Manzoni Bianco - Montello - Asolo Hills DOC Serafini & Vidotto
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It has straw-yellow hues with bright and subtle golden-light glints; it is crystalline and of excellent consistency.
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It has straw-yellow hues with bright and subtle golden-light glints; it is crystalline and of excellent consistency.
Coda di Volpe, a grape already mentioned by Pliny the Elder in his “Naturalis Historia” with the name of “Cauda Vulpium” for its bunch which when fully ripe takes on the shape of the fox's tail.
Greco is a grape so called because it was brought to southern Italy by the Pelasgians of Thessaly in the 8th century BC. It is also called “aminea gemina” due to the twin shape of the small bunches.
Fiano, a grape called “Vitis Apiana” by the Latins because bees are particularly fond of the sweetness of this grape.
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.
Dry white with a beautiful structure, intense straw yellow with evident greenish reflections; of good aromatic intensity, reminiscent of exotic fruit, pineapple and citrus; fruity, with a balanced acidulous vein, it is slightly bitter in the aftertaste.
Fresh white, straw yellow with greenish reflections, fruity, with long and intense aromas with clear hints of citrus, white flowers and fresh fruit salad; dry, with a good structure, it has a fragrant evolution with a delicate acidity and a long aftertaste. The name of this wine is closely linked...
Fresh and fragrant white from two varieties of great character that here are combined with synergy, modernity and freshness. Aromas of fresh fruit and white flowers, sweet taste supported by a particularly fresh fruitiness, with a long and persistent finish.
Falanghina from the Greek-Latin term "Falango", that is "Palo", as the characteristic of Campania viticulture is that of the "Vine tied to the pole", or always from the Greek-Latin term "Falange", giving it the meaning of "Falange" ”Of the finger to which you would like the grape to resemble.
The Vette owes its name to the imposing peaks that frame the vineyards from which it is born, a Sauvignon Blanc of great freshness and minerality.