineral salts and seaweed.

    MADEIRA – Portuguese

    Madeira is part of a multi-isle archipelago and submarine ridge made up of the southernmost tips of a volcanic iceberg 200 leagues under the sea on the Tore underwater mountain range.   It is 600 miles from mainland Portugal and 300 miles from Morocco.  Madeira Island, one of the only two inhabited islands, is the top of a massive shield volcano with sides of the island dropping sharply into the sea. The volcano last erupted 6500 years ago.  A shield volcano has a low profile dome shape due to low viscosity lava spreading out over a large area.  Mauna Loa, in Hawaii, is the world’s largest shield volcano.

    Madeira is a very popular year-round tourist destination, but it is really famous for the fortified wine grown from grapes on the island and having the same name, Madeira.  It’s a 550 year old wine known to all explorers and sailors who ever passed through this part of the Atlantic.  It was a favorite of the United States founding fathers.  George Washington supposedly drank a pint every night with dinner!  Early cocktail parties, called Madeira parties, were common among the well-to-do colonials.  Yes indeed, Madeira wine made this tiny little rock world famous!

    The basalt bedrock has yielded extremely fertile soils capable of producing three times the average for quality vineyards elsewhere.  Narrow green terraces called poios cling to the sides of the hills.  Narrow strips of land have to be held in place by dry stonewalls to keep them from washing down to the sea.  Vines are grown on a traditional pergola type of system called latada.  The height of the pergola ranges from 3 – 6 feet, the higher elevation the pergola, the lower to the ground it is, and all vineyards are tended and harvested by hand.   In fact vines grown at 2600 feet are called “vines of the ground”.  The main varieties of grapes and styles of Madeira are:

    • Sercial – A white grape with a razor-sharp acidity that makes the driest style of wine produced.
    • Verdelho – A white grape produced exclusively in a medium-dry style.
    • Terrantez – A white grape highly susceptible to disease and made in medium-dry or sweet style.
    • Boal – Bual Branco is produced only in a medium-sweet style.
    • Malvasia – Or “Malmsey” is an aromatic white grape brought from Greece and makes the richest sweetest style of Madeira.
    • Tinta Negra – The most important grape on Madeira and accounting for 85% of wine produced. It’s the only grape allowed in all of Madeira’s official sweetness categories and used for basic inexpensive Madeiras which includes the light style known as “Rainwater”.
    • Rainwater style is said to be the result of accidentally leaving casks out in the rain. The buyer initially complained but found that the customers enjoyed it.  And so the Rainwater style became official.  Today it is reserved for pale or light-gold colored medium-dry Madeira with an indication of 10 years or less.

    Madeira is a relatively neutral, high-acid, low-alcohol type of wine requiring a long time to process.  The soils are low in potassium and therefore low in PH and accumulate sugar more slowly.  Madeira is also fortified, 17 to 20% alcohol, by the addition of brandy to the fermenting grapes which kills the yeast and inhibits malolactic fermentation.  Then the wine is “maderized” or heated and oxidized either in hot attics or specially designed tanks.  Unlike wines that mellow with age, Madeira becomes more concentrated and fiery during its long stay in wood.  The Madeira Wine Institute strictly controls the entire process from the vineyard to sales, and not a single drop of wine moves without approval of the Institute.  Many great Madeiras might have taken 40 years to completion.  It can be aged as long as 200 years, and you probably won’t find anything else like it in the wine world.

    These are the approved levels of sweetness measured by g/l of sugar left after fermentation:

    • Dry or Extra Dry (Seco) – 50-60 g/l – Includes all wines made with Sercial.
    • Medium Dry (Meio Seco) – 60-80 g/l – Includes all wines made with Verdelho and some Terrantez.
    • Medium Sweet or Medium Rich (Meio Doce) – 80 – 100 g/l – All Boal wines and some Terrantez.
    • Sweet or Rich or Full Rice (Doce) – 100+ g/l – All Malvasia wines.

    Just to further complicate selecting a bottle of Madeira, you will want to look at the vintage.  It can either be a blend of vintages, or a single vintage, but it must be at least three years old.

    • Blended – comes with an age designation of anywhere from 5 to over 50 years. And even more confusing, this just means that it displays the characteristics of a wine aged that many years.
    • Vintage Date Wine – from a single harvest and can be labeled with that year along with several other identifications!
    • Solera – more confusion: a sort of hybrid single-vintage and blended wine.  I’ll just leave it at that!

    All styles of Madeira have a backbone of acidity and are quite enjoyable on their own but also excellent served with food, the type of food depending upon the sweetness of the Madeira.  They are best served in good size white wine glasses so there is plenty of room to swirl. An open bottle of Madeira will last nearly forever!  Enjoy.

    THE CANARY ISLANDS (ISLAS CANARIAS OR CANARIES) – Spanish

    The Canaries are a group of seven major islands located in the Atlantic Ocean 62 miles west of Morocco, Tenerife being the largest.  The Canaries are the most tropical of all Europe’s wine regions.  All of them are oceanic volcanoes formed by continental drift over a hotspot.  The oldest islands came out of the ocean 20 million years ago.  Tenerife’s Pico del Teide is the biggest of all the Canary Island volcanos, the tallest mountain in Spain and also the world’s third highest at 12,198 feet. Del Teide last erupted in 1909 but is considered a “Decade Volcano”, or one worth keeping an eye on due to its proximity to populated areas and previous history of destruction.

    There are 30 some indigenous grape varietals here that have been untouched by phylloxera for centuries with over 80 varietals growing today and have been unknown by most of us in the modern world until just a few decades ago.  The volcanic soils are quite diverse from ash and rich organic matter rock to white ash and clay-sandy soils.  The landscape of these islands features scenery different than any other wine region.  The vineyards look like something from a science-fiction movie.  On Tenerife you will see long braided grape vines tied together with dried banana peels. The island of Lanzarote has extremely unusual views of its treeless, moonlike landscapes with craters and strange rock formations with stiff breezes that are really tough on young grapevines.  The solution is to dig a wide shallow hole in the volcanic black ash soil, plant a vine, then build a semi-circular rock barrier around it.  Each hole and wall holds but one grapevine!  You may also see camels carrying grapes to the winery!  There are 10 separate DOs (wine appellations) in the Canaries with 5 of them on Tenerife.  About 250 producers make wine here but only 11 of them make their way into the US.  With the recent emergence of modern wines, hopefully there will be more.

    Listάn Blanco (the Palomino Fino of Sherry) is the most planted white varietal, and exhibits crisp and lively aromatic intensity with lemon-lime and green apple flavors.  It is usually made without oak.

    Listάn Negro is the most planted red grape.  It makes peppery, light, low-tannin wine of modest structure and complexity.  It is also known as Criolla in Argentina, País in Chile and was identical to the Mission grape brought to California by Mexican settlers.  One example that I plan to taste is an Ignios Origenes Tenerife DO Vcoden Daute Isora from a 30-year old vineyard planted on the iron-rich clay loam of a coastal banana plantation.  It is expected to be tart and salty with herbal raspberry and other flavors such as sour cherry, red beets, pepper, iodine and smoky, funky earth.

    ALSACE AND GERMANY

    Some 400,000 million years ago, in this corner of northeastern France and southwestern Germany, the earth’s crust started to tear apart and crumble.  Most of the volcanism ended a long time ago, however there are still some clearly active small pockets.  This activity makes for some of the most prized vineyard land in northern Europe.  Only a few vineyards are considered volcanic, but their wines have been praised for a thousand years.

    ALSACE AND THE RANGEN DE THANN GRAND CRU

    About 300 miles due east of Paris you will find the wine region of Alsace, the northernmost wine region in France after Champagne.  The winelands of Alsace lie along the western margin of the Upper Rhine Graben, a major rift about 220 miles long and average of 31 miles wide. The Rhine River flows through a trench, the Rhine Rift Valley, which has sunk several miles into the earth’s crust.  The French Vosges and German Black Forest Mountains were once united but are now 30 miles apart.  The finest grapes grow on the foothills on either side of the valley.   Volcanism began here underwater several hundred million years ago.  Volcanic cones formed along the way spewed out a mixture of sandstone, granite, limestone and more.  The local pink sandstone – gres de Vosges – is a favorite for building cathedrals.

    The town of Thann in southern Alsace displays the clearest evidence of volcanism and a single vineyard has reigned supreme for a thousand years –the Rangen de Thann Grand Cru! The Rangenkopf Mountain is 1950 feet high at the southernmost point of Alsace, right over the Vosges Fault Line.  Rangen is the only true volcanic terroir in Alsace with soil very poor in organic matter and clay, rich in potassium, phosphorous and magnesium and dark grey-brown-black in color.  The vines on these 47 acres seem to grow right out of stone on a steep high hillside reaching up to 1500+ feet high.   It’s a windy, slow-ripening site able to grow rich and luxurious Riesling and Pinot Gris; Gewurztraminer and Muscat are also grown here. All Rangen wines are concentrated, bold, powerful, long, deep, have a great aging capacity and always taste dry. The Rieslings of the Rangen have been found to be consistently higher in ash and the most minerality when compared to other Rieslings.  Gunflint, roasted and smoky are terms often used to describe them. The Alsatian winemaker’s goal is to showcase the character of these grapes, and all varietally labeled Alsace AOC must contain 100% of the variety named on the label.  There is no doubt these wines display the uniqueness of a single terroir with soils originating from a volcano and are quite possibly the ultimate terroir wine. These are wines that serious winelovers should not miss!

    Two of the most highly respected vineyards (or clos) you should definitely know and taste their wines are:

    Domaine Zind-Humbrecht’s Clos Saint Urbain: Wines from Zind-Humbrecht’s 12-acre walled vineyard of Clos Saint Urbain consistently rate in the mid to high 90s.  A 2012 Pinot Gris Clos Saint Urbain scored 94 from Robert Parker and 93 Wine Spectator with a description of silky, zesty acidity to balance pineapple, candied coconut and ginger, white peach and grapefruit zest and minerality running throughout.

    Domaine Schoffit’s Clos Saint Theobald: The 16-acre Clos Saint Theobald of Domaine Schoffit produces similarly highly rated wines. Their 94 point 2013 Riesling displays lemon and lime zest notes, is dry, muscular and toned with an almost salty aftertaste.

     GERMANY

    Up until the twentieth century, Germany and France were the two greatest wine-producing countries in the world.  In fact a bottle of German Riesling sold for more than a First Growth Bordeaux and Grand Cru Burgundy.  Prices have never returned to that high, but Germany does have a lot of excellent wine to offer—–and much of it is volcanic!   Nearly 60% of the world’s Riesling vineyards can be found in Germany, and Riesling is planted in all 13 official regions making it an ideal place to study the differences and similarities created by various bedrocks and soils.  Studies completed during an official Viticulture and Oenology and Sensory Evaluation by Dr. Ulrich Fischer at the DLR –Rheinpfalz (a German research center) demonstrated a clear connection between vineyard geology and wine style.  Any serious winelover has found this to be true for many centuries, but we are still searching for scientific proof!

    These are German wine regions that display a correlation between volcanism, soil and wine style:

    Ahr & Mittelrhein: The Eifel Volcanic Field contains over 200 volcanoes in western Germany north of the Mosel River displaying dormant hotspot volcanism.  It extends from Belgium and Luxemburg to east of the Rhine River.  The last great eruption occurred 12,000 years ago spreading pumice and ash from Sweden to northern Italy.  There are still numerous geysers present.

    Ahr is one of the smallest (1400 acres) and least known of Germany’s wine regions.  Its soils vary between slate, basalt and clay of volcanic origin.  Red grapes account for 86% and three-quarters of it is Spätburgunder (Pinot Noir) which is more than any other German wine region.

    The Mittelrhein is located in the tourist portion of the Rhine known as the Middle Rhine. This area is a beautiful region of steep terraced vineyards crowned with medieval castles and ruins and was designated as a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2002.    The 1100 acres of vineyards are dominated by white grapes, primarily Riesling, and wines here are seldom exported.

    Volcanoes in the Mosel are over 280 million years older than the Eifel.  The Mosel River loops northward into the Wittlischer Senke marking where the earth was pulled apart along a fault.   Slate is plentiful here, sometimes blue-grey and sometimes burnt-orange, but always porous and heat-retaining. There are almost 22,000 acres in Mosel and Riesling reigns supreme.  The world famous Dr. Loosen can be found here and the Würzgarten (Spice Garden) Vineyard is renowned. The Bremmer Calmont Vineyard is located in the Mosel and is the steepest vineyard in the world with a 60-70 degree incline.

    Nahe & Rheinhessen: The Saar-Naar Senke runs from the Saar River to the Nahe River south of Mosel and represents another area of rifting resulting in volcanic flows 285 – 290 million years ago.

    The Nahe is made up of about 10,000 acres of vineyards with 75% white grapes dominated by Riesling.  About 500 of these acres are planted on an extraordinary range of volcanic soil which produces some of the regions finest wines.  An immense subterranean volcano collapsed around the region of Bad Kreuznach resulting in some spectacular vestiges of volcanism.  The region was covered in rhyolitic rock known locally as porphyry.  Today most of Nahe wine is consumed domestically or sold directly to consumers.  The history of Nahe grapes found them blended with other German grapes and labeled as “Rhine wine”.  I remember those jugs of “Rhine wine” in my VERY early days of wine drinking!  How about a jug of Carlo Rossi Rhine Wine for $3.95?  Much to my surprise, I see it is all still available; however the cost is now $10.99 – inflation at work!  Luckily for us winelovers, Nahe makes some of Germany’s most revered wines that are racy and full of flinty-minerality and on the opposite spectrum from that jug wine.

    The Rheinhessen is the largest of the 13 German wine regions with 65,000 acres.  The volcanic soils of Nahe continue here.  Two of the finest vineyards are the warm, shallow Hollberg, and the cool, steep and stony Herrkretz where planting is classified as “a true horror”.  White grapes Riesling and Müller-Thurgau account for most of the vineyards, but the red Dornfelder is becoming more important.   Rheinhessen is still remembered as the home of Liebfraumilch, a semi-sweet wine that helped to erode the reputation of German wine on the export market.   Remember the little Blue Nun?  Today quality-oriented top producers in Rheinhessen would not dare to produce that wine.

    Pfalz (the Palatinate): The Upper Rhine Graben, lies on the western side of the Upper Rhine Valley.  This wine region is situated under the lee of the Palatinate Forest on the Haardt Mountains.  Pechsteinkopf is a basaltic volcano above the town of Forst.  One of Forst’s most respected vineyards GG Forster Pechstein is named after it.  Pech (pitch) and stein (stone) refer to the abundant pitch-black basaltic stones and gives the best description.  The Pfalz has become one of the more inventive and exciting wine regions in Germany.  There are nearly 20 wineries on the Pechstein and they are all Riesling; however of the 58,000 acres in Pfalz only 24% of it is Riesling.  Plantings of red wine varieties such as Spatburgunder (Pinot Noir), Portugieser and Dornfelder continue to increase.  Pfalz is a little more southerly and wines here are more “creamy” and less harsh than the northern regions.

    Dr. Bürklin-Wolf is a 400-year old property and now one of the EU’s largest Biodyvin-certified biodynamic wine estates. They are located in the village of Wachenheim known for its high quality Rieslings.  The Bürklin-Wolf Wachenheim 2015 Rieslings are full of fresh green apple and peach aromas with juicy mouth-feel and spice, clean minerality and elegant acidity. They are matured in stainless steel tanks and large oak barrels.

    The Friedrich Becker Estate is one of the top Pinot Noir (Spӓtburgunder) producers in Germany.  Becker is located almost on the border of Alsace – in fact almost 70% of their vineyards are actually in Alsace.  The Beckers produce about 12,000 cases annually.  Soil is limestone and  one can expect a spicy treat from their estate 2013 Pinot Noir full of strawberry and bright cherry fruit, a hint of tobacco and dusty earthiness and layers of subtle textures.

    Baden, the “Black Forest” area, is Germany’s southernmost wine region and is home to the Kaiserstuhl Volcanic Complex which rises atop the junction of two major faults where periodic eruptions occurred from 18 million to 16 million years ago.   Soils range from granite, gravel, limestone and clay to loess and volcanic stone. This is Germany’s warmest location; therefore its wines are usually more full-bodied and higher in alcohol than other German wine regions. The Pinot family is now challenging Riesling with almost 55% of the vineyards planted in pinot varietals (23% Spätburgunder/ Pinot Noir).

    German wine classifications can be extremely confusing.  In addition to regions and internal smaller regions, wines can be made at six levels of ripeness which you may see on the label:

    • Kabinett: Typically light-bodied, low in alcohol and usually dry or off-dry.
    • Spatlese: Grapes are harvested later than kabinett, may be dry or off-dry with greater fruit intensity and fuller body.
    • Auslese: Made from very ripe grapes harvested in bunches, lush and often fairly sweet.
    • Beerenauslese: Made from very ripe individual hand selected grapes, affected by noble rot, with deep honeyed richness and always sweet.
    • Trockenbeerenauslese: The richest, sweetest, rarest and most expensive of all German wines; enormously concentrated and exquisitely balanced.
    • Eiswein: Made from very ripe, frozen grapes; high in both sweetness and acidity. Must be naturally frozen on the vine as opposed to commercial freezing in other countries.

    And then there is the level of sweetness categories:

    • Trocken: bone dry; less than .9% residual sugar.
    • Halbtrocken: half dry; less than 1.8% residual sugar.
    • Lieblich or mild: some sweetness; up to 4.5% residual sugar.

    Germany is considered one of the world’s top producers of elegant white wines. Of the nearly 60 grapes grown, Riesling is the most prestigious.  Yes, the German wine organization and labeling systems are complicated; however, these highly acidic, very fresh and crisp wines with their origins in volcanic soil are not to be ignored!

    HUNGARY THE BAKONY-BALATON HIGHLANDS VOLCANIC FIELD & THE ZEMPLÉN HILLS

    Modern Hungary is a small country in the middle of Eastern Europe bordered by Slovakia, Ukraine, Romania, Croatia, Serbia, Slovenia and Austria, and was once one of the most powerful forces in the world.  There are 22 wine regions in Hungary, and you don’t need to travel far to find volcanic rocks.  There are arcs of volcanoes running parallel to a subduction zone of the Intra-Carpathian plate and other isolated volcano cones here and there.  There are dozens of mineral springs and thermal pools in the countryside; all reminders of volcanic activity a couple million years ago.  There are now so many hot springs, spas and wellness hotels that Hungarians call themselves a “spa superpower”.

    Hungary has a long history and culture of winemaking and unique varietals.  Vineyards have been thriving at least since Roman times. When the Magyars arrived from the Ural Mountains in the ninth century, they brought a language which is one of the few in Europe that does not belong to the Indo-European language family.  Hungarian is definitely a difficult language!  In the seventeenth century, the extraordinary wine Tokaji Aszu (TOKE-eye ah-SOO) put Hungary on the international wine map. It is still one of the world’s greatest dessert wines to this day.   For most of the modern era Hungarian wines weren’t known outside of the Soviet Union and other Communist countries.  Hungary was under Communist rule for 40 years.

    There are twenty-two wine regions and each of them has their own unique character.  The wines have been described as “colorful” and varied.  There are a number of indigenous white varieties with late ripening, distinctive, aromatic fruit and floral scents and some bold red varieties.  They are also fully bodied, rich in minerals due to their volcanic soils.  Wine regions that you should know are: Tokaj-Hegyalja, by far the most prestigious, Somlό, Badacsony, Szekszάrd, Villάny-Siklόs, Eger and Mάtra.

    Four of Hungary’s finest volcanic regions are: Tokaj-Hegyalja, Badascony, Balaton-felvidek (Bakony-Balaton Highlands) and Somlό.

    Bakony-Balaton Highlands Volcanic Field is home to over 50 eruptive centers.  These trapezoidal-shaped volcanic flat-topped hills are the result of volcanic activity that began 7.5 million years ago and lasted for 5 million years.  The remainders of all this activity left strange formations around the northern shores of Lake Balaton where vines now grow.  Further north the volcanos of Somlό share the same genetics featuring eroded volcanic necks of columnar basalt or “organ pipes”.

    Badascony (bah-dah-choin) and Balaton-felvidέk, on the north shore of Lake Balaton, are two of the 22 official wine regions.   The landscape is beautiful and much of the area is now protected by the Balaton-felvidέk National Park.  Balaton-felvidέk is a relative large appellation with the separate appellation of Badascony within it. Vineyards cover these volcanic “hegy” or hills in Hungarian.  Lake Balaton is a remnant of the ancient Pannonian Sea which covered most of Hungary until about 5.5 million years ago.

    Distance to the lake makes many differences based on humidity and temperatures.  And then there are many differences in the soil between all those volcanoes making it a lot for winemakers to understand and make the best of.

    Badascony produces primarily white wines – Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, Szürkebarάt (pinot gris), and Olasz Rizling (Welschriesling in Austria and Graševina in Croatia); however red grapes are permitted and grown.  Kέknyelű or “Blue Stocked” is utterly unique to this region and named for the color of its stems.  It makes a smoky, flinty, honeyed floral wine with sizzling acids, salty taste and almost chewable extracts.

    Somlό (shown-low), nicknamed Witness Mountain,  is one of the smallest, most beautiful and most remote regions specializing in traditional wood-aged powerful dense white wines – Furmint, Hάrslevelὔ, and Juhfark.  Just a bit of trivia: the Hapsburgs believed that drinking Juhfark, or sheep’s tail, guaranteed that a pregnant woman give birth to a boy.  Then there is Nάszέjszakάk Bora, the “wedding night wine” of Somlό which “guarantees” the birth of a boy.  And by remote, I mean few paved roads or limited electricity!  This is Hungary’s smallest appellation and most of the vineyards sit on Somlό-hegy (Somlό Hill), a single truncated volcanic cone.  Somlo is the only region that grows any major amount of Juhfark which is considered a blue-collar grape and needing time and oxygen to make it drinkable.  Furmint gives a complex array of savory and botanical notes with screaming stony non-fruit flavors.  Hάrslevelű is softer and more aromatic but still mineral in character.  The best of these wines is usually fermented in 500 liter casks and can age for decades.  

    The Somlόi Apάtsάgi Pincέszet, originally owned by the Benedictine Pannonhalma Archabbey, was expropriated and redistributed during Communism.  In 2001 Zoltan Balogh, grandson of a previous winemaker, bought it and brought it back to life.  It is planted in Furmint, Juhfark, Hάrslevelű and Olaszrizling. The Hάrslevelű grapes are low cordon trained and dry farmed without herbicides or pesticides in a mixture of clay, sand and basalt.  The grapes are late harvested, handpicked for extreme ripeness, fermented and aged in oak, then bottled unfiltered.  Balogh believes his grapes need to fully express the terroir. The 2015 Hάrslevelű wine is oily, concentrated, bright and powerful without losing fruitiness.  It is rich and sweet in notes of pineapple, pear and strawberry while firm and savory at the same time.

    Stephan (Istvάn) Spiegelberg was a German DJ and BMW test car driver in his previous life.  In 1993, he left Germany and bought 2 hectares of vines plus a small home without running water or electricity in Somlό.  He began bottling wines in 2004.  Spiegelberg Artisan Winery cellars and production are the smallest in Hungary and he works everything by hand making some “classic” Somlό wines but mainly quirky artisanal wines.  After hand harvesting and sorting, his grapes go into Hungarian oak barrels for fermentation and continuing barrel aging for 12-16 months to the sounds of Gregorian chamber music.  Spiegelberg’s wines are heady, dense, and gripping with smoky minerality and brininess.  You can read a first-hand account of a visit to Spiegelberg Winery by googling a blogpost “Stephan Spiegelberg’s passion & candles reveal a special wine site” at hobberdogchronicles.royhobbs.co.  Our local winelovers, Tom and Ellen Giffen visited Spiegelberg in 2016 and tell you all about their amazing experience.

    The 2011 Spiegelberg Wedding Night Wine is a blend of Juhfark, Hάrslevelű and Furmint blending fruit, flowers, orange blossom aromatics, salt and smoke in one bottle!  2230 bottles were produced.

    The Tornai Pincέszet historic estate was founded in 1946 by Endre Tornai, who was among the first to bottle wine commercially from Somlό in 1984, and is now one of the two largest in Somlό.  He started out on a one acre vineyard and now owns 56 planted in the usual Somlό varietals.  There is special emphasis on agro-technical and biological protection.  Juhfark Premium is Tornai’s flagship wine macerated and aged in a blend of stainless steel and oak.    The 2015 Tornai Juhfark Premium shows overripe aromas on the nose, underlined by stony notes.  It is very complex on the palate with a vibrant and round acidity.

    On a previous occasion, I have also enjoyed a Kreinbacher Brut Classic Sparkling wine from Somlό made of Furmint and Chardonnay which won a gold medal at the 2016 Champagne and Sparkling Wine World Championship.

    The Zemplέn Hills rise up above Hungary’s Great Plain on the other side of the country in the northeastern corner.  They are near a subduction zone related to the formation of the Carpathian Mountains along a volcanic arc that stretches from Budapest to the northeast tip of Hungary.  There are all sorts of signs of volcanic action here including multiple deep layers of various rocks, ash, and tephra.  The region is also known for hot springs and geysers.

    Tokaj-Hegyάlja is the wine region that covers the foot of the Zemplέn Hills.  It is named after the town of Tokaj which sits at the foot of Tokaj-hegy or Bald Mountain, the region’s tallest volcanic remnant at 1680 feet.  This is home to Tokaji Aszú, Hungary’s most famous wine, which is made from botrytized grapes, and they’ve been making it for at least 500 years.  In the 18th century, it was the most highly-prized and sought-after wine in the world, pronounced by Louis XIV as the “Wine of Kings and King of Wines”.  The exceptional terroir, volcanic soils, miles of underground wine cellars, and centuries-old wine making traditions all helped the region to become UNESCO designated on its list of World Heritage Cultural Landscapes in 2002. Soils are complex with the most important type called nyirok, a heavy clay from volcanic rock ranging in color from reddish to brown or black.  Grapes primarily used now are Furmint and Hάrslevelű .

    Tokaju Aszú is one of the world’s most multi-dimensional wines.  It has extreme high levels of sugar, extract and acid with astonishing flavor complexity and is one of the most decadent but-well-balanced sweet wines in the world.  The wine is made by soaking individually hand-picked, botrytis-affected berries (aszú) in a base of fresh grape must or wine for a few hours up to a few days, then pressing, re-fermenting and ageing at least 18 months in wood.  Sweetness is measured in puttonyos.

    3 puttonyos – 6-9% residual sugar

    4 puttonyos – 9-12% residual sugar (Equivalent to a French Sauterne)

    (Note: 3 and 4 were legally abolished in 2014, but they are still on the market.)

    5 puttonyos – 12-15 % residual sugar

    6 puttonyos – 15-18% residual sugar

    Tokaji Aszú Esszencia – 18-45% residual sugar

    Tokaji Esszencia – 45-90% residual sugar

    Tokaji Aszú is meant to be drunk in a 2-ounce serving (or less!) and should always be lightly chilled.  There is no need to age it further and upon opening can be kept in the refrigerator for months.  It is traditionally served with Hungarian celebratory desserts or else paired with foie gras or Roquefort or Stilton cheese.

    The three main white grapes used in Tokaji are Furmint, Hάrslevelű, and Sάrga Muskotάly, also known as Muscat Blanc a Petits Grains.  Since the 1990s, Zeta (formerly called Orέmus), Kövέrszőlő and Kabar are also permitted.   The wine must be aged for at least three years in oak barrels and is always bottled in the traditional squat 500 ml Tokaji Aszú bottles.

    Orέmus has been owned by the Alvarez family since 1993. Alvarez also owns Spain’s most famous estate, Vega-Sicilia.  They began an ambitious restoration plan, built a modern production facility and invested heavily in vineyards making Orέmus now one of the most reliable and consistent estates producing 375,000 bottles per year of which 80,000 are Aszu.  The 5 Puttonyos is usually a rich, gold color.  The complex nose features caramel, dried fruits especially raisins and dried apricots, lemon peel, spice and brown sugar.  It is sweet on the palate, with great balancing acidity crammed with layers of ripe fruit.  It has a fresh, clean finish and very long length.

    The 2006 Orέmus Vega Sicilia Tokaji Aszú 5 Puttonyos has been rated 95 pts by Robert Parker. Specific Wine Enthusiast tasting notes include heady aromas of gardenia, white flowers, freesia, honey and dried apricots; full bodied in the mouth with flavors of caramelized pineapple, apricot nectar and lemon curd.

    One of the biggest changes since the communist era is the making of dry Tokaji wines.  Until the 2000s dry Tokaji was usually an afterthought.  Now such high-quality dry Furmint wine is setting Tokaji on a new path.

    The 2015 Bott Csontos Furmint from Tokaj is 100% Furmint macerated and aged in Hungarian oak.  It was produced by Jόzsef and Judit Bodό, both from a Hungarian ethnic region in Slovakia.  Following their dream to produce wine in Tokaj, they found Csontos and in 2005 bottled their first vintage of “Bott”, Judit’s maiden name, from 1 hectare.  Today they tend 5 hectares all from indigenous varietals.  Csontos means “strong boned” and the vineyard is red clay and volcanic soils planted right on the edge of the Zemplen forest.  The soil is still tilled by horses and the family uses an antique wooden press and a medieval looking bladder press from the 60s.  Wines are fermented slowly in mostly used oak barrels with native yeast over 6-8 weeks.  They then remain in the barrel between 7-10 months and remain true to place. Critics gave it an average score of 90 points.

     In recent years the individual wine regions have started some serious planning to showcase and promote their wines.  Organic winemaking and sustainability has become very important.  There are wine festivals in the main cities welcoming tourists, journalists and bloggers.  Outstanding red wines are being promoted – the “Franc and Franc” conference helps to promote outstanding Cabernet Franc to the international market.  Kέkfrankos (Blaufrӓnkisch) is an outstanding indigenous red becoming increasingly capable of competing with the best wines of elsewhere.

    Wine culture is spreading, the selection of quality wines at affordable prices is increasing, consumption of sparkling wine is once again popular, the variety is set to expand further, and premium wines are available and will see growing demand among more sophisticated consumers. This small country of Hungary, hardly known for anything else than the head-achingly communist style wines from the Cold War era and its world-class sweet Tokaji wines, warranted 47 pages in John Szabo’s book. In total, 44 of its wineries were found good enough to get a detailed introduction by Mr. Szabo. As one Hungarian said, they have “tasty rocks”!  Hungarian wine is definitely on the rise.  I think it rocks!  Please give it a try.

    ITALY AT THE MARGINS OF EURASIA & AFRICA

    Italy is already so worthy of wine discussion due to the prolific amounts of highly rated wines produced there, that it is hard to think we can come up with any additional reasons to drink more Italian wine, but believe it or not it is also one of the world’s most volcanically active wine regions.  The only active volcanoes in mainland Europe are in Italy.  In fact the Island of Vulcano-  the origin of the word volcano – is here in Italy.   The endless crunching, scraping and subducting of the Eurasian and Teutonic plates has pushed up the Alps and Apennines and caused a chain of volcanism of every kind from Soave to Sicily.  Some volcanoes have been extinct for a very long time while others are alarmingly active.  Without them, Italy’s wine would be quite different.  For this article, we are just going to discuss a few of the volcanic regions starting with Mount Etna in Sicily , moving north to Basilicata, then on to Campania and last but not least, Soave.  So let’s get ready to rumble!

    MOUNT ETNA, SICILY

    Mount Etna rises up like an island on an island, known by the Sicilians as “Mongibello” meaning mountain mountain in two different languages.  Etna is a classic stratovolcano built over the last 600,000 years now reaching 10,990 feet above the sea.  It is one of the world’s most active volcanoes and is still growing.  It has several eruption centers plus hundreds of minor cones and vents. Add that to the list of winemaker concerns!  The rocky perilous slopes are already difficult and expensive to farm.

    The main white grape on Etna is Carricante which is defined by stony flavors and salinity.  The chief red is Nerello Mascalese which features high acids and significant tannins, full of wild strawberry, sour cherry and currants with plenty of savory herbal and tobacco notes.  Its companion grape is Nerello Cappuccio which is slightly lower in tannin and deeper in color.

    The Etna DOC grows in a semi-circle around the volcano only excluding the west flank.  Vines grow from 1150 feet rising up to 3300 feet.  Terraces are necessary to keep the vineyards from falling down the hillsides.  The higher up the hillside, the deeper the volcanic soil.  The exact makeup of the soil varies all around and up and down the hillsides, but it is all volcanic in origin.

    Etna Bianco is made predominately from Carricante (minimum 60% by law).  Etna Rosso is made from the Nerello Mascalese (80% minimum) with the possible addition of Nerello Cappuccio.

    Tenuta di Fessina has two lava flows that wrap around the property ensuring a feared and respected relationship with Mt. Etna.  “Erse” Etna Bianco DOC is a white blend made up of 80% Carricante, 20% Catarratto and Minnella.  The grapes grow in lava stones, volcanic ash and sandy loam between 2900-3300 ft up the hillside. The wine has a savory salinity with notes of pear and hay with a long textural finish.  “Erse” Etna Rosso DOC is 80% Nerello Mascalese and 20% Nerello Cappuccio.  These bush trained vines grow slightly lower down the hill at 2200 ft in lava stones, volcanic ash and sandy loam.  You can expect aromas of crushed berries, plums and smoky minerality plus some chalky dusty dryness really requiring a food accompaniment.  The Fessina winemaker Federico Curtaz worked with Angelo Gaja for two decades.  Erse is an excellent regional representative from younger vines.

    Sicily itself is Italy’s largest region at 10,000 square miles and outside of Etna is known for the red grape variety Nero d’Avola.  Just 62 miles southwest of Sicily is the small active volcanic island of Pantelleria, a satellite island of Sicily and part of the same volcanic chain.  Pantelleria is famous for its moscato passito di Pantelleria, made from Zibibbo grapes.  Zibibbo grapes are the oldest continually existing unmodified grape still in vinification and are also known as Muscat of Alexandria. Part of the moscato is harvested when ripe, pressed and juice set aside but the remaining moscato grapes are laid on mats and dried in the sun until shriveled into supersweet raisins.  These juices are then blended and fermented together.  The result is a neon-orange passito dessert wine.

    Donnafugata Passito di Pantelleria Ben Ryέ (Ben Ree-ay) is an international icon for Italian dessert wines.  It is produced on Pantelleria in volcanic sandy soil originating from lava.  The low bush vines of Pantelleria have been inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List as a “creative and sustainable practice”.  Tasting notes describe the 2014 Ben Ryέ as brilliant amber with freshness and complexity.  The bouquet is intense and fragrant: typical aromas of apricots and candied citrus zest combined with balsamic scents of Mediterranean scrub and sweet notes of honey and fresh figs.  The palate is well defined and intense, with pleasant sweetness well balanced by a fresh vein of acidity and lively sapidity.   Serve it in tulip-shaped goblets of medium size, slightly bellied; uncork at time of serving; 57 degrees.  Ben Rye comes from the Arabic term “Son of the Wind”.  95 pts Robert Parker; 93 pts Wine Enthusiast & WS.

    BASILICATA

    Monte Vulture (VOOL- too-reh), an extinct stratovolcano with black basalt soils, stands at 4350 feet just across the eastern border of Campania in the region of Basilicata.  It’s the only volcano in Italy on the east side of the Apennines.  The important wine appellation in Basilicata is the Aglianico del Vulture DOCG.  Vulture began to erupt about one million years ago, but last erupted 40,000 years ago.  Earthquakes have also devastated much of the region.  Basilicata has two coastlines, one on the Tyrrhennian Sea between Campania and Calabria, and a longer coastline between Calabria and Apulia. If you think of Calabria as the “toe” of Italy and Apulia the “heel”, then Basilicata is the “instep”.  Time stands still in Basilicata.  It is mostly agricultural with shepherds tending flocks of sheep and cattle, single lane country roads and unpaved dirt tracks.  Its Italy’s sparsest populated region, and you may travel for miles without seeing anyone else.

    Aglianico (alli-yawn-nico) is the only permitted grape variety here and the vines are grown on the traditional vine-trellising method called vigna a capanno,  introduced by Albanian immigrants in the 15th century.  Three posts are tied together like a tripod over a single vine.  One post is fixed but the other two are moveable.  The moveable part of the tripod is shifted up to four times during the growing season so that grapes are shaded from the sun and lessen damage from the fierce winds.  Aglianico is full-bodied and known for savory flavors of leather, white pepper, black fruits and cured meat, most definitely a wine of its terroir.  You can almost imagine smoke, ash, cedar, cigar box, and game when you taste it.  Traditional Aglianico is best after 10 or more years of age and has been nicknamed the “Barolo of the South”.  Wine styles differ so dramatically the further away you get from Vulture that some producers have proposed creating an Upper Vulture sub-zone. Of course the “true” Aglianico del Vulture DOCG wines come from the highest elevations.

    Bisceglia 2012 Gudarrà Aglianico del Vulture comes from 1300 feet up the east side of the Apennine Mountain range on the slopes of Mount Vulture and vines grow in tufo and basalt volcanic soil.  The Bisceglia estate is in the historic district of Lavello.  Gudarrà, in local dialect means “to be enjoyed”. It is 100% Aglianico, deep ruby-red in color with violet hues and gives you a weighty ashy mouthfeel texture and notes of savory tomato compote.  Expect Mediterranean herbs, black-skinned berries, and baking spice aromas with anise, ground pepper, and dried black cherries on the palate.  Tannins are aggressive and gripping.  WS gave it 90 pts.

    CAMPANIA

    Campania is located in the Southern Italian Peninsula moving north from the toe, heel and ankle of the Italian boot.  It borders on the Mediterranean Sea on the west and is best known for Naples, the Amalfi Coast and the Isle of Capri.

    The soils in every area of Campania have been influenced by volcanism.  The regular eruptions of nearby Lipari Island, the Campi Flegrei, Roccamonfina, Monte Vulture and Vesuvius have all contributed to the ash and tephra enriched soils of the entire region.  Mount Vesuvius, the most famous, is a 4203 foot high stratovolcano that can be seen from every angle in the Bay of Naples.  It’s just 25,000 years old! Vesuvius eruptions have been fairly cyclical and volcanologists predict the next major eruption sometime in the next 500 years.  Considering that three million people live nearby, it has earned the title of the world’s most dangerous volcano. Camp Flegrei is a large highly active area on the opposite side of Naples with five volcanic lakes and up to ninety volcanic cones and craters that have erupted during the past 37,000 years.  The ground in this area is known to heave and swell up by several inches in a day and even feet during a year.  Roccamonfina  is Campania’s only extinct stratovolcano, active from 650,000 to 50,000 years ago and is located in the northwest corner of the region.

    Campania has a rich tradition in gastronomy and wine with over 100 grape varietals and more than 100 wineries.  It is such a happy place that the Romans referred to it as Campania Felix or “happy country”.  Unfortunately a devastating earthquake rocked the province of Avellino in 1980. An entire generation of the area residents fled leaving behind many ancient vineyards that remained as they were 200 years ago.  Instead of replanting with “newer” varietals like the rest of the country, they are now making wine just like it was 200 years ago.  In 2016, Campania produced 14 million cases of wine but most of it was table wine with only 19% at the DOP level.

    Falanghina, the most planted white, is usually fresh and unoaked.  Fiano is the greatest white and is prominent in the Fiano di Avellino DOCG.  The Fiano and Greco di Tufo were the first whites to be granted top classification in southern Italy.  Antonio Mastroberardino, considered by many as the patriarch of wine in Campania, is credited with returning Fiano to its current status.  Fiano is distinctly non-fruity, but with a mix of fennel and fresh herbs, hazelnuts and honey, chamomile and acacia flowers, growing more toasty and smoky with time.  Greco was transported here by the Greeks and is difficult to grow.  It is even less fruity – with high acids and alcohol, quite tannic. It may be called the “most red of white wines”.  The town of Tufo is on top of volcanic-derived sulphur that is responsible for the wine’s flinty and stony character.  Coda di Volpe (or fox’s tail) is generally soft, fruity and easy drinking.  It is naturally high in acid delivering marked saline-mineral character and even a touch of petrol.  Aglianico is Campania’s main red grape and is the backbone of Aglianico del Taburno and Taurasi, the region’s only red DOCG appellations.  Just as Aglianico in Basilicata, it is dry and austere with aromas of leather, tobacco, tar, and sun-warmed terra cotta.  Piedirosso is the next most planted red grape and said to be “the most difficult variety in the world”.  Most vintners complain of the lack of color and structure.

    Campania is made up of five provinces and here are some of the most important volcanic-influenced zones.  Benevento produces over half of the Campanian total but bottled wine is a new thing here. This area has regularly received volcanic fallout from nearby eruptions for eons.   Most of Falanghina originates here and the Sannio Falanghina DOC is a very good example.  Avellino produces strikingly fresh whites and two of the three DOCG appellations are whites – Fiano di Avellino and Greco di Tufo.  Avellino’s top red is the Aglianico-based Taurasi DOCG. Napoli is primarily urban and industrial, but there are still some producers in the suburbs.  Vesuvio DOC and its Lacryma Christi del Vesuvio Bianco/Rosso sub-categories are Napoli’s other important appellations, produced on all sides of Mount Vesuvius.

    Caserta is the northernmost province on the Lazio border.  Falernum was the most important wine in ancient Rome and it came from the vineyards on volcanic ash over limestone soil in the hills north of Roccamonfina.  It was a cult wine for the rich and famous of its time, often mentioned in Roman literature.  Falernian was either red or white wine with 15-16% alcohol. It was late-harvested, then aged for 15-20 years in clay amphorae.  Falerno del Massico DOC is the modern Falernum with whites from Falanghina.  Galluccio DOC is the other appellation in the foothills of Roccamonfina.  Roccamonfina IGP is a protected geographical area in Caserta.

    Mastroberardino has been a registered wine estate since 1878 with a wine-growing history dating back to 1760.  They made the decision to champion Campania’s indigenous varietals instead of going more in the French direction, propagating priceless genetic material from the ancient vines and encouraging many smaller wine-growers to do the same.  Today they are a regional leader with appellations in Avellino, Benevento and Vesuvius.

    2016 Mastroberardino Falanghino del Sannio DOC is made from 100% Falanghina and is named after falangae, Latin for supporting stakes, and may well be the basis for the legendary Falernian wine.  It is grown 1,155 feet altitude in volcanic sandy loam in the espalier style with Guyot training and aged in stainless steel tanks.  It is pale lemon-green in color with aromas of ripe pineapples and citrus fruits complemented by undertones of white flowers.  On the palate, zesty acidity and persistent notes of honeysuckle and toasted almond.

    2016 Mastroberardino Lacryma Christi del Vesuvio Bianco DOC is made from 100% Coda di Volpe grapes grown at 560 feet on Mt. Vesuvius in layers of volcanic ash composed of pumice, pyroclastic debris and clay loam.  It tastes of dusty stone and daphne flower blossoms with a gritty mouth feel.

    Lacryma Christi, (tears of Christ) are said to have been shed by Christ either because the Bay of Naples was so beautiful or  because when Lucifer fell from heaven, Christ was sad and cried tears that landed on the slopes of Mount Vesuvius producing the miraculous vines.

    2014 Fattoria Galardi Terra di Lavoro Roccamonfina IGT comes from 1485 foot high Roccamonfina volcanic slopes and is 80% Aglianico and 20% Piedirosso.  The Galardi family produces just this one wine!  Terra di Lavoro means “land of work” and is it a challenging environment.  The soil is grey tufo with pyroclastic flow deposits of pumice and fine ash. The wine is deep purple with smoky, earthy aromas and hints of tobacco and graphite.  Notes of ripe black cherries, cassis, tobacco and leather come through on the palate.   It also has mineral notes similar to crunchy graphite.

    SOAVE

    The name “Soave” (So-Ah-Ve) represents a number of things.  First of all it is a hillside town just east of Verona in the western part of the Veneto, the 8th largest region in Italy in the northeastern part, the home of canals and romantic Venice and the setting of Romeo and Juliet.   But of even more importance to winelovers, it is the home of Soave, a wine made from Garganega (“gar-GAN-nehgah”and Trebbiano grapes.  This is Italy’s largest white wine appellation with 16,000 acres.  It is hard to distinguish signs that these grapes represent a volcanic wine; however if you were here 65 million years ago, you would have been underwater in a tropical lagoon.  Most of northern Italy was underwater before the Alps were formed.  After a lot of pushing and pulling by the African and Eurasian plates, Africa sank and melted beneath Europe.  The sea floor was eventually torn apart  creating volcanic eruptions across the top of the peninsula lasting for 50 million years.  Hundreds of volcanic peaks grew out of the lagoon which slowly filled with lava and marine sediment over millions of years.  This area, called the Alpine-Chiampa Graben (trench), left Soave soils with a mix of limestone from the marine sediments and black basalt.

    Soave was one of only two wine-producing area recognized by the Italian government in 1931.  The other one was Chianti.  After post World War II when Italy was converting from agriculture to industry, cheap bulk Soave was produced and exported around the world, but when sales of Soave were overtaken by Pinot Grigio in the 1990s, it became evident to quality producers that the bar must be raised.  These producers had vineyards predominantly in the volcanic hills where the original fine wines were made.  The quality of Soave has only improved since then!  The invisible fault line runs right through the middle of Soave Classico.  You can actually see the soil difference as you cross over that invisible line – from sand and white limestone to black basalt. The vines notice the difference, too.  Limestone soil creates expressive and aromatic floral wines with lots of elegance and finesse.  The volcanic soil wines display riper orchard and tropical fruits with some flint, diesel and graphite after a few years.  These wines take time to express themselves as minerality takes time to emerge. The best Crus can age for 20 years!

    The Soave DOC was created in 1968 and requires a 70% minimum of Garganega grapes; up to 30% can come from Trebbiano di Soave. It is used for still or sparkling wines and is mainly from the flatlands and valleys. Soave Classico DOC and Soave Superiore DOCG are from the central hills in the communes of Soave and Monteforte d’Alpone.  You will find two styles for Soave – the simple lean stainless steel style and the rich slightly nutty aged in old wooden barrels style.  The more aged are usually Superiore or Classico.

    In 1982 the Tessari family named their estate Suavia after the ancient name for Soave.  The three daughters now manage this estate located in the heart of volcanic Soave Classico at one of the highest and most northern points in the zone.  Their basic Soave is flinty and smoky and made from up to 50-year-old vines.  The grapes for their top cru, Monte Carbonare, are grown 975 feet high on the Monte Carbonare Hill.  Carbonare refers to coal just like the black as coal soil.  This wine is more extreme and mineral with a weighty oily texture with almond evolving towards petrol with age. Soave wine pairs incredibly well with rich Italian seafood like clams and gnocchi and scallops and risotto.  We had our first bottle of Monte Carbonare with Bigoli pasta, probably the most traditional pasta of Veneto.  Bigoli is a very thick but long spaghetti-like (but not spaghetti – like!) made on a very special extruding tool called a bigolaro.  You can buy the hand cranked version called a torchio on the internet.

    The 2015 Suavia Soave Classico DOC “Monte Carbonare” is a perfect example of wine produced from black basalt volcanic soil created by eruptic volcanic activity 50,000,000 years ago.  This wine was made of 100% Garganega grapes in stainless steel to preserve freshness as the Tessari family describes the wine as “earth in a glass”.  It is truly an expression of it’s volcanic terroir.  Tasting notes tell us to expect straw yellow with intense brilliant highlights; creamy elegance; freshness and aromas of citrus, herbs, and mineral.  It should be well-balanced and dry with a persistent finish.

    Are you ready to make some new wine discoveries?

    I’ve just touched the top of the volcanic crater in this article.  We haven’t even mentioned the entire western hemisphere of volcanic wine regions from the Pacific Northwest to California and on down to South America, but as I said initially that would require many chapters!   Hopefully your interest level has been raised sufficiently to be on the alert for those salty, gritty and powerful wines described by John Szabo.  It looks like they are going to be around for awhile, so learn to love the taste of lava!    It is really exciting to learn that some more obscure wine regions are producing excellent wines made from indigenous grapes. You won’t find them boring. You will even find a few of them on restaurant wine lists. Whether it is the taste, the texture or the soil, please enjoy them!

    12.27.17 LFRakos@gmail.com
    Note from the author:
    Should you want to have your own volcanic tasting, you can find volcanic wines at the local big box store and boutique wine shops.  Naples Wine Collection can order a number of them for you. However, as usual I have sourced my obscure wines from websites such as B-21 and Blue Danube Wines. As always, my research information has come from several reliable wine authors such as John Szabo’s book already mentioned, Karen MacNeil’s “The Wine Bible”, Wine Folly “The Essential Guide to Wine” and many internet searches.  You can find all of this information yourself, but I’ve done the work for you so you just get to taste the wine.  Please accept my apologies if there is any incorrect data or information; I try my best to verify from several reliable sources.  I am an avid winelover and foodie who also really enjoys researching and continuing to learn something new. Now that I am retired from a life of food service management and dietetics, this has become my full-time passion!
  • 11May

     Sangiovese grapes 2

    Grapevines grow literally everywhere in Italy.

    Italy is the leading producer of wine in the world. The International Organization of Vine and Wine (OIV), those folks who provide us with annual data on world wine production, estimates the wine producers of the world made around 260 million hectoliters in the year 2016, and we consumers drank about 240 million hectoliters.  Since one hectoliter equals 26.417 gallons, that is about 6.3 billion gallons of wine consumed around the world!

    The OIV estimates that Italy will have produced 48.8 million of those 260 million hectoliters in the 2016 harvest.  Just in case you are wondering who was number 2 and where did the United States rank, France was estimated to have almost 42 million, Spain at 37.8 million and US holding the number 4 spot for another year with 22.5 million hectoliters.  (Numbers are subject to change.)

    Wine in Italy goes back over 4000 years.  When the Greeks first came to Southern Italy, they even named the country Oenotria, “the land of wine”. The Etruscans and Romans were all interested in making wine. Italy continued to refine winemaking techniques throughout the middle ages and became known for making excellent wines.  Then along came phylloxera to Northern Europe in the nineteenth century, destroying many Italian vineyards.  Unfortunately those lost vineyards were replanted for quantity, not quality, thus leading to the production of inexpensive table wines.  If you drank Italian wine in the 1960s, it was more than likely in a straw-covered bottle, technically called a fiasco, which described a glass bottle with a long neck and bulbous body  covered in wicker or Fiasco straw for protection.  The Oxford English Dictionary says the word fiasco means “a failure or complete breakdown”.  We can only speculate that the quality of the wine had something to do with the term.  And this was the status of Italian wine until after the 1960s when laws were passed to control wine quality and labeling.

    There are 20 regions, or administrative divisions like our 50 states, in present day Italy.  These regions, except for the Aosta Valley, are then divided into 110 provinces and just to further complicate the governing structure, there are also 14 special Metropolitan cities. All of these regions produce wine to some extent; however some are much more significant than others: Tuscany, Piedmont, Veneto and Fruili – Venezia Giula.  There are over 350 documented “authorized” varietals indigenous to Italy and another 500 or more documented in circulation in Italy with as many as 2000 grape varietals grown throughout Italy.  According to Wine Folly, a website and wine education company, “if you tasted a new Italian wine each week, it would take you 20 years to taste your way through Italy”! 

    Italian wine can vary drastically from region to region or even estate to estate even if it is made from the same grape varietal.  Winemaking style has something to do with this, but the terroir changes so dramatically due to the many mesoclimates throughout the country.  Italy is about 40% mountains and another 40% hills.  Much of the country borders on one of four seas: the Mediterranean, the Tyrrhennian, the Ligurian and the Adriatic.  A lot of the soil has also been impacted by earthquakes throughout the years.  You can expect your Sangiovese and other varietals to taste different in all of these areas similar to how Pinot Noir tastes much different in the Central Coast, Russian River Valley and Oregon.

    Introduction of Italian Wine Laws

    As in France, Italy has a wine classification system.  French wines were first systematically organized in 1937, but Italy did not begin to classify until the 1960s with the first Italian DOC laws enacted in 1963.  The first wine given DOC status was the Tuscan white Vernaccia di San Gimignano in 1966.  Here is what those classification initials mean:

    DOC – Denominazione di Origine ControllataControlled designation of origin (a quality control label in Italy for both wine and cheese).

    DOCG – Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita – The highest level of quality assurance.

    IGT –Indicazione Geografica Tipica – Typical geographic indication; wines of the region; wines with non-Italian grapes usually fall under this designation; i.e. superTuscans.

    IGP – Indicazione di Originie Protettiva – A more current term similar to IGT, but it conforms to EUs (European Union) terms of Protected Geographical Indication or PGI.

    VdT – Vino da Tavola – Literally means “table wine” intended for everyday drinking as it is unsuitable for aging.  The wine has to come from Italy and can be made from grapes of any region.

    There are 334 DOCs and 74 DOCGs for a total of 408 Denominazioni di Origine Protetta (DOP) in Italy. Visit www.italianwinecentral.com to see the complete list of Italian quality-wine denominations as of July 2016.

    What about Sangiovese?  (san joe VAE sae)

    Two of the most commercial and significant of those approximately 350 Italian grape varietals are Nebbiolo and Sangiovese.  You will not find these varietals growing significantly in any other world wine region except for in very small quantities.  Nebbiolo is predominant in the Piedmont northwestern Italian region. Sangiovese can be found mainly in central Italy; however it does also exist in the north and south.  A 2007 ampelographic study confirmed that Sangiovese came from the Ciliegiolo grape (meaning “cherry” in Italian) and the Calabrese Montenuovo grape grown somewhere in the Apennine Mountains between the regions of Tuscany and Romagna.

    Sangiovese grapes 3Sangiovese is the official authorized grape varietal for planting in 53 provinces and is recommended by law in an additional 13 of the 107 total provinces and 14 special metropolitan cities.  Sangiovese represents 10% of the just under 2 million acres of vineyard plantings in Italy, has dozens of different clones and may be closely related to many other grapes.

    While there are more than 250,000 acres of Sangiovese planted in many different clonal variations, just two clones are predominant:

    • Sangiovese Grosso – (Large Sangiovese) or Brunello, Prugnolo Gentile and Sangiovese di Lamole. It has larger more loosely bunched grapes, is more widely cultivated and yields a larger crop.
    • Sangiovese Piccolo – (Small Sangiovese) or Sangioveto. It has smaller grape clusters than the Grosso clone.

    In those old days of straw wrapped bottles and red checkered table cloths, Sangiovese was overproduced, often blended with white grapes and exhibited high acids and unripe tannins.     Thank goodness for winelovers, the quality drastically improved beginning in the 1980s with the help of Italian Wine Laws in the 1960s.  Today Sangiovese is the product of much lower yields with a real concentration of color and savor and is considered one of the nine noble red grape varietals, which are grapes widely planted in most major wine producing regions and are very popular.

    What’s it taste like?  It offers a wide range of tastes from earthy and rustic to round and fruit forward. Here are some of the many descriptors used: tart or sour red cherry, strawberry, red plum, mulberry, prunes, carob, chestnuts, rhubarb, roasted pepper, tomato, tea, cloves, coffee, cedar, tobacco, dried roses, violet, peony, potpourri, licorice, anise, toast, clay, brick, smoke, marjoram, oregano, thyme, pinewood, capers, truffles, mushrooms, moss, ferns, pencil lead and leather. However there is one taste you should be able to count on — it always exhibits cherry flavors.

    The Sangiovese grape also has thinner skin which leads to easier winemaking; therefore you need really good winemakers and producers to create really good Sangiovese wines. The grape is praised for a balanced acidity (high) with firm tannins which maintains aging while being ready to drink younger.  It is usually aged in neutral oak barrels for normally 4-7 years and 10-18 for Brunellos.

    Map of Italy regions

    Where does Italian Sangiovese come from?

    Any practicing winelover who drinks Sangiovese should know about these Italian regions, DOPs, DOCs and DOCGs.  Some of them are synonymous with “Sangiovese” in Italy and have been famous since the 19th century while others may be more up and coming as in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.  There are other regions growing plenty of Sangiovese, but it may be blended and/or very little makes its way to wine shelves in the US.  Highlights about each region or DOP follow.

    Field of sunflowers

    Sangiovese is “The Soul of Tuscany”

    Tuscany, or Toscana in Italian, is THE leading and best known region for Sangiovese wines even though it is present in 259 DOCs across the country.  Tuscany is located in central Italy along the Tyrrhenian coast and is home to some of the world’s most famous wine regions. Wine producers have been working with Sangiovese for over 250 years in Tuscany.

    Tuscany has 35 DOCs and 11 DOCGs plus the very famous Super Tuscans, but these are the wine denominations you should know in Tuscany.

    THE “CHIANTI ZONE”

    • The “Chianti Zone” is a wine region in Tuscany (Toscana) making Sangiovese-dominated blends and includes all of the subdistricts of Chianti and Chianti Classico which is a major part of central Tuscany. It is probably the most well-known Italian Sangiovese region especially to wine drinkers in the United States. A Chianti wine is any wine produced in the Chianti wine region.  Chiantis have savory flavors paired with high acidity and coarse tannin which makes for incredible food wines.
    • Both Chianti and Chianti Classico have their own DOCGs, and the wines of both are extremely different. The blend of grape varietals must follow the authorized formula for that DOCG.  Felsina no 40 wine of 2016
    • Historically only local grape varietals like Sangiovese (also known as Sangioveto in Chianti), Colorino, Canaiolo and Ciliegiolo plus a white variety (Trebbiano or Malvasia) were permitted in the Chianti blend. Nowadays some wineries are adding non-Italian varietals like Cabernet Sauvignon.  Chiantis tend to be simpler and easier to drink.  Chianti is traditionally aged in large Slavonian oak casks.
    • Chianti’s international reputation diminished by the mid -1970s but began to improve due to some innovative producers who did not want to see the demise of Italian winemaking.

    CHIANTI DOCG

    • The basic modern Chianti in the Chianti DOCG can be anywhere from 75 – 100% Sangiovese. Canaiolo can be no more than 10% of blend with other authorized reds making up no more than 15%.  White Malvasia and Trebbiano used to make up to 10% of Chianti blend but the wine laws were rewritten in 1984 and white wine was no longer allowed in the blend.  The Chianti DOCG was also designated.
    • There are 8 subzones in Chianti and their name appears on the wine label: Colli Fiorentini, Montespertoli, Chianti Rufina, Colli Aretini, Colli Senesi, Colline Pisane, Montalbano and the Chianti Classico DOCG.
    • Chianti from a named subzone can have up to 20% of “other authorized reds” – not 15% as in the basic Chianti.

    CHIANTI CLASSICO DOCG  

    • Chianti Classico is one of the 8 Chianti subzones but also has its own DOCG.
    • Wine and grapes in a Chianti Classico come from the oldest and usually best part of the Chianti region and must be at least 80% Sangiovese. The other grapes must be Canaiolo, Colorino, Cabernet Sauvignon, and/or Merlot.
    • A Chianti Classico Reserva must be aged, by law, at least 2 years in wood and 3 months in the barrel. Most Classico Reservas are aged in small new French oak barrels thus making a fuller more complex wine.
    • Chianti Classico Gran Selezione was introduced in 2014 as an even higher quality than Reserva. It must be made from estate-grown grapes and aged 30 months including 3 months in bottle before it can be sold and has to pass a suitability test conducted by authorized labs and be approved by a special tasting committee.
    • The best Chianti Classicos have plum and dried cherry flavors; sometimes with a bit of salt and spice. Reservas may display fig, chocolate, cedar, dried orange, earth, smoke, saddle leather, prune, minerals, salt and exotic spices.
    • Ever notice the black rooster on a bottle of Chianti Classico? The black rooster, or gallo nero, was officially adopted by the Chianti Classic Wine Consortium in 2005, and the wine isn’t an official Chianti Classico without it on the bottle.  A red circle around the rooster means regular Classico and a gold circle indicates a Riserva.

    SUPER TUSCANS AND THE BOLGHERI/BOLGHERI SASSICAIA DOCS

    • After Chianti’s reputation began to dwindle, some winemakers became fed up with the rules they had to follow to make DOC wines. This meant they had to label their wines as Vino Da Tavola or “table wine”.  So along came what we know as “Super Tuscans”.
    • Sassicaias were the inspiration for the first non-Chianti Chiantis that helped to revitalize winemaking in Italy. Sassicaia means “rocky place” and comes from Bolgheri in the Maremma district in the far west of Tuscany along the coast of the Tyrrhenian Sea. It was produced by Incisa della Rochetta and first released commercially in 1968. Cabernet Sauvignon is the leading red grape in this wine.
    • Antinori’s Tignanello was the first well-known non-Chianti Chianti. It was first based almost entirely on Sangiovese; Cabernet Sauvignon then was added.
    • Super Tuscan blends are full bodied and aged in French barriques instead of the normal oak from Slavonia. Some are Bordeaux grape style; others are not.  As a side note, a French barrique is made of French oak and can hold between 59 to 79 gallons.  The type of oak and age and size of the barrel all result in wines with unique characteristics, but that would be a topic for another whole discussion!
    • Super Tuscan blends frequently contain Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot or Cabernet Franc as well as other non-native Italian grapes or they can even be 100% Sangiovese.
    • The IGT Indicazione Geografica Tipica was created as a designation allowing for experimentation such as a Super Tuscan as long as the grapes come from the area where the wine in made. Now winemakers of the Tuscan coast focus on making wines that represent the geography of where those grapes come from.  Super Tuscans may have put it on the map, but now it is all about the territory.

    BRUNELLO DI MONTALCINO DOCG

    • Montalcino is a hilltop town in Tuscany within the Chianti zone south of Florence.
    • Brunello was granted DOCG status in 1980, one of the first reds to gain this status. Brunello wines are Sangiovese at its best, possibly the most famous and often the most expensive of the Montalcinos and Vino Nobile di Montepulcianos. They are high to premium priced wines.
    • They were first promulgated by Biondi Santi in the late 19th century who bottled the first official Brunello di Montalcino in 1888.  Montalcino
    • Brunellos are 100% Sangiovese Grosso clone grapes unlike Chianti’s blended wines. They are rich, elegant and full-bodied with incredibly smooth tannins and complex aromas and flavors of blackberry, black cherry, black raspberry, chocolate, violet, tar, cinnamon and leather.
    • Brunellos are aged in large vats which are often made of Slovenian oak. Slovenian oak is more neutral than French or American oak. Some are aged in small barriques which give vanilla tones to the wine.  They must be aged at least 2 years in wood casks and another 3 years in the cellar; thus it takes at least 5 years after harvest for release.  Riservas require an extra year of cellar aging – it’s the Italian wine that stays in the cellar longest by law — aging up to as many as 25 years.
    • 2008’s infamous Brunellogate, or Brunellopoli, was the result of blending non-authorized grapes! Defendants were accused of “making false statements to public officials and of selling adulterated substances and falsely labelled industrial products that do not comply with the Brunello regulations.”  Rumors of this practice had previously been circulating for years and finally resulted in guilty verdicts, fines, sentences and tarnished reputations.  Discussions about possibly relaxing some of the Brunello wine laws ensued; however, the laws remained in place and winemakers know what may result if they are not followed.

    ROSSO DI MONTALCINO DOC

    • You may think of Rosso as Brunello’s younger sibling which would be a good comparison as Rosso is made from the earlier maturing red grapes of Montalcino which are also 100% Sangiovese Grosso. Rosso received DOC status in 1984 in order to differentiate it from Brunello di Montalcino.
    • It’s less austere than Brunello and less expensive. A plus for the winemakers – they can make some money while waiting for their Brunellos to age! A plus for winelovers – a Rosso can be a really good choice especially during years when producers declassify their Brunellos and make Rosso di Montalcino with them instead!! Discussions regarding a change in Rosso wine laws also resulted in their retention.
    • A good Rosso should have a depth of black cherry, wild-berry fruit, and hints of spice and vanilla. It is considered a more lively style of wine than the more austere Brunellos.

    VINO NOBILE DI MONTEPULCIANO DOCG

    • Montepulciano is also in Tuscany and located just to the east of Montalcino.
    • Vino Nobile di Montepulciano comes from the Prugnolo Gentile clone and must be a minimum of 70% Sangiovese. “Prugnolo”, which means little prune, refers to the prunelike shape, color and aroma of the grapes.  The remainder of the blend may be Canaiolo Nero and Mammolo.
    • Vino Nobile wines are dark and earthy with subtle overtones of dried herbs or blue flowers.
    • These wines must be aged at least one year in oak and two years overall before leaving the winery thus making them a less expensive alternative to Brunellos.
    • The vineyards of Montepulciano surround the city of Siena, near the southern end of the Valley of Chiana. Chiana is the home of Tuscany’s special breed of white cattle named Chianina often served up as a mammoth T-bone steak called bistecca alla florentina.
    • Do not confuse this region with Montepulciano d’Abruzzo! Montepulciano is another red grape varietal found in the region of Abruzzo in Central Italy.

    ROSSO DI MONTEPULCIANO DOC   Montepulciano region

    • Rosso di Montepulciano is the less expensive “younger sister” of Vino Nobile di Montepulciano. The DOC was created in 1989, but the Rosso style that we know and enjoy didn’t really come about until 1999 when the DOC rules were amended. Regulations now allow it to be made in the same area of production around the town of Montepulciano and from similar grape varietals as the Vino Nobile di Montepulciano DOCG of Siena, such as native Mammolo and/or internationals Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon (maximum 20%).
    • It is also made from Prugnolo Gentile clones but in slightly different percentages of the DOCG wines: minimum 70% Sangiovese combined with maximum Canaiolo and other permitted varietals of Siena and/or Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon.
    • Vineyards are usually younger and the wine aged for 6 months compared to 24 months for the Vino Nobile.
    • The quality is entirely dependent on the producer but generally it is an easier-drinking, fresher and fruitier version of Vino Nobile. It is medium bodied and has aromas of violets just like big brother.

    CARMIGNANO DOCG

    • Carmignano is a tiny wine region just west of Florence. It was one of Italy’s earliest regulated wine names, long before the country’s DOC/G system was introduced in the late 1960s.The Grand Duke Cosimo III de’ Medici established Carmignano as a nursery for grape varietals way back in the early 1700s.  He also planted Cabernet Sauvignon which was imported from France. The Grand Duke issued decrees controlling wine production and sales enforced by his Congregazione di Vigilanza.  Carmignano was later absorbed into the Chianti regulations, then became its own DOC in 1975 and was upgraded to a DOCG in 1990.
    • That Cabernet Sauvignon planted by the Grand Duke is Carmignano’s claim to fame. Carmignano wines are dry red and must contain a minimum of 50% Sangiovese plus  10-20% Cabernet Sauvignon and Cabernet Franc.  The rest is Canaiolo, white grapes and other authorized reds.  Rosso must be aged for a minimum of 20 months with a minimum of 8 months in the barrel.  Riserva requires a minimum of 3 years aging including 12 months in the barrel.  Cabernet Sauvignon has been allowed in the Chianti blend since 1996.
    • There are fewer than 20 producers here and Villa de Cappezzana makes what many Italian winelovers consider to be the best Carmignano. A Cappezzana can be medium to full-bodied with lots of dark fruit – boysenberry, blueberry, black cherry – combining with notes of slate, earth, tobacco, and licorice or can be more aromatic with notes of chocolate, licorice and dark fruit.

     COASTAL TUSCANY

    • The Tuscan Coast, or the Maremma, didn’t even exist as a high quality wine production area just 35 years ago. Now winelovers around the world know about the famous Sassicaia and Ornellaia from Bolgheri and Tua Rita from a little further south.  The Maremma runs from the northern part where Bolgheri is located, called Maremma Livornese or Alta “high” Maremma, to the southern part known as Maremma Grossetana.  Maremma cattleCoastal Italy fiels
    • MORELLINO DI SCANSANO DOCG is from the hilly village of Scansano in the southern Maremma region and definitely a Maremma Sangiovese wine area to know. “Morellino” is the local name for the Sangiovese varietal here and the wine must be at least 85% Sangiovese.  Morello (brown) is the color of the region’s horses but the name may also come from the Morello cherry, a dark red cherry which is very tart and acidic.  Morellino di Scansano became a DOC in 1978 and was later upgraded to DOCG with the 2007 vintage.  It’s an easier to produce and less expensive Sangiovese-based wine – vineyard land here is less expensive and the grapes are a little easier to ripen.  Regular or normale Morellino di Scansano wine does not need to age in wood and can be released and on the shelf at less than 8 months old.  This makes it a crisp wine with fresh fruit characteristics and is excellent with food.   “First Selections” Morellino wines are aged in wood for 4 to 12 months.  Riserva Morellino must be aged for 2 years with at least at least 1 year in wood for and can be released two years after harvest.  All of this means that the characteristics of a Morellino wine can vary significantly from producer to producer and even label to label.  Not a lot of these wines find their way to the US, but if you find them they are generally a good value for the price.The Maremma Toscana DOC and Montecucco Sangiovese DOCG subzones both produce rich sun-drenched grapes with jammy notes of blackberry and strawberry and the best known bright cherry flavors. Sangiovese is widely planted in the home of the Super Tuscans; however it is most often used as a blending grape in Massa Carerra, Lucca, Pisa, Livorno and Grosseto, the coastal provinces of Tuscany.
    • The MONTECUCCO DOCG was elevated from a DOC in 2011 and can be found between Montalcino and Scansano. The wines are known for their fine tannins, sweet fruit aromas and rich black-cherry flavor.  They must be at least 90% Sangiovese, and oak barrel aged for 12 to 24 months depending on whether regular or riserva.  These wines are a good value compared to their more expensive Montalcino cousins, but with less than 20,000 cases made don’t expect to find much if any.

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    Other Italian regions and DOPs With Sangiovese significance

    LIGURIA

    • Liguria is a small crescent shaped strip of land on the coast of the Mediterranean Sea known as the Italian Rivieria. Much of the wines here are kept for local consumption, but there are a few well worth trying.  There are only 14,800 acres of vineyards here and 75% of wine produced is white – Vermentino.  The coast of Liguria has high steep hills that look like they drop straight into the sea. Some vineyards can only be reached by boat!
    • Colli di Luni, “hills of the moon”, DOC is based on Sangiovese (at least 50% of it) blended with other local varietal grapes. Look up and you will see the distinctive white and blue-grey Carrara marble in the hills above.  You may not have much luck finding Colli di Luni Sangiovese on wine shelves near you, but if you do be sure to give it a try. Liguria
    • Colline di Levanto DOC covers four villages on the coast with 26 acres of vines planted where topography allows. Some are high up on clifftops so close to the sea that they are moistened by salty sea spray.  The rosso wines must have a 30% minimum of Sangiovese with the remainder local reds.  Don’t expect to see many or any of these wines outside of Italy!

     UMBRIA

    • Umbria is a neighbor of Tuscany and the only Italian region without access to the sea or another nation. It is often called the “green heart of Italy”.  White wines were always the most significant here but recently two reds have gained in popularity  – Sangiovese and Sagrantino. Sangiovese is the grape used for two Umbrian DOC/G wines.  You can expect to find some really nice undervalued Italian wines from Umbria just waiting to be discovered.
    • Torgiano Rosso Riserva DOCG contains Sangiovese 50-70% and Riserva must age at least 3 years with 6 months minimum in bottle. This meets same aging requirement as a Chianti Gran Selezione, Chianti’s highest umbriaquality tier.  You should expect notes of raspberry, strawberry, hide leather and subtle potpourri.  Tannins are bold with notes of coffee or cocoa powder with tangy acidity.  Consider putting it away for 10+ years.  If you visit Torgiano, don’t miss the Lungarotti’s museo del vino, or wine museum known as MUVIT, where you will see one of the most impressive personal collections of wine artifacts in Italy or their Olive and Oil Museum known as MOO.
    • Montefalco Rosso DOC wines are 60-70% Sangiovese and 10-15% Sagrantino which may be the world’s most tannic red wine. The tannins in Sagrantino are similar to that of pure cocoa.  If you montefalcocellar your Sagrantino wines properly, they can age for 30+ years.  Montefalco Rosso wines with their splash of Sagrantino have deeper color, more tannin and richer plummy fruit than many other Italian Sangiovese-based wines.  It has been referred to as “Sangiovese on crack”! You can expect raspberry, strawberry, cinnamon, leather and rose aromas with bold, spicy, medium to high tannin and acidity.  Drink 3 to 10 years from its vintage.

    EMILIA-ROMAGNA AND THE ROMAGNA DOC

    • Emilia-Romagna actually consists of two regions and is considered by many as Italy’s ultimate food region. Parmigiano-Reggiano, balsamic vinegar and prosciutto di Parma Romagna rank high on most culinarian’s list of favorites.  The wine is just sort of a bonus to go with them.  Emilia is best known for frizzante or frothy-style wines (Lambrusco of the old days??).  Romagna wines
    • Romagna is the south-eastern portion of Emilia-Romagna, bordered by Tuscany and extends to the Adriatic coast. We concentrated on Romagna because it is the most important Sangiovese-based region outside of Tuscany.  Sangiovese di Romagna obtained DOC status way back in 1967, the first DOC in the region, and has since become incorporated into the Romagna DOC in 2011.
    • Best known in the past for its bulk wines, most of the vineyards here were replanted in the 1990s resulting in some wines that continue to improve with every vintage and shake off that bulk wine image. Now some Tuscan producers are actually using Sangiovese clones from Romagna since years of research resulted in finding that R24 and T19 are two of the finest Sangiovese clones, and  they are actually from Romagna. The clones here are more fruit oriented with smoother and more open tannins than those in Tuscany.  The official Romagna DOC blend has to contain at least 85% Sangiovese and up to 15% other approved grape varietals.  The amount of other allowed grapes in a specified subzone has been decreased from 15 to 5% to highlight the importance of Sangiovese in Romagna.  You can expect a ruby red wine with violet and blackberry accents with dry, balanced, and silky tannins capable of aging in your cellar.  It is excellent with roasts and grilled meats.  podere la berta 2

    MARCHE (MAR-kay)

    • Le Marche is located on the eastern edge of central Italy and is a wine region to be taken seriously. Over the last decades, the move has been away from quantity towards quality. There are a number of DOCs (15) and DOCGs (5) but only a few wines actually make it here to US.  Although Marche is best known for its whites, specifically Verdicchio, there are some excellent Sangioveses and Montepulcianos.
    • marcheRosso Piceno DOC wines must have between 35 to 85% Sangiovese grapes and 15 to 50% Montepulciano allowing for a max of 15% other grapes including some whites. This makes for a rich dark color wine with vibrant cherry notes and sweet tannins. Sangiovese is most often used to blend up to 15% with Montepulciano grapes in Rosso Conero DOC wines which results in a rich, dark color wine with aromas of black cherries and herbs and bold tannins.  Pork dishes and pecorino cheese are most popular in the Marche region.

    LAZIO (Latium) AND MOLISE DOC

    • Lazio runs south from coastal Tuscany, ranks 8th in output of wine in Italy’s 20 regions, and 80% of the wine is white. Rome is located in Lazio, and it produces the most wine of any metropolitan area.  Lazio is the home of Frascati.  However, there are some reds called “Super Lazios” blended with Sangiovese that deserve mention. Just like the Super Tuscans, these wines are blended with French-origin varietals Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Syrah, Petit Verdot and Cabernet Franc.  Castelli Romani DOC, located just southeast of Rome, is an up-and-coming area for French-Lazio blends. These wines are usually declassified to Lazio IGT and very little is written about Lazio wines, but if you find any, they are definitely worth tasting.
    • Molise is one of Italy’s smallest and most obscure wine regions; the wines are not very well known outside of Italy. There are 4 DOCs here and at least one of them produces Sangiovese wines that make it to our local wine shelves.  Molise DOC is home to the Di Majo Norante Winery who produces 100% Sangiovese wines that are value-priced and have received some good ratings. Di Majo Norante Sangiovese typically displays aromas of violets, red berries, tart cherries, with undertones of cedar, leather and anise.  It is a smooth soft easy-to-drink red wine.  molise

    SICILY (Sicilia) AND SARDENIA (Sardegna)

    • Sicily and Sardinia are the two largest islands in the Mediterranean and share a long history of making wines that run the gamut from simple to spectacular. The revolution to start producing quality instead of quantity   happened here, too.  Sicily is Italy’s largest region and just a short ferry ride away from the mainland.  Sardinia is much more remote at 125 miles from the mainland.  Sardinia is famous for having so many people who live Hand harvest in Sicilyover the age of 100.  Maybe it’s the wine!
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    • Nerello is a name given to two varieties of red wine grapes that are grown primarily in Sicily and Sardinia.  Nerello Mascalese is grown mainly on the northeastern side of Sicily. It can be used for blending, but the grape is often made into varietal  Nerello Cappuccio is widely used in the Etna Rosso DOC as a blending grape that adds color and alcohol to the wine. The two are almost always blended together.
    • An Italian study published in 2008 using DNA typing showed that Nerello Mascalese is quite probably the offspring of the Sangiovese varietal a close genetic relationship between Sangiovese on the one hand and ten other Italian grape varieties on the other hand, including Nerello. It is therefore likely that Nerello is a crossing of Sangiovese and another, so far unidentified, grape varietal.   Nerello usually makes wines that are strong bodied, ruby red with fruity scent of red berry fruits, slight floral shades, spice, licorice and a bit of vanilla and tobacco.
    • Etna is one of Sicily’s most exciting wine regions with vineyards planted in the black lava soil of its slopes. Mt. Sicily harvestEtna reds are generally made from Nerello grapes and taste chalky, dusty, dry and bitter really requiring food to go with it.

    CORSICA

    • Corsica is a French island about 60 miles west right off the coast of Italy, and it’s the birthplace of Napoleon Bonaparte. Corsica has been under Phoenician rule, Islamic rule, the City of Pisa and the Republic of Genoa.  The Genoese gave control of the island to France in 1769, where it has remained ever since.
    • Ampelographers believe that a Sangiovese grape varietal clone called Nielluccio was introduced to Corsica by the Italians. Patrimonio, the first AOC out of the current 9, was established in 1968.  Nielluccio is the main varietal here.  This varietal is quite distinctive from other Sangioveses with a character called “maquis” after the shrub land of sage, juniper, heath trees, oak and myrtle that cover the island.  It also has streaks of flowers, minerals, red fruit and earth.  The wines here are of better quality than the rest of the island.  Patrimonio is an AOC to look for if you want good quality Corsican wine.  Corsican wine

    This list is by no means intended to tell you everything you need to know about Sangiovese grapes growing in Italy. That would include a major portion of the country and another 10 pages!  Most of the wines we would never even have the opportunity to taste without traveling to Italy and visiting those regions.  The intention is to give information about regions, DOCs and DOCGs where Sangiovese plays a significant role in the wine production of that area, and even better yet –- you may learn about wines that have a good chance of travelling to wine stores or restaurants here in the United States.  Granted you may have to branch out a bit from the local big box stores.  The smaller boutique wine shops are where you have the possibility of finding some of them, and even better yet if you are an online shopper.  It is amazing how many wines from these lesser known areas are available if you are willing to search the internet for them.  For example, just for this research alone, we were able to source Sangiovese wines from Torgiano Rosso DOCG in Umbria, Romagna DOC, Rosso Piceno DOC in Marche, Colli di Luni DOC in Liguria and Patrimonio DOC in Corsica as well as others not quite as “rare”.  Remember the earlier quote about tasting your way through Italian grape varietals?–   “If you tasted a new Italian wine each week, it would take you 20 years to taste your way through Italy”!  We hope you have been given the inspiration to step out of your “wine comfort zone” a bit and try some unfamiliar grape varietals and regions even if you don’t want to devote 20 years.   You may just discover some “Tre Bicchiere” quality wines that are budget-friendly, really enjoyable and worthy of a “three glass” rating just like those given by the Italian food and wine magazine, Gambero Rosso.  Happy adventures, winelovers.  Saluti and Ciao!

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    Note from the author:

    All of this information is readily available on the internet along with some excellent books written by several reliable wine authors including Hugh Johnson & Jancis Robinson “The World Atlas of Wine”, Karen MacNeil’s “The Wine Bible” and Wine Folly “The Essential Guide to Wine”.  I just did the research for you.  Please accept my apologies if there is any incorrect data or information; I try my best to verify from several sources.  I am an avid winelover and foodie who also really enjoys researching and continuing to learn something new.  

    What’s up next on www.forkandcorkdivine.com?  In Italy, Wine is Food!  Stay tuned for an upcoming post that will offer up some information on Italian food and wine pairings along with a few more Italian laws, the DOP.  Wine and food make for the perfect Italian marriage, and it is true – if it grows together, it goes together! 

    Linda Rakos