Tasting Notes: There is no one way to create the perfect Super Tuscan, but some of our favorites are increasingly adding Cabernet Franc in recent years. Fragrant, floral and deeply fruity, its powerful tannins make the Il Fauno... Read More
Tasting Notes: Pale salmon in color, Castello di Bossi Rosato pays homage to the rosé wines of southern France. On the nose, however, it immediately asserts its Italian heritage with aromas of dusty earth and Mediterranean... Read More
Tasting Notes: The Giuseppe Quintarelli Recioto della Valpolicella A Roberto is named in honor of Roberto Ferrarini, Giuseppe Quintarelli’s longtime enologist. Grapes are dried before the wine is vinified and then racked... Read More
Tasting Notes: In essence a declassified Amarone from a cooler vintage, the Giuseppe Quintarelli Rosso del Bepi is typically only produced when the Amarone is not made. A great introduction into Quintarelli wines without the splurge... Read More
Tasting Notes: In essence a declassified Amarone from a cooler vintage, the Giuseppe Quintarelli Rosso del Bepi is typically only produced when the Amarone is not made. A great introduction into Quintarelli wines without the splurge... Read More
Tasting Notes: Rute comes from the word “red” in Etruscan. The Etruscans were the most ancient civilization of this territory and the first to cultivate vines in Italy. Merlot is harvested in mid-September, Cabernet... Read More
Tasting Notes: “Madègo”, the name of the vineyard is the word in the local dialect for the harvest of the alfalfa that was once grown on this plot of land. It is a red wine that should be drunk young in order... Read More
Tasting Notes: The La Mozza Cabernet I Perazzi is a truly Tuscan Cabernet, in which the great Bordeaux variety is interpreted with Maremma style: maximum ripeness and highest quality. Intense fruit, notes of ripe blueberry and... Read More