Author Archives: VinoeStile

A GREAT WINE EVENING TO PRESENT FRIULI-VENEZIA GIULIA

The italian autonomous region FRIULI VENEZIA GIULIA is a land of exceptional flavors at the crossroad of Italy, Slovenia (then the former Austro-Hungarian Empire), Austria, the Mediterranean see and the Adriatic). It has nice cities like Trieste and Udine and a huge historical heritage.

On 19 November, in Brussels the Friuli Venezia Giulia  showed its best assets to a selected audience. A great masterclass was led by two experts: Walter Filiputti, a famous italian journalist and the belgian wine journalist Marc Vanhellemont  (In Vino Veritas). They  presented  traditional grape sorts of the region as Ribolla gialla, Pignolo, RefoscoMalvasia istriana,  Schiopettino, Friulano, Ramandolo and others. 5 wines were tasted (1 spumante, 1 white, 1 red, 2 sweet wines), first alone and then in the middle of a beautiful wine-food pairing with prosciutto San Daniele hams DOC and delicious cheeses.

Then the representatives of the Chamber of Commerce of Udine and ICE have received a wider audience for a walking dinner which allowed everyone to discover the specialties of Friuli-Venezia Giulia prepared by four chefs::

– From VITELLO D`ORO restaurant, slice of swordfish, fresh tomatoes, basil and buffalo mozzarella from     Friuli.

– From COSTANTINI restaurant, traditional agnolotti from Carnia.

– From LA PRIMULA restaurant, typical  Frico cheese with mushrooms and polenta molle.

– From LA TAVERNA restaurant, risotto with late red chicory.

What a succesfull evening !

Miguel D DESNERCK

pictures: Henry BORZI

Consorzio Vini Colli Euganei: 4 decades of denomination, two millennia of vocation

Last Sunday, November 4th at the beautiful Villa dei Vescovi in Luvigliano in the province of Padua the Consorzio Vini Colli Euganei celebrated his forty years of activity.

On the occasion of the celebration of forty years of activity of the Consorzio dei Vini Colli Euganei, we interviewed the President of the Consorzio Antonio Dal Santo.

Q.-Dear Director what are the main steps that have characterized the growth of the consortium towards a better quality?
A.- The fact that we put together a statement of intent 40 years ago, and that we believed in the territory and oenological potential of the same.We realized the first achievements with the red wines, in terms of quality in the mid of the eighties.

From there we started the first attempt to identify the  good plots and we carried out a careful control of yields, in order to produce red wines.

These early projects were initially followed by a limited number of wineries, but by the early 90s, the first results seemed very flattering. In 1994 we laid a milestone with the upgrade of the rules and the introduction of Fior d’Arancio and Serprino as recognized grape sorts.
From there we started an in-depth research on white wines. At the beginning of 2000 we started to find out the different parcels for  merlot, cabernet franc and  Moscato Bianco. And then, we continued with the Moscato Giallo and Cabernet Sauvignon. Another milestone and key technical tool for our members was the recognition of the analysis laboratory (2000).

At this point, we also paid attention to the training of our young farmers who yet had brushed up their good basic education, thanks to many educational and technical initiatives of our wine association. All this, combined with a careful choice of  grape sorts suitable for each  individual plot of land, had as consequence for the Euganean Hills, a significant improvement in quality over the entire range of products; a goal that has been reached by a numerous winemakers  giving a determined impression of the improvement of the overall quality of our wines.

Q.- What steps have been made to improve the marketing of your products in Italy and abroad?

A.-  At first, we took care of the presentations and  events  about wine on a  local level. Afterwards, mainly thanks to the support of the Chamber of Commerce, and the collaboration with the Uvive ( Unione Consorzi Vini Veneti D.O.C.) we participated to fairs and major events nationally and internationally.

About 10 years ago, we decided to emphasize the communication of our Consorzio, solely based on our flagship: Fior d’Arancio, which became DOCG in 2011.

We have created a bottle and a general label for the whole wine region, which aimed to represent the excellence and uniqueness of this product, but also which  created a unique image and caused the unification of all the various small and large producers of the Euganean Hills.

Another step  was the creation, six years ago, of an internal structure “Enoteca consortile”   into the wine association located in  Montegrotto Terme,  which represents both a permanent business card in the territory and a center for the organization of events and promotion of our products.

Q.- Plans for the future?
A.- The ambition for the coming years is to bring the Euganean hills to cross new boundaries. Obtaining the DOCG in this regard has been very useful; now we have to carry on the work we started by giving even a greater impact and effectiveness of our promotional program.

We will also focus even more on the specificity and uniqueness of some of our products. Due to strong recent commercial successes that have sustained sales (particularly  for  the “fior d’arancio del Serprino” and  the “ CE rosso”), and due to the growing importance of wine tourism in all Italian wine regions, we would like to make of wine a key point for collaboration between all economical and territorial stakeholders.

A GREAT WINERY AT THE WALLS OF CARCASSONNE

VINEYARDS PAPER became acquainted with Sébastien ARINO, of domaine “FONTAINE GRANDE” whose property is located near the walls of Carcassonne, the picturesque medieval city in the Aude (South of France).

Sébastienmakes  three unique wines produced in white, pink and red.

In white wine he produces a smooth,  powerful wine – without batonnage or oak- that really gives priority to the fruit and its quintessence. Delicious.

The rosé tasted directly at the bulk, based on Merlot and Cabernet has a very dark color, a strong  taste of cherry and strawberry with a greedy side that we love.

His red is a powerful wine based on Merlot and Cabernet with very pronounced spicy notes. I loved it!!!!!!

You need to discover this winery very urgently:

contact:

Domaine Fontaine Grande, impasse des Anglais, F11000 Carcassonne, 33616407603, sebastien.arino @ wanadoo.fr

THE EUROPEAN WINE REGIONS ASSEMBLY GATHERS IN BRUSSELS TO PREVENT THE ABOLITION OF PLANTING RIGHTS

The most important personalities of the european wine world met in Brussels this 7th november at the Permanent Representation of Bavaria, invited by Jean-Paul Bachy, President of the Association European regions wine (AREV).

They took the floor : Jean-Paul Bachy, also president of the Champagne-Ardennes region, presidents or representatives of regions in France, Italy, Romania, Germany, Spain and especially Mrs Astrid Lulling, President of the wine intergoupe of the European Parliament and Michel Dantin, MEP and rapporteur CMO wines. They also noted the presence of national french MP’s Philippe MARTIN, chairman of ANEV, Marine Le Pen MEP. The Regional Minister for agriculture of the region of Veneto Franco MANZATO represented all Italian wine regions.
The different stakeholders, all united stressed the dire consequences which should occur after the liberalisation and also expressed their misunderstanding of the current position of officials of the European Commission as European Commissioner Dacian CIOLOS showed signs of opening to the wine industry and regions.
These consequences are: standardization of wine production, loss of family wine farms, disappearance of key elements of European winemaking : « climate, terroirs, grands crus ».
The coming months will be crucial to counter the liberalization of planting rights.

Wine production declining in the world

France, wine country, lost its lustre in the last report of the OIV, which is overcome by Italy.

The conclusion of the Organisation mondiale du vignoble et du vin (OIV) confirm that the surfaces of vineyards continue to decline worldwide only with exception of South America.

This phenomenon combined with bad weather, led to the production of wine at “very low levels,” said the OIV.

Italy is ahead of France

Italy is ahead of France OIV estimated, this week, that the wine production this year will reach 248.2 million hectoliters, a “net decrease of 16 million hectoliters compared to 2011.” In this classification, the European Union remains far ahead, but surprisingly, Italy rose largest producer with 40.8 million hectoliters – despite a 3% decline compared to 2011 – ahead of France. France has a sharp decline to 40.7 million hectoliters (-9.3 Mhl compared to 2011). Spanish production amount at 31.5 million hectoliters. United States is the fourth largest wine producer in the world.

In Europe, where the EU has lost 270,000 hectares of wines due to the grubbing-up premiums granted for three consecutive years, only Portugal and Greece saw their surfaces grow.

Growth slowed almost everywhere

The situation is no better in the world: the growth rate of planted areas in the southern hemisphere and the United States has slowed since several campaigns against the movement of expansion observed around the year 2000. The North American production remains up in 2012 (20.5 million Mhl, 7%), but this is small compared to its level of 2011 emphasizes the OIV.
Only South America continues its development in particular Argentina (2000 ha), Brazil and Chile. This one even reaches a record of level production of 10.6 million hectoliters (up 15.5% compared to 2010).
Finally, OIV finds that the growth of Chinese vineyards tends to diminish and erosion observed since 2006 continued in South Africa and particularly Australia (12,000 hectares lost in 2012, 162 million).

Henry borzi

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