Italy's classification system is a modern one that reflects current
realities. It has four classes of wine, with two falling under the
EU category Quality Wine Produced in a Specific Region (QWPSR) and
two falling under the category of 'table wine'. The four classes
are:
Both DOC and DOCG wines refer to zones which are more specific
than an IGT, and the permitted grapes are also more specifically
defined. The main difference between a DOC and a DOCG is that the
latter must pass a blind taste test for quality in addition to conforming
to the strict legal requirements to be designated as a wine from
the area in question.
Presently, there are 120 IGT zones. In February 2006 there were
311 DOC plus 32 DOCG appellations, according to the PDF document
V.Q.P.R.D. Vini (DOCG – DOC): Elenco e Riferimenti Normativi
al 07.02.2006, published by the Italian Ministry of Agriculture.
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Key
Italian Wine Varietals
Italy's Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry (MIRAF), has documented
over 350 grapes and granted them "authorized" status.
There are more than 500 other documented varietals in circulation
as well. The following is a list of the most common and important
of Italy's varietals.
Rosso
(red)
Sangiovese - Italy's claim to
fame, the pride of Tuscany. Its wines are full of cherry fruit,
earth, and cedar. It produces Chianti Classico, Rosso di Montalcino,
Brunello di Montalcino, Rosso di Montepulciano, Montefalco Rosso,
and many others.
Nebbiolo - The most noble of Italy's varietals.
The name (meaning "little fog") refers to the autumn
fog that blankets most of Piedmont where it is grown, a condition
the grape seems to enjoy. It is a somewhat difficult varietal
to master, but produces the most renowned Barolo and Barbaresco,
made in province of Cuneo, along with the lesser-known Sforzato,
Inferno and Sassella made in Valtellina, Ghemme and Gattinara,
made in Vercelli's province. The wines are known for their elegance
and bouquet of wild mushroom, truffle, roses, and tar.
Montepulciano - The grape of this name is not
to be confused with the Tuscan town of Montepulciano; it is most
widely planted on the opposite coast in Abruzzo. Its wines develop
silky plum-like fruit, friendly acidity, and light tannin.
Barbera - The most widely grown red wine grape
of Piedmont and Southern Lombardy, most famously around the towns
of Asti and Alba, and Pavia. The wines of Barbera were once simply
"what you drank while waiting for the Barolo to be ready."
With a new generation of wine makers, this is no longer the case.
The wines are now meticulously vinified, aged Barbera gets the
name "Barbera Superiore" Superior Barbera, sometines
aged in French barrique becoming "Barbera Barricato",
and intended for the international market. The wine has bright
cherry fruit, a very dark color, and a food-friendly acidity.
Corvina - Along with the varietals rondinella
and molinara, this is the principal grape which makes the famous
wines of the Veneto: Valpolicella and Amarone. Valpolicella wine
has dark cherry fruit and spice. After the grapes undergo passito
(a drying process), the Amarone they yield is elegant, dark, and
full of raisinated fruits. Some Amarones can age for 40+ years.
Nero d'Avola - Nearly unheard of in the international
market until recent years, this native varietal of Sicily is gaining
attention for its robust, inky wines.
Dolcetto - A grape that grows alongside barbera
and nebbiolo in Piedmont, its name means "little sweet one"",
referring not to the taste of the wine, but the ease in which
it grows and makes great wines, suitable for everyday drinking.
Flavors of concord grape, wild blackberries and herbs permeate
the wine.
Negroamaro - The name literally means "black
and bitter". A widely planted grape with its concentration
in the region of Puglia, it is the backbone of the acclaimed Salice
Salentino: spicy, toasty, and full of dark red fruits.
Aglianico - Considered the "noble varietal
of the south," it is primarily grown in Campania and Basilicata.
The name is derived from Hellenic, so it is considered a Greek
transplant. Thick skinned and spicy, the wines are both rustic
and powerful.
Sagrantino - A native to Umbria, it is only planted
on 250 hectares, but the wines are world-renowned. Inky purple,
with rustic brooding fruit and heavily tannic, these wines can
age for many years.
Malvasia Nera - Red Malvasia varietal from Piedmont.
A sweet and perfumed wine, sometimes elaborated in the passito
style.
Other major red varieties are: Ciliegolo, Gaplioppo,
Lagrein, Lambrusco, Monica, Nerello Mascalese, Pignolo, Primitivo,
Refosco, Schiava, Schiopettino, Teroldego, and Uva di Troia.
“International” varietals such as Merlot,
Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah, and Cabernet Franc are also widely
grown.
Bianco
(White)
Trebbiano - Behind cataratto (which
is made for industrial jug wine), this is the most widely planted
white varietal in Italy. It is grown throughout the country, with
a special focus on the wines from Abruzzo. Mostly, they are pale,
easy drinking wines, but trebbiano from producers such as Valentini
have been known to age for 15+ years. It is known as Ugni Blanc
in France.
Moscato - Grown mainly in Piedmont, it is mainly
used in the slightly-sparkling (frizzante), semi-sweet Moscato
d'Asti. Not to be confused with moscato giallo and moscato rosa,
two Germanic varietals that are grown in Trentino Alto-Adige.
Nuragus - An ancient Phoenician varietal found in southern Sardegna.
Light and tart wines that are drunk as an apertif in their homeland.
Pinot Grigio - A hugely successful commercial
grape (known as Pinot Gris in France), its wines are characterized
by crispness and cleanness. As a hugely mass-produced wine, it
is usually delicate and mild, but in a good producers' hands,
the wine can grow more full-bodied and complex. The main problem
with the grape is that to satisfy the commercial demand, the grapes
are harvested too early every year, leading to wines without character.
Tocai Friuliano - A varietal distantly related
to Sauvignon Blanc, it yields the top wine of Friuli, full of
peachiness and minerality. Currently, there is a bit of controversy
regarding the name, as the EC has demanded it changed to avoid
confusion with the Tokay dessert wine from Hungary.
Ribolla Gialla - A Slovenian grape that now makes
its home in Friuli, these wines are decidedly old-world, with
aromas of pineapple and mustiness.
Arneis - A crisp and floral varietal from Piedmont, which has
been grown there since the 15th century.
Malvasia Bianca - Another white varietal that
peeks up in all corners of Italy with a wide variety of clones
and mutations. Can range from easy quaffers to funky, musty whites.
Pigato - A heavily acidic varietal from Liguria,
the wines are vinified to pair with a cuisine rich in sea-food.
Fiano (wine) - Grown on the southwest coast of
Italy, the wines from this grape can be described as dewy and
herbal, often with notes of pinenut and pesto.
Garganega - The main grape varietal for wines
labeled Soave, this is a crisp, dry white wine from the Veneto
wine region of Italy. It's a very popular wine that hails from
northeast Italy around the city of Verona.
Currently, there are over 3,500 distinct producers
of Soave.
Other important whites include
Carricante, Catarratto, Coda de Volpe, Cortese, Falaghina, Grillo,
Inzolia, Picolit, Tocai Friulano, Traminer, Verdicchio, Verduzzo,
Vermentino and Vernaccia.
As far as non-native varietals, the Italians plant
chardonnay, gewürztraminer (sometimes called traminer aromatico),
riesling, petite arvine, and many others.
Super
Tuscans
The term "Super Tuscan" describes any
Tuscan red wine that does not adhere to traditional blending laws
for the region. For example, Chianti Classico wines are
made from a blend of grapes with Sangiovese as the dominant varietal
in the blend. Super Tuscans often use other grapes, especially
cabernet sauvignon, making them ineligible for DOC(G) classification
under the traditional rules.
In the 1970s Piero Antinori, whose family had been
making wine for more than 600 years, decided to make a richer
wine by eliminating the white grapes from the Chianti blend, and
instead adding Bordeaux varietals (namely, cabernet sauvignon
and merlot). He was inspired by a little-known (at the time) cabernet
sauvignon made by relatives called Sassicaia, which openly flouted
the rules set down for traditional wines in Tuscany. The result
was the first Super Tuscan, which he named Tignanello, after the
vineyard where the grapes were grown. Other winemakers started
experimenting with Super Tuscan blends of their own shortly thereafter.
Because these wines did not conform to strict DOC(G)
classifications, they were initially labeled as vino da tavola,
meaning "table wine," a term ordinarily reserved for
lower quality wines. The creation of the Indicazione Geografica
Tipica category (technically indicating a level of quality between
vino da tavola and DOCG) helped bring Super Tuscans "back
into the fold" from a regulatory standpoint.
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