Cabernet Franc Alturis
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Small red fruit on a sweet spice mat. Balanced and soft, it has a good structure and reflects the typicality but without excess aromas.
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Small red fruit on a sweet spice mat. Balanced and soft, it has a good structure and reflects the typicality but without excess aromas.
Dessert wine. Intense and complex on the nose, it has a bouquet of great elegance: it gives dried fruit, acacia honey and barley candy. Typical sweet and almond finish.
Strong straw yellow color, typical floral and ripe yellow fruit aroma; dry, velvety flavor, great volume and intensity. 50% in steel with inert gas protection; the remaining 50% in barrique with racking at the end of the bâtonnage. At the bottling, the two parts come together.
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...
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.
A wine produced in Venice on the island of Sant'Erasmo, in the fenuta "garden of Venice". Generated "free of foot" from ancient Italian vines cultivated in respect of natural dynamics, by virtue of the soothing and tenacious passion of the Thoulouze family. Cradled in the heart of the Venice...
The taste is full and soft, with very delicate olfactory sensations ranging from floral to spicy accompanied by a honeyed hint.
Elegant and intense bouquet, with fruity notes of peach and acacia flowers. In the mouth it is fresh, enveloping, savory and persistent.
It enters the delicate nose, with elegant fruity and floral tones that blend with mineral sensations. It has clean and fresh aromas with refined nuances of jasmine on fruity notes of golden apple and ripe tropical fruits. In the mouth it is lively and balanced, it has good softness and lively...
Elegant and intense aroma, with varietal notes of sage, tomato leaf and mint, which are mixed with fruity hints of grapefruit and exotic fruit. In the mouth it is fresh, enveloping, savory and persistent.
Refined, broad and complex bouquet, with notes of exotic fruit, hay, bread crust and toasted almonds that distinguish its typicality. The taste confirms the olfactory sensations and is dry, full and savory. It stands out for its pleasantness and elegance.
It best expresses this native vine which represents the territory more than any other. Nose characterized by excellent typicality with warm flavors of lime honey, white flowers and pear. Balanced to the taste, where the captivating softness is balanced by flavor and lively freshness. It closes...
Elegant and fruity bouquet with pleasant notes of vanilla, small pastries and ripe fruit. On the palate it is decisive and persistent. The enveloping texture confirms the fruity and soft echoes for a long time and the pleasant freshness invites a new sip.
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.