Good Things From Italy - Le Cose Buone d'Italia
335.9K views | +20 today
Follow
Good Things From Italy - Le Cose Buone d'Italia
Alle goede dingen uit Italie! Zoals eten en drinken, mode, vakantie, bezienswaardigheden, delicatessen, producten, dienstverlening, design, kunst, made in italy, geschiedenis, trends, muziek, mensen, dorpen, steden e.d. Koop uw Italiaanse producten via <a href="http://www.goodthingsfromitaly.com" rel="nofollow">www.goodthingsfromitaly.com</a>  
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Rescooped by Good Things From Italy from Wines and People
Scoop.it!

In Le Marche a Count Uses Sheep to Snag Wine Lovers

In Le Marche a Count Uses Sheep to Snag Wine Lovers | Good Things From Italy - Le Cose Buone d'Italia | Scoop.it
Next time you’re searching for a unique white wine, uncork a bottle of Saladini Pilastri Pecorino white wine. Is the name of the Italian, family-owned winery a challenge? No problem. Just ask for wine with sheep on the label.
In Italian “pecora” means little sheep. That is why Pecorino wines sport it on the label. But even with a bottle in hand, the image begs the question: What do sheep have to do with this wine? While Pecorino Italian cheese is made from sheep’s milk, that’s only part of this wine’s pedigree.
According to a local legend, the Pecorino grape acquired its name from sheep who loved grazing on Pecorino grapes while shepherded from pasture to pasture. The Greeks brought the grape to Italy, but the low-yielding grape was thought to be extinct until the 1990s.
One reason the sheep may have loved the grapes, which are found in the Marche, Abruzzo, and Umbria wine regions, is for their natural sweetness. Yet Pecorino is not a sweet wine in any sense of the word. It is an aromatic wine with bright acidity that pairs well with all types of seafood dishes.
Saladini Pilastri uses the yellow sheep’s image as a marketing tool, inspiring wine aficionados to explore its organic white wines. The sheep’s image also reflects the white grape’s Denominazione Di Origine Controllata e Garantita (DOCG) required by Italian law.
Pecorino wines must contain at least 85 percent Pecorino grapes to receive the Offida DOCG stamp of approval. Low in acidity, the wine is typically straw-colored and medium-bodied. On the nose, it’s all about nuts and fruits, such as green apple, pineapple, and even bananas.
Count Saladini Pilastri heads up the family wine business from his sprawling villa 2 kilometers from the medieval town of Spinetoli in the Ascoli Piceno province. The lands and titles were gifted to the Saladini Pilastri family 1,000 years ago as a reward for its participation in the Holy Crusades.
Three centuries into it, the Count continues to produce artisan wines and one-of-kind olive oil. The rolling sun-baked hills of Monte Prandone and Porto d’ Ascoli surround the 300 hectares that make up Saladini Pilastri winery.
Nestled in the bucolic Marche appellation in the eastern coastal region of Italy, the winery is not far from the Adriatic Sea. Looking at a map of Italy, the Marche is situated in the “calf” of the iconic Italian boot. In English, the wine region is called the “Italian Marches” region.
Le Marche region, however, is not as famous as neighboring Tuscany and Umbria. But to wine aficionados searching for fine organic wines, that’s a good thing. In fact, Saladini Pilastri implemented low-impact organic farming practices as recently as 1995. Those efforts included eliminating artificial fertilizers and pesticides. By 2008, the winery was one of a few certified organic wineries in Marche.
With celebrated Tuscan enologist and winemaker Alberto Antonini at the helm, Saladin Pilastri was the first winery in the Piceno area to earn the prestigious Tre Bicchieri award from Gambero Rosso, Italy’s wine bible.
The count follows all the process of the harvest, the winery, and the vineyards. He personally controls everything. For him, it is a passion,” said Pietro Piccioni, export manager. “Like the decision to go bio and organic. He started with bio and organic cultivation in 1995, and we wrote “organic” on the first label in 1998.”
The move to organic is one technique that caught the eye of a wine scout from Total Wines & More, which promptly added Saladini Pilastri winery to the company’s portfolio. Now, the fine wines are available at one of TWM’s 80 superstores in 13 states.TWM has stores in New York, New Jersey, and other states on the east coast. A bottle of Pecorino white wine retails for about $10 a bottle.
Although 55 to 60 percent of the wines Saladini Pilastri produces are white wines, its red Rosso Piceno wines are also a gift. This red has 80 percent Sangiovese and 20 percent Montepulciano. A bottle of this ruby red also retails for $10 a bottle. Like Pecorino white, Rosso Piceno 2010 is made from hand-picked organic grapes. [...]
Via Mariano Pallottini
No comment yet.
Rescooped by Good Things From Italy from Wines and People
Scoop.it!

Best Wines of Le Marche: Saladini e Pilastri, Rosso Piceno Superiore "Vigna Monteprandone"

Best Wines of Le Marche: Saladini e Pilastri,  Rosso Piceno Superiore "Vigna Monteprandone" | Good Things From Italy - Le Cose Buone d'Italia | Scoop.it

Opulent aromas with layers of black cherry, mulberry and prune, eastern spice and liquorice. Beautiful textured, combining generosity and sophistication, with an underlying vitality that is rivetting. Everything is accentuated by the generosity of the older vineyards of Sangiovese and Montepulciano situated on the sweet sunny hills of Monteprandone.

Controlled denomination: Rosso Piceno Superiore

Zone of production: Monteprandone (Marche)
Type of vines: Montepulciano 70% and Sangiovese 30%
Vineyard and surface: hamlet Colle Navicchio - 7 Ha
Exposure: south-east
Altitude: 200 m
Type of soil: average mixture- clay loam
Cultivation system: curtain with short spurs
Average age of vines: 36 years
Grape yield per hectar: 5000 Kg/ha
Period of harvest: end of October
Fermentation: steel
Temperature of fermentation: 28°C (33° the beginning 3 days)
Lenght of fermentation and maceration: 30 days
Yeasts used: selected
Barrels: barriques of French oak – 50% of them new
Ageing in barrels: 18 months

Tasting Notes: Ruby-red color; nose of ripe cherries, plums, spice, vanilla and liquorice. The structure combines elegance with a soft tannic structure. The palate is rich with ripe black fruit flavors and a long-lasting finish.


Via Mariano Pallottini
No comment yet.
Rescooped by Good Things From Italy from Wines and People
Scoop.it!

Two Italian Giants meet in Rosso Piceno

Two Italian Giants meet in Rosso Piceno | Good Things From Italy - Le Cose Buone d'Italia | Scoop.it

The two giants in question are not Primo Carnera and Bruno Sammartino and Rosso Piceno is not the name of the venue for the fight card. The two giants in fact are (shockingly) grapes – Sangiovese and Montepulciano, and Rosso Piceno is the name of an extensive appellation in The Marche.

Strangely, despite what I’ve always thought to be the chemistry between the deep plumpness of Montepulciano and the edgey complexity of Sangiovese, there are precious few appellations that allow for a combination of the two. Like I said above, Rosso Piceno can be made almost anywhere in the fairly large region of Marche, so that means that there’s Rosso Piceno, and there’s Rosso Piceno. The regulation’s permissable yields might be a bit too high, but lots of producers severely restrict their harvests as a matter of common practice. And again, because of the extension of the zone, some of the terroirs range from just passable to truly distinctive.

So as I’m not prone to wasting your time or mine on sketchy wines, tonight’s bottle is undoubtedly one of the good ones. The Rosso Piceno disciplinare (the specific whats and wherefores of grape blend percentages, aging requirements, etc.) allows for a wide swing in the percentages of Sangiovese and Montepulciano. This evening’s blend was produced exclusively from the Montetinello vineyard in the town of Spinetoli. Montetinello’s situation close to the sea makes it a warm site; this in addition to the vineyard’s dense plantation, and the blend’s heavy lean on Montepulciano (70%) over Sangiovese (30%) make this wine one of the giants of it’s type.

Big wine, big food. First course: bucatini all’ amatriciana. Second course/side: Thick-cut bone porkchops oven-braised with cannellini beans, white wine, garlic, sage, rosemary, and a touch of paprika.


Via Mariano Pallottini
No comment yet.