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Wine
WineType of grape
-
Type of grape
- Verdejo
- Tempranillo
- Chardonnay
- Malbec
- Merlot
- Riesling
- Sangiovese
- Pinot noir
- Syrah
- Grenache
WineProduction area-
Production area
- Ribera de Duero
- Rioja
- Priorat
- Bordeaux
- Burgundy
- Loire valley
- Douro
- Piedmont
- Tuscany
- Mendoza
WineWineType of grape-
Type of grape
- Verdejo
- Tempranillo
- Chardonnay
- Malbec
- Merlot
- Riesling
- Sangiovese
- Pinot noir
- Syrah
- Grenache
WineProduction area-
Production area
- Ribera de Duero
- Rioja
- Priorat
- Bordeaux
- Burgundy
- Loire valley
- Douro
- Piedmont
- Tuscany
- Mendoza
Wine -
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Sparkling wine
Sparkling wineProduction area
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Production area
- Champagne
- Cava
- Prosecco
- Lambrusco
- Moscato d'Asti
- Franciacorta
- Corpinnat
Sparkling wineRatings-
Ratings
- Rated by Parker
- Rated by Decántalo
Sparkling wineSugar level-
Sugar level
- Champagne Brut
- Champagne Brut Nature
- Champagne Extra Brut
- Cava Brut
- Cava Brut Nature
- Cava Extra Brut
Sparkling wineDiscover more-
Discover more
- Champagne in Magnum format
- Cava in Magnum format
- Top 10 Champagne
- Top 10 Cava
- Give cava and champagne
Sparkling wineSparkling wineProduction area-
Production area
- Champagne
- Cava
- Prosecco
- Lambrusco
- Moscato d'Asti
- Franciacorta
- Corpinnat
Sparkling wineRatings-
Ratings
- Rated by Parker
- Rated by Decántalo
Sparkling wineSugar level-
Sugar level
- Champagne Brut
- Champagne Brut Nature
- Champagne Extra Brut
- Cava Brut
- Cava Brut Nature
- Cava Extra Brut
Sparkling wineDiscover more-
Discover more
- Champagne in Magnum format
- Cava in Magnum format
- Top 10 Champagne
- Top 10 Cava
- Give cava and champagne
Sparkling wine -
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Italian red wine
Enjoy the best red wines from Italy
The latitude, climate and landscape of Italy makes it the perfect country for producing quality red wines. In fact, wine is produced in all of the country’s twenty regions, so Italian red wine is a reflection of these regions and their varieties, soils and climates. To give you some examples, we might say that in Piedmont, reds from the DOCG Barolo are full-bodied dry red wines and those from the DOCG Barbaresco are more elegant and refined. Another example would be the Italian red wine from the DOC Bardolino, in Veneto, where they generally make young red wines with a ruby colour and a marked acidity.
Varieties used to make Italian red wines.
Italy is a country that is lucky to have a long history of cultivation when it comes to grape varieties.
Perhaps the most famous grapes used to make Italian red wine are Nebbiolo and Sangiovese. The first is originally from Piedmont and makes very powerful, long aging red wines. The second is typical of Tuscany, and is usually used to make chiantis, easier wines with a somewhat lower aging potential.
Some of the most common varieties by area.
In the northwest of Italy, in Piedmont, the Nebbiolo, Barbera and Dolcetto varieties are most common. In the northeast, in Veneto, it’s the Corvina, Molinara and Rondinella varieties; in Friuli, Refosco; in the Trento-Alto Adige, Teroldego, Schiava and Lagrein. In the centre, in Tuscany, it is Sangiovese and Cabernet Sauvignon. In the South, in Campania, Aglianico; in Apulia, Negroamaro, Malvasia Nera, Primitivo and Uva di Troia; in Sardinia, Cannonau and Carignano. Finally, in Sicily, it is mostly the Nero d’Avola and Nerello Mascalese varieties.
The Italian red wine scene is extremely rich and diverse thanks to the large number of varieties they grow, the different micro-climates and the diverse soils, with limestone, clay-stony and even volcanic soils. Would you like to try them?