Verdiso Colli Trevigiani IGP Collalto
« Collalto »
Its incredible and fine acidulous note places it among the most characteristic and representative wines of the Treviso area.
Price
Cellar
Region
Active filters
Its incredible and fine acidulous note places it among the most characteristic and representative wines of the Treviso area.
It has straw-yellow hues with bright and subtle golden-light glints; it is crystalline and of excellent consistency.
Falanghina is cultivated according to the traditional methods also widespread in Germany and France during the Middle Ages, as in the medieval riggiole preserved in the Casanetese library or in the 11th century crutch of the Lombard harvest in the church of Santa Sofia in Benevento.
The Greek comes from a vineyard 100 meters as the crow flies from the Avellino DOCG, but the plants testify to one of the oldest vineyards of the variety mentioned by Pliny. The label is a Bourbon riggiola, from the eighteenth century, like all the labels of the winery.
Caudium means tail, and the foxtail has its chosen area in Cirignano, a Montesarchio farmhouse in the foothills. In Cirignano the vine grows in difficult areas, poor, without soil, on steeper slopes of the Moselle or Val d'Aosta. Extreme viticulture. The label is a votive shrine from the 1700s.
It takes its name from the vine of the same name that the Latins called Vitis apiana, thanks to the bees particularly fond of the sweetness of these grapes. In the register of Frederick II of Swabia there is an order for three "corpses" of Fiano. Carlo D'Angiò also planted 16,000 Fiano vines in...
Ideal on crustaceans and molluscs, risotto with lagoon shrimps, trenette with pesto, fried scampi and squid, asparagus au gratin. But a wonderful companion of the best raw hams with a sweet tendency: from S. Daniele to Parma, from Sauris to Montagnana.
Intense yellow tending to golden, wide and intense bouquet with aromas of dry hay and chamomile, acacia honey and white pulp fruit. On the palate it is full-bodied, enveloping, with a dense aromatic texture innervated by a long mineral trail. Recommended pairings: risotto with wild asparagus...
The origin of this vine seems to be Spain from which it would have spread to the northern Tyrrhenian coasts where it is still widely cultivated today.
Istrian Malvasia and Vitovska, indigenous grape varieties of a territory with characteristic rough, sour, arid expressions. The presence of Malvasia, however, gives aromaticity, intense but elegant aromas for a fine wine, but with a proud and important structure. Very interesting.
The donnalaura is the emblem of the place of origin of the Falanghina, Montesarchio, with two biotypes, one now known throughout Campania and another rarer, exuberant, and with great acidity. Laura is the grandmother of the owner of the winery, Pasquale Clemente.