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Items 346-360 of 560
A gorgeous vintage. A liquorice bomb, nevertheless. Some rose and candied characteristics. Unsurprisingly grippy tannins. Good with oily tomato pesto and ravioli. After giving it some time to breath there's bold cassis and prunes to complement the slightly more toned-down liquorice.
An orange wine with floral scents, candied citrus and Mediterranean herbs. The taste is soft, fresh, with a great sapidity that brings us towards a lightly saline finish, very persistent and of great elegance.
From certified biodynamic agriculture comes a wine with an attractive ruby red color: the Montepulciano d'Abruzzo Passione Natura Red Wine is a true harmony of flavor to make every moment in company exceptional.
Straw yellow. Aroma: Fresh and fruity. Apple, melon and honey. Apple, melon and honey, with a clean crisp refreshing finish. Perfect accompaniment to any occasion, as an aperitif, with light starters and seafood.
The grapes are harvested in the coolest hours of the day and the wine is left to ferment in conical wooden vats at a controlled temperature. At the end of the process, it is refined for 15 months, first in new 600-litre demi-muids and then in barriques.
The vineyards where the grapes for Camartina are grown have been cultivated organically since 1988 and have been converted to a strict biodynamic standard in 2000. The grapes are carefully selected in the vineyards and harvested in 8-kilo crates.
The bouquet is intense with vibrant herbal, spicy, and fruit-forward notes. Very well structured, full bodied, quite soft, and balanced with pronounced tannins. A wine with a great personality and long aftertaste.
Beautifully textured and balanced, this full-bodied wine represents uncompromising quality, a subtle expression of Casa Raia's organic approach to wine making. The Bevilo name is a playful reference to an old Tuscany drinking song with the words "Bevi lo! Vino fa cantare," meaning "Drink it! Wine makes you sing."
The native Mataossu (pronounced mah-tah-OHSS-soo) dominated the vineyards of Varigotti in the 19th century, but its delicate vegetative balance provoked most winegrowers to rip out the vines in favor of less finicky grapes.