Barbera d'Alba DOC Pio Cesare
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The Barbera grapes from the Barolo and Barbaresco areas give our Barbera exclusive characteristics of full structure, fleshiness, complexity, softness, hints of very ripe fruit, spices and a long life.
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The Barbera grapes from the Barolo and Barbaresco areas give our Barbera exclusive characteristics of full structure, fleshiness, complexity, softness, hints of very ripe fruit, spices and a long life.
Sangiovese and other complementary varieties to pay homage to a historic label and a wine with a long tradition: the Villa Antinori Chianti Classico Riserva. With the inauguration of the Antinori winery in Chianti Classico, the family wanted to reinterpret a Tuscan classic, with an unmistakable...
Amarone Roccolo Grassi is a wine of great structure and softness, in which great balance, finesse and complexity are sought; a wine in which the tannins are very sweet but present and able to give length and depth to the wine It has a very intense ruby red color; on the nose there are hints of...
Our Barbaresco is the result of the careful selection of Nebbiolo grapes from vineyards owned by our family, located in different positions within the Barbaresco area: in Treiso (Cascina Il Bricco, San Stefanetto and Bongiovanni) and in San Rocco Seno D 'Elvio (Rocche di Massalupo).
A Barolo with a classic style, full-bodied and elegant, with structure and harmony, with soft tannins and the right fruit, austere but persuasive. Very long life.
Spicy, savory, medium-bodied, but with a great fragrance. Excellent with fish. It should be served slightly chilled.
Villa Antinori was produced for the first time in 1928 by the Marquis Niccolò Antinori, father of Piero Antinori, as the symbolic wine of Casa Antinori, capable, like perhaps no other, of representing history, identity and family continuity. “It's called Villa Antinori. Tuscan Blood Red.
Valpolicella Superiore Roccolo Grassi is obtained from about 60% of fresh grapes and 40% of grapes slightly dried for 20 days (the quantity of dried grapes and the number of days vary from year to year; this slight dehydration of the grapes allows to change the skin / pulp ratio and therefore to...
A timeless myth because the name amarone appeared on the label in Italy for the first time in 1953 thanks to Bolla. In this version, Amarone Bolla expresses its fruity potential to the maximum.