ETHICA WINES USA CATALOG

USA PORTFOLIO

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ITALIAN ROOTS. GLOBAL REACH.

“Our name Ethica Wines means transparency as a key value for our company. We provide our partners with informed advice that will allow them to build our working relationships through a well-honed and overarching approach to doing business.

Our Italian team operates globally, offering importing, marketing and sales services in North America and Asia Pacific. From Italy to the world.”

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A NOTE FROM OUR CEO

“Ethica Wines is a long-term, ambitious project born out of a dream to create a new, value-driven approach to Italian wine importing and distributing. The project is focused on authenticity and generating enthusiasm among consumers and producers alike. Our team of dynamic and passionate professionals takes its inspiration from Italian wine heritage. Our goal is to build a new future for Italian wine across the world.” Francesco Ganz Co-founder & CEO

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OUR SALES REGIONS

“Our team is made up of young and highly skilled professionals whose passion and expertise make it one of the best in the industry. With streamlined decision- making, team members in every major market, and robust support from our office in Italy, we are committed to forging long- term partnerships.

Stationed throughout the globe we keep a close eye on our local markets and at the same time get a global perspective of the current wine world. With our reach, you’ll get constant support guaranteed. From Italy to the world we cover from coastline to coastline and back again.”

West Coast

Central

Midwest

Southeast

Northeast

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USA

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ME

ND

VT

MT

MN

OR

NH

NY

MA

ID

SD

WI

RI

MI

MY

CT

PA MD

NJ

IA

NE

OH

NV

IN

IL

UT

WV

CA

DE

CO

VA

KY

KS

MO

NC

TN

OK

SC

AZ

AR

NM

GA

MS

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TX

LA

FL

AK

HI

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PORTFOLIO BY CATEGORY

Ethica Wines offers a portfolio of premium Italian wines. With a selection of the most desirable regions from distinctive grape-growing estates; our wine portfolio is a celebration of Italy in all its forms.

STARS Leading and noteworthy wineries from the major Italian wine regions.

LITTLE DIAMONDS Unique and outstanding wines from selected estates worth to discover.

EVERYDAY ITALY Classic great-quality Italian wines for everyday consumption.

Additional specifications about certain wines.

VEGAN FRIENDLY Produced without animal fining agents. CRU Single-vineyard designation.

ORGANIC Farmed without chemicals.

BIODYNAMIC Holistically farmed.

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REGIONS & WINERIES

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5. Friuli-Venezia Giulia/Slovenia

1. Valle d’Aosta

p. 16

La Kiuva

p. 116

Movia

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2. Piemonte

6. Lombardia

p. 22

Amista’

p. 126

Ca’ dei Frati

p. 26

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Borgogno

7. Emilia – Romagna

p. 32

Cascina Valle Asinari

p. 134

Villa di Corlo

Cordero di Montezemolo Fontanabianca

p. 38

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p. 44

8. Toscana

p. 48

Mirafiore

p. 140 Cafaggio p. 146 Cappella Sant’Andrea

p. 52

Ottosoldi

p. 150

p. 60

Casanova di Neri

Villa Sparina

p. 162 Fattoria Le Pupille p. 156 Colombaio di Cencio p. 168 I Greppi p. 172 Ridolfi

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3. Trentino – Alto Adige

p. 68

Cantina Lavis

p. 74

Cembra

p. 78

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St. Pauls

9. Lazio

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4. Veneto

p. 178 Tenuta Principe Alberico

p. 86

Anselmi

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10. Puglia

p. 90

Antica Quercia

p. 184

Vespa

p. 94

Ca’ dei Zago

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11. Sicilia

p. 98

Giovanna Tantini

p. 192 p. 196

Carranco

p. 102

La Gioiosa

Terrazze dell‘Etna

p. 106

Nicolis

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p. 110

Serafini e Vidotto

p. 202

Everyday Italy

Beer

p. 218

Birra Dolomiti

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ITALY

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VALLE D'AOSTA

The Aosta Valley region (Valle d’Aosta or Val d’Aosta in Italian) is renowned for its “heroic viticulture.” The slopes of this ancient alpine river valley are so steep that all the work in the vineyards must be carried out by hand. Grape growing there is shaped by the cool alpine air currents that arrive from

the north and the granitic composition of the valley’s walls. Combined, they create the ideal conditions for diurnal shifts: The granitic rock traps the warmth of the sun during the day, while the cool air cools the vineyards at night, thus prolonging the vegetative cycle and delivering freshness and

rich flavors in the wine. The main grape varieties grown there are Nebbiolo, which makes for lighter-styled but nonetheless complex wines, and the native Petit Rouge, which is made generally in a bright, fruit-forward (but not jammy) style. Chardonnay is also grown there with spectacular results.

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VALLE D'AOSTA

Courmayer

Aosta

Arnad

La Kiuva

Cooperative producer of top wines from Aosta Valley, home to mountainside vineyards and the heroic grower members who farm them.

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• Founded in the second half of the 1970s, La Kiuva (lah kee- OO-vah) is a cooperative winery with 50 grower members located in the beautiful small village of Arnad, right at the heart of the Alps. • Members were encouraged to take over old, abandoned vineyards in the best areas in order to produce authentic and sustainable wines. • 15 hectares (37 acres) of vines all hand-picked. • La Kiuva is committed to giving value to the terroir and the indigenous grape variety as Picotendro, the local clone of Nebbiolo • The Alpine climate, with wide temperature variations between day and night, increases the acidity and freshness of the grapes • Cultivation method: Guyot and Pergola, on sandy glacier- crafted terraces • Soil: sandy and alkaline

In the Aosta Valley where La Kiuva grows grapes and makes wine, Nebbiolo is known as Picotendro, from the French Picot Tendre. Nebbiolo from this part of Italy, where French is spoken, is often more delicate and more perfumed than its Piedmontese counterpart.

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LA KIUVA Rosé de Vallée

LA KIUVA Arnad Montjovet Supérieur Valle d’Aosta DOC

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Although its members also grow international grape varieties like Merlot and Chardonnay, their primary focus is grape varieties native to the Aosta Valley like Petite Arvine, Petit Rouge, and Picotendro, the local name for Nebbiolo. La Kiuva’s clean winemaking style is centered around freshness, clarity, and terroir expression.

LA KIUVA Rouge de Vallée

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PIEMONTE

The name Piedmont means literally “at the foot of the mountain,” a reference to the fact that the region is bordered to the northwest and west by the towering Pennine Alps. Although today we think of Piedmont as a producer of Italy’s most coveted and collectible wines it wasn’t until the post-war era that the region emerged as a wine powerhouse. There are a number of reasons why

Piedmont, and in particular the Langhe Hills where Nebbiolo is grown for Barolo and Barbaresco, are ideal for fine wine production: Alpine currents help to cool the grapes during summer and maritime influence — from both the nearby Mediterranean and the Tanaro river which snakes through the area — helps to mitigate the cold during winter, for example.

But the most important element is arguably the ancient seabed soils and their calcareous character that make Piedmont one of the best growing sites in Italy.

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PIEMONTE

Torino

Gavi

Asti

Alba

Barolo

Amistà

Barbera from its historic homeland, Nizza Monferrato, grown, vinified, and patiently aged by one of Italy’s top winemakers, Luca D’Attoma. It’s his first wine in Piedmont.

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• Amistà produces only two wines: Amistà Nizza DOCG, and Amistà Nizza DOCG Riserva, both made from 100-percent estate-grown Barbera grapes. • The Nizza DOCG appellation was established in 2014 and it is the original home of Barbera d’Asti, which found here some of its greatest expressions. • Although still not certified organic, the winery uses innovative farming practices in the vineyard. • Enologist Luca D’Attoma, internationally acclaimed and renownedwinemaker,manageseveryaspectofproduction, from vineyard management to vinification and bottling. • Large-format cask aging gives the wine depth and complexity without imparting invasive wood flavors. • Soil types: the classic sandstone and limestone marl to be found throughout Monferrato, a UNESCO-designated wine growing region. • Amistà is the latest project by Michele Marsjai, co-owner of the Ottosoldi winery, a partnership with Stefano Moccagatta of Villa Sparina fame and producer of critically acclaimed Gavi.

Amistà wines are made only from Barbera grapes that have been grown in the variety’s historic homeland, Nizza Monferrato, and vinified by leading enologist\, Luca D’Attoma. This compelling, focused, and highly nuanced expression of Barbera has already become a benchmark for the Nizza DOCG, which was created in 2014..

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AMISTÀ Nizza DOCG

Amistà makes just one wine, its Nizza DOCG, a 100-percent Barbera grown in some of the appellation’s most highly coveted vineyards. This is Barbera at its absolute best, rich in body and flavor, lithe and vibrant on the palate.

AMISTÀ Nizza Riserva DOCG

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PIEMONTE

Torino

Gavi

Alba

Barolo

Borgogno

Barolo’s oldest continuously operating winery, with one of the oldest cellars and back vintages collection in the appellation. Traditional-style wines, whose class and elegance conquers wine lovers and collectors across the globe.

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• Founded in 1761, Borgogno is the oldest continuously operating winery in Barolo. • Cesare Borgogno was one of the first winemakers from Piedmont to ship wines abroad, and he also created a “wine library” where half of the Barolo production was held back, only to be released 20 years later. • Italian entrepreneur and founder of Eataly Oscar Farinetti acquired the estate in 2008. • The winery obtained the organic certification in 2020 and went back to using only cement vats for fermentation, a return to the original winemaking style. • Today, vinification and bottling still take place in the original and historic building built in 1761, in the very center of Barolo village. • The winery’s focus is Barolo production, including three of Barolo’s most prestigious crus: Cannubi, Liste and Fossati. • In 2015, Borgogno acquired 5 hectares of Timorasso, from which Derthona is produced. • In the vinification process, the traditional Barolo production method is followed: Extended maceration, concrete tank fermentation, aging in large cask. • Today, the estate includes 39 hectares (96 acres) with 31 planted to vine.

Back in the 1920s, Cesare Borgogno decided to do something entirely unheard of at the time in Barolo: He began cellaring half of the production from every vintage instead of selling it. Today, Borgogno has one of the deepest wine libraries in the world, with vintages stretching back decades.

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BORGOGNO Derthona Colli Tortonesi DOC

BORGOGNO Nebbiolo Langhe DOC

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One of Barolo’s most iconic producers, Borgogno focuses on native grapes varieties and traditional-style winemaking. The wines are made using classic techniques like extended submerged cap maceration and long-term, large-format cask aging. The wines are indisputable classics and library releases are always available thanks to an ambitious cellaring program.

BORGOGNO Barolo Riserva DOCG

BORGOGNO Cannubi Barolo DOCG

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First released in 2011, Borgogno’s Langhe Nebbiolo “No Name” was born after the Barolo tasting committee “flunked” a cask of the estate’s classic Barolo even though the same tasters “approved” a second cask with the exact same wine. Discouraged but determined, the winemaker decided to call the reclassified Barolo “No Name” in protest. And the rest is history.

BORGOGNO No Name Nebbiolo Langhe DOC

BORGOGNO Barolo DOCG

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1 Liter bottle.

BORGOGNO Vermouth di Torino Superiore

1 Liter bottle.

BORGOGNO Barolo Chinato

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PIEMONTE

Torino

Gavi

Alba

Barolo

Cascina Valle Asinari

The Cascina Valle Asinari farm is located along the Bricco di Nizza, the top growing zone for the Nizza DOCG, which was created in 2014. The soils found in its vineyard are identical to those found in La Morra in the heart of the Barolo appellation.

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• The limestone and clay soils in the estate’s top vineyards are identical to those found in La Morra commune in the Barolo appellation; they are ideal for the production of nuanced, long-lived wines with structure and complexity. • Spontaneous fermentation using only naturally occurring native yeasts ensures the purest expression of terroir. • The estate is in the process of receiving its organic certification and is currently working toward its biodynamic certification as well. • A leading producer of one of Italy’s most exciting appellations: Nizza DOCG, created in 2014.

The Cascina Valle Asinari is located in the heart of the Nizza DOCG where Barbera achieves its greatest expression. The estate’s top vineyard is located on the Bricco di Nizza, the top subzone in the appellation.

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CASCINA VALLE ASINARI Moscato d’Asti DOCG

CASCINA VALLE ASINARI Barbera d’Asti DOCG

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The winery’s Barbera d’Asti, Barbera d’Asti Superiore, and Moscato d’Asti are considered classics of Piedmont viticulture. Thanks to its organic farming practices and traditional winemaking style, the estate’s Nizza DOCG has also established itself as a sought-after label.

CASCINA VALLE ASINARI Barbera d’Asti Superiore DOCG

CASCINA VALLE ASINARI Ciuchino Monferrato DOC

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CASCINA VALLE ASINARI Nizza DOCG

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PIEMONTE

Torino

Gavi

Alba

Barolo

Cordero Di Montezemolo

Certified organic grape grower and historic producer of Barolo made from one of the appellation’s most coveted vineyards, Monfalletto.

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• Cordero di Montezemolo: since 1340, a 19 generation famaily-managed winery. • Located in in the village of La Morra, at the heart of the Barolo DOCG appellation • The vineyards have been certified organic since 2013. • Efficient and sustainable cultivation techniques: Cordero di Montezemolo received the Unesco World Heritage Friends Certificate for providing a wonderful example of integrated architecture where antique structures blend harmoniously with innovative restoration works • Great whites: age-worthy, complex, single vineyard Chardonnay and young, fresh Arneis. • Signature reds: age-worthy Barolos that slowly and continuously evolve in the bottle; Barolo Monfalletto, a multiple vineyards Barolo blend, is winery’s masterpiece of unique elegance and finesse • The family owns and makes wine from 56 hectares of land (135 acres). Among these, a hilly amphitheater of 28 hectares is planted to Nebbiolo to produce Barolo. • Dolcetto, Barbera, and Arneis are planted on the northern- facing side of the hill. • In 1965, the Cordero family purchased two hectares in the Villero cru, one of Barolo’s most coveted growing sites where grapes for its flagship single vineyard Barolo Enrico VI are sourced. • The abundance of clay and limestone translates into approchable, elegant, and fruit-driven wines.

The famous Lebanon cedar planted at the highest point of Cordero di Montezemolo’s Monfalletto estate in La Morra is one of the symbols of the Barolo appellation and one of the Langhe Hills’ most iconic landmarks. It’s even used by the Italian air force for navigation.

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CORDERO DI MONTEZEMOLO Arneis Langhe DOC

CORDERO DI MONTEZEMOLO Elioro Chardonnay Langhe DOC

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Cordero di Montezemolo is one of Italy’s most iconic wineries, producer of some of the most famous expressions of Barolo. Although it grows some Chardonnay, its focus is on native grapes, primarily Nebbiolo. An extra year of bottle aging makes their wines more approachable on release.

CORDERO DI MONTEZEMOLO Barbera d’Alba DOC

CORDERO DI MONTEZEMOLO Nebbiolo Langhe DOC

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Other formats available: 0.375, 1.5, 3, 5 L

CORDERO DI MONTEZEMOLO Monfalletto Barolo DOCG

Other formats available: 1.5 L

CORDERO DI MONTEZEMOLO Gattera Barolo DOCG

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Other formats available: 1.5 L

CORDERO DI MONTEZEMOLO Enrico VI Barolo DOCG

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PIEMONTE

Torino

Gavi

Alba

Barolo

Fontanabianca

Producer of cru-designate Barbaresco from two of the appellation’s most famous vineyard sites, Serraboella and Bordini.

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• Founded in 1969, the winery has some of the best vineyard sites in the village of Neive, in the heart of the Barbaresco appellation. • Named after a natural spring, the “white fountain” from which the water for vineyards is sourced • Family-led winery where winemakers Aldo Pola, the founder of Fontanabianca, and the son Matteo take care of the entire production • Awarded with “The Green Experience” certification which ensures Eco-friendly and sustainable viticulture and productions, protection of biodiversity and of the natural environment, elimination of chemicals, pesticides, and herbicides • 15 hectares (37 acres) cultivated with Nebbiolo and Arneis grapes • Producer of elegant and classic Barbaresco, pure expression of the terroir and the flagship Bordini Cru, one of the top Crus in the Barbaresco region. • Recently renovated winery equipped with state-of-the-art technology • The calcareous-clayish, medium-textured soil gives the perfect grapes to produce perfumed, elegant and full- bodied wines. • Slightly maritime climate: warmer, drier and milder than its neighbor Barolo.

At Fontanabianca, the father-and-son team divide the work between them: Aldo, the dad, is the vineyard manager and Matteo, the son, makes the wines. Aldo’s known as one of the best growers in Barbaresco and Matteo was mentored by one of the greatest Nebbiolo producers of all time, Beppe Caviola.

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FONTANABIANCA Arneis Langhe DOC

Fontanabianca makes cru- designate Barbaresco from two of the appellations most famous vineyards, Serraboella and Bordini (the latter a rare sorì in Barbaresco). The winemaking style is traditional, with a focus on vintage expression and Nebbiolo’s classic aromas and flavors. Similarly, the winery’s Arneis and Dolcetto are classic in style.

FONTANABIANCA Barbera d’Alba Superiore DOC

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FONTANABIANCA Barbaresco DOCG

FONTANABIANCA Bordini Barbaresco DOCG

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PIEMONTE

Turin

Barbaresco

Gavi

Barolo

Mirafiore

Producer of the original “wine of kings.” Top Barolo made in a strictly traditional, terroir-driven style.

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• Founded in 1878 by Italy’s Royal Family, the winery that gave Barolo its nickname: “King of Wines, Wine of Kings.” • One of the earliest producers and champions of Barolo and one of the first to ship the wines beyond Italy’s borders together with Borgogno (p.27). Boutique winery, total production of 5000 cases. • Vineyards in Serralunga d’Alba commune, one of the appellation’s top growing zones. • The estate’s production has been 100 percent certified organic since the 2018 harvest. • Producer of top crus Lazzarito and Paiagallo, known for their depth, nuance, and immense aging potential. • Strictly traditional vinification and style, with wines that have classic notes of earth and “rose petal,” hallmarks of great Nebbiolo. • Submerged cap fermentation with extended maceration times. • Known for distinctive terroir-driven wines that embody the essence of Barolo, a wine that should always speak of “place.”

Barolo is called “the king of wines and wine of kings” be- cause of the Mirafiore estate and its historic association with Italy’s royal family. The beauti- ful winery and estate are one of Piedmont’s most popular wine tourism destinations.

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With 25 hectares in Serralunga d’Alba, where some of the appellation’s oldest soils are found (dating back to the Serravallian era, middle Miocene), Mirafiore makes a rich distinctive style of Barolo and Nebbiolo that has been hailed as one of the commune’s most terroir-driven expressions.

MIRAFIORE Barolo DOCG

MIRAFIORE Barolo Riserva DOCG

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MIRAFIORE Lazzarito Barolo DOCG

MIRAFIORE Paiagallo Barolo DOCG

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PIEMONTE

Torino

Alessandria

Gavi

Alba

Barolo

Ottosoldi

A boutique producer of Gavi sourced from one of the appellation’s most coveted growing sites.

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• Producer of elegant and well-balanced Gavi, organic certified since 2019, representing the perfect expression of the indigenous Cortese grape • The 5,000 plants per hectare are being farmed according to biological methods which demands a cultivation without fertilizers and chemical synthesis. • Boutique winery, total production of 5000 cases. • 5 hectares (13 acres) of vineyards, organically certified that extend across an amphitheater vineyard with southwest exposure — one of the most coveted crus in the Gavi appellation. • Climate: this hilly area of Southern Piemonte, close to the Ligurian border, benefits from the mild Mediterranean Sea influence which preserves the freshness and natural aromas and flavors of the grapes during vinification. • Soil: rich in clay and limestone.

The Ottosoldi farm is one of the top growing sites in the Gavi appellation. Just a small five-hectare parcel, this southern- facing amphitheater produces wines known for their authenticity and quality.

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The Ottosoldi winery and estate in Gavi, named after the “otto soldi” in Italian, or eight shillings that the current owners’ grandfather paid for the farm, produces some of the appellation’s top wines using estate-grown fruit from a coveted five- hectare amphitheater parcel with southwest exposure and excellent climatic conditions.

OTTOSOLDI Gavi DOCG

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PIEMONTE

Torino

Alessandria

Gavi

Alba

Barolo

Scagliola

Leading producer of Moscato d’Asti, known for their high quality, old-school style, and eye-catching labels.

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• Silvia and Giovanni Scagliola represent the fourth generation of the Scagliola family to make wine in Asti (Piedmont), home to Moscato d’Asti DOCG and Barbera d’Asti DOCG. • Originally founded in the 1930s, the Scagliola ranch focused on raising livestock and growing other crops besides grapes until buyers at a local cattle market noticed how good the family’s wines were. • It was not until the post-war era that the Scagliola’s began to see the potential for making and selling their wines in bottles (as opposed to bulk). • By the 1980s, the family had begun to bottle what would become one of Piedmont’s most famous sparkling wines, their now legendary Moscato d’Asti. • With roughly 35 hectares planted to vine in Asti province, a wine region renowned for its sandstone subsoils and the distinctive wines it produces, the Scagliola’s now make a line of Moscato d’Asti and a line of red wines, mostly Barbera d’Asti, including fresher-style, traditional reds (aged in classic large oak casks known as botti) and richer-style, modern reds (aged in small French casks known as barriques). • The estate employs organic farming practices and no synthetic pesticides, herbicides, or fungicides are used.

Scagliola is a fourth-generation winery that produces classic-style wines in Asti province. Known especially for their critically acclaimed sparkling wines, the Scagliola family balances traditional Piedmontese viticulture with modern technology, combining the best of both worlds. The estate’s Moscato d’Asti Primo Bacio (“First Kiss”) is considered an appellation benchmark.

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One of the things that makes the Scagliola family’s wines so distinctive is their hand-painted labels by Asti-based artists Massimo Ricci. He began showing his work in local galleries back in the 1980s and by the 1990s was already well established as one of Piedmont’s most important painters.

SCAGLIOLA Dan Vian Chardonnay Piemonte DOC

SCAGLIOLA Frem Barbera D’Asti DOCG

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SCAGLIOLA Mati Barbera D’Asti DOCG

SCAGLIOLA Primo Bacio Moscato D’Asti DOCG

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PIEMONTE

Torino

Alessandria

Gavi

Alba

Barolo

Villa Sparina

Producer of top-rated, cru-designate Gavi di Gavi wines, the winery that changed the way the world tasted the Cortese di Gavi in all its shapes.

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• The Villa Sparina estate was purchased by the Moccagatta family in the late 1970s. • 70 hectares (173 acres) cultivated with the traditional varieties Cortese and Barbera in Comune di Gavi, a restricted production area in the Gavi appellation to produce “Gavi di Gavi” wines. • The best Cortese grapes are used to produce the Monterotondo Cru, an age-worthy riserva. WineSearcher.com has called it one of the five best Gavis (2020). • Cortese is vinified also in a lighter-style expression of Gavi from vineyards approximately 30 years in age and in a Brut sparkling wine aged on its lees in the bottle for 30 months. • A light and refreshing Rosé del Monferrato and juicy- tasting Barbera DOC are also produced. • Historical cellars from the XVIIth Century. • Attractive and distinctive bottle shape inspired by an old bottle that was discovered in the estate’s historic cellar. • Perfect climate for grape growing, influenced by the Mediterranean Sea . • Soil: rich in clay and limestone.

When it first released its single-vineyard Gavi Monterotondo, Villa Sparina changed the way the world thought about Cortese di Gavi and the Gavi appellation. With its rich style, immense aging potential, and unique bottle shape, the wine set a new standard for quality and terroir expression in the appellation.

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BOTTLE FERMENTED

VILLA SPARINA Metodo Classico Brut Blanc de Blanc

The distinctive bottle shape used by the Villa Sparina winery was inspired by an old bottle that was discovered in the villa’s ancient cellar after the Moccagatta family purchased the property in the late 1970s. It represents a connection to the past and to the legacy of this extraordinary farm.

Other formats available: 0.375, 1.5, 3 L

VILLA SPARINA Gavi del Comune di Gavi DOCG

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VILLA SPARINA Monterotondo Gavi del Comune di Gavi DOCG

VILLA SPARINA Rosé Monferrato Chiaretto DOC

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Other formats available: 0.375 L

VILLA SPARINA Barbera del Monferrato DOC

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TRENTINO – ALTO ADIGE

As you drive north from Verona toward Austria, the land rises up rapidly before you suddenly find yourself in a valley in the sky — the Val d’Adige, the Adige River Valley in Italy’s Dolomite Alps. It’s one of the most compelling landscapes you’ll ever see, with its apple orchards stretching across the valley floor and vineyards

planted along the hills on either side of this long narrow stretch of land surrounded by towering mountains. It’s in this pristine ancient riverbed that the wineries of Italian- speaking Trentino in the south and German-speaking Alto Adige (South Tyrol) in the north are found.

The soils in the vineyards, some of the highest-lying parcels in the world, are mostly volcanic and diluvial. But it’s the valley’s unique macroclimate, with diurnal temperature shifts and protection from inclement weather thanks to the Alps, that make it such a unique place for viticulture.

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TRENTINO - ALTO ADIGE

Lavis

Trento

Lavis

Pioneering cooperative winery, author of an innovative subzone project and study that reshaped alpine viticulture in Italy.

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• Located in the Lavis village, near the city of Trento in the heart of Italy’s alpine Trentino region. • The La-Vis cooperative includes more than 800 growers, with an average of one hectare planted to vine among them. • More than 800 hectares (1970 acres) of vineyards farmed by hand, in strict compliance with monitoring by Italy’s Integrated Crop Management National Quality System. • Pioneer of the Quality and Zoning project, completed and implemented more than 30 years ago, that enhances the importance of “the right vine in the right place”, encouraging the cultivation of both native and international grape varieties. • Quality, territoriality, and eco-sustainability to achieve authentic wines unmatched in their price class. • Roughly 80 percent of its production is white wine: Chardonnay, Pinot Grigio, and Müller Thurgau. Its members also grow native red varieties including Schiava, Teroldego, and Lagrein. International varieties such as Merlot and Pinot Nero are harvested as well. • Soil rich in minerals: sandstone deposits and Dolomites rocks. • Moderate cool climate: hills located at the foot of the Alps. • Vineyards planted on steep hills, as high as 800 meters above sea level (2625 feet). • Traditional cultivation method and hand-harvesting.

More than 30 years ago, the La-Vis cooperative launched a pioneering subzone survey and study of Trentino vineyards that would entirely transform viticulture in the region. Today, all of its growers use the best- suited sites for the given grape variety, thus increasing quality and terroir expression.

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Classici

LAVIS Pinot Grigio Trentino DOC

Classici

LAVIS Pinot Grigio Rosé delle Venezie DOC

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Classici

LAVIS Chardonnay Trentino DOC

Classici

LAVIS Riesling Trentino DOC

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LAVIS Sauvignon Trevenezie IGT

Classici

LAVIS Gewürztraminer Trentino DOC

Classici

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Classici

LAVIS Pinot Nero Trentino DOC

The La-Vis cooperative produces some of Trentino’s most critically acclaimed wines. Here the focus is on freshness and terroir and varietal expression, an effort that has been bolstered by the winery’s ambitious subzone study, and its focus on sustainable farming practices.

Selezioni

LAVIS Cabernet Trentino DOC

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TRENTINO - ALTO ADIGE

Lavis

Trento

Cembra

“Cembra Cantina di Montagna”, a “Mountain winery” and producer of top wines farmed in Alpine volcanic soils. These are some of the highest and most pristine vineyards found in all of Europe.

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• The name of the Cembra Cantina di Montagna cooperative means literally “Cembra Mountain Winery”. • Among the highest producers in Europe: vineyards are located at an elevation of 550 to 850 meters above sea level (1800 - 2800 feet). • A fine wine “branch” of the La-Vis Group and of the 1980s Zoning Project • The cooperative involves 400 members passionately dedicated to heroic grape growing on the hard-to- reach terraces that are typical of the Cembra valley. • 300 hectares (740 acres) of vineyards following La-Vis 1980s Zoning Project philosophy. • All farming by Cembra growers is done by hand in strict compliance with Italy’s Integrated Crop Management National Quality System. • Specific soil composition: the porphyry (the “red gold” of the valley) is responsible for the flavor and persistence typical of Cembra wines. • Wines known for their freshness and vibrancy with floral aromas and rich in fruit flavors. • Alpine climate, extreme temperature ranges, and excellent sun exposure.

The porphyry stone found in the Val di Cembra, one of Italy’s most beautiful and famous alpine river valleys, is used all over the world by top architects, designers, and artists. Its volcanic origins also make it ideal for the cultivation of fine wine grapes.

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Classici

CEMBRA Pinot Grigio Trentino DOC

Cembra Cantina di Montagna means literally “Cembra Mountain Winery.” This cooperative, believed to be the highest altitude winery in Italy, produces native grape varieties farmed on the volcanic- origin subsoils of Trentino’s Cembra valley, where elevation and alpine air currents make for fresh aromas and flavors in these complex wines.

Classici

CEMBRA Schiava Trentino DOC

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Classici

CEMBRA Pinot Nero Trentino DOC

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TRENTINO - ALTO ADIGE

Bolzano

Trento

St. Pauls

Soulful cooperative of South Tyrolean family farmers, with an average of one hectare per grower.

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• The St. Pauls cooperative winery is located in the village of St. Pauls (San Paolo), in South Tyrol (Alto Adige). • With roughly 150 grower members, the cooperative covers 175 hectares (435 acres) planted to vine. • An average of one hectare per grower, all the members are family-owned and run farms. • Culture: the Alto Adige region has been part of Austria until the first world war – now, for 65% of the inhabitants German is the mother tongue. • Sustainability: solar panels, non-invasive grape growing technique. • World-famous Pinot Bianco: St. Pauls is the proud owner of what is considered the oldest vineyard in Alto Adige, planted in 1899. • Gravity-based wine-making process. • Mineral soil (Dolomites rocks) and excellent sun exposure. • Alpine climate that favors the growth of traditional and international grape varieties, all characterized by a specific freshness and high acidity.

St. Pauls cooperative is named after the village where it is located, in picturesque South Tyrol. That’s because nearly everyone in the town is involved in some way with the winery, whether as a grower or worker. You’ll find the other villagers at the winery’s wine bar enjoying a glass!

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ST. PAULS Chardonnay Alto Adige DOC

ST. PAULS Plötzner Pinot Bianco Alto Adige DOC

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ST. PAULS Pinot Grigio Alto Adige DOC

ST. PAULS Gfill Sauvignon Alto Adige DOC

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ST. PAULS Sauvignong Alto Adige DOC

ST. PAULS Missianer Schiava Alto Adige DOC

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With an average of one hectare per grower, St. Pauls in Eppan in South Tyrol (Alto Adige) focuses on native grape varieties vinified in a traditional style, with an emphasis on terroir and varietal expression. Organic and sustainable farming practices make for vibrant wines with rich flavor and balance.

ST. PAULS Luzia Pinot Nero Alto Adige DOC

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VENETO

Long before Tuscany and Piedmont emerged as Italy’s top regions for fine wine production, Veneto was renowned for the quality of wines produced there. As early as Roman times, naturalists and poets had high praise for the wines of Valpolicella where volcanic, morainic, and calcareous soils are ideal for the

production of long-lived red wines. Lake Garda to the west, Italy’s largest body of water, is also a hub for fine wine, including white Lugana in more recent decades. In the easternmost part of Veneto, close to the region’s capital, Venice, Sparkling wine production has eclipsed the anonymous red wines once produced there

in abundance. The morainic and sandy soils of hillside vineyards in Valdobbiadene and Conegliano are ideal for the production of fresh, fruit-driven Prosecco, today the world’s most popular bubbly.

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VENETO

Vicenza

Verona

Venice

Anselmi

The pioneer of Soave Classico who singlehandedly raised the bar for quality in the appellation. Producer of cru-designate wines with distinct personality and unmistakable character.

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• Pioneer of Soave Classico, the winery that put the appellation on the map after decades of over-cropping and mass production. • Visionary winemaker Roberto Anselmi revolutionized viticulture in Soave Classico when he abandoned traditional pergola training in the 1990s and converted his vineyards to Guyot and permanent cordon (cordone speronato). • He also was one of the first to introduce the idea of cru- designate (single-vineyard) wines in the appellation. • The estate covers roughly 70 hectares planted to vine, including Garganega (gahr-GAHN-eh-GAH), Sauvignon Blanc, and Chardonnay. • Organic farming practices are employed in the vineyards (although Roberto Anselmi refuses to obtain certification). • Soave’s volcanic and calcareous limestone subsoils are ideal for creating white wines with extreme freshness and minerality. • In 2000, Anselmi wrote a famous open letter to the Soave consortium explaining that excessive bureaucracy and backward thinking had moved him to leave the consortium. • After 2000, all of the estate’s wines have been classified as Veneto IGT.

Roberto Anselmi single-handedly reshaped the Soave Classico appellation when he introduced Guyot and permanent cordon training and significantly decreased yields. His peers thought he was crazy when he decided to leave the Soave consortium so as not to be constrained by restrictive bureaucracy. History proved him right.

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ANSELMI San Vincenzo Vino Bianco Italy

ANSELMI Capitel Croce Vino Bianco Italy

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Organic and biodynamic expert and leading wine writer Jamie Goode has called Anselmi one his favorite Italian wineries.

ANSELMI Capitel Foscarino Vino Bianco Italy

ANSELMI I Capitelli Vino Bianco Dolce Italy

0.375 Liter bottle

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VENETO

Valdobbiadene

Asolo

Treviso

Verona

Venice

Antica Quercia

An biodynamic grape grower and producer of traditional “col fondo” Prosecco, one of the appellation’s most beautiful estates.

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• L’Antica Quercia — the ancient oak tree — is named after the two stupendous trees that look out over this small family-run farm’s roughly 25 hectares, which are planted to olives, pomegranates, and grape vine. • Its charismatic owner Claudio Francavilla believes that “integrated farming,” where vines are cultivated next to other crops and surrounded by woods, is the key to producing wines that truly capture the appellation and terroir’s essence. • He employs organic and biodynamic practices, including cover crops, in his quest to deliver the pure, focused aromas and flavors of the wines he enjoyed growing up in the heart of Prosecco county. • L’Antica Quercia produces a variety of wines, including an old school “col fondo” Prosecco, all sourced from his top vineyards. The expression “col fondo” means “on the lees” in Italian. • These wines have been aged “on their lees” (the solids that result from fermentation) and bottled without disgorgement or filtration.

Did you know that most Prosecco was produced “col fondo” (“with its sediment”) before the Prosecco boom of the 1990s? Some people store their Prosecco Col Fondo upright and then decant it so that it is clear in the glass. Others like to serve it cloudy.–

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“L’Antica Quercia is renowned for its organically farmed Prosecco Col Fondo, which is bottled undisgorged and unfiltered. But it also produces a classic extra dry Prosecco, a rare still Prosecco, a lees-aged Prosecco brut nature, and a red made from Bordeaux varieties”.

ANTICA QUERCIA Ancestrale Prosecco Superiore DOCG

ANCESTRAL METHOD

BOTTLE FERMENTED

ANTICA QUERCIA Su’ Alto Indigeno Colfondo

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VENETO

Valdobbiadene

Asolo

Treviso

Verona

Venice

Ca’ dei Zago

Ca’ dei Zago is one of the most critically acclaimed wineries in the “new wave” of Prosecco growers, a producer of one of critic’s favorite “col fondo” wines.

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• Founded in the 1920s, the Ca’ dei Zago family farm and estate stretches over just 6 hectares (15 acres) planted to vine, including some of the Prosecco di Valdobbiadene appellation’s most coveted growing sites. • Vines are more than 40 years old and mostly planted on impossibly steep hillsides where all vineyard management must be done by hand. • Although not certified, biodynamic practices are rigorously implemented. • Traditional production methods: current-generation winemaker Christian Zago looks back at how his grandfather used to make wine. • Winemaking and bottling are carried out in strict accordance with the lunar calendar. • Renowned for his production of Prosecco Colfondo (or col fondo, meaning literally with sediment). • Recently the winery begun producing great classic method Prosecco, vintage 2015 was ranked #8 in The Wine Enthusiast TOP 100 of 2018. • Hills located at an elevation of around 250 meters above sea level (820 feet). • Soil rich in clay and limestone. • Climate is moderate-warm, influenced by the vicinity of both the Alpine Dolomites and the Adriatic Sea.

Christian Zago was among the first Prosecco producers to release a “col fondo,” meaning “on the lees.” It refers to the fact that the second fermentation is carried out in bottle and the wine is undisgorged. The aging on the lees (sediment) gives the wine greater character and depth.

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Christian Zago of Ca’ dei Zago is widely considered to be the face of the “new wave” of Prosecco growers and winemakers. Employing biodynamic practices on his family’s farm, one of Valdobbiadene’s top growing sites, he crafts Prosecco Col Fondo that is as vibrant as it is rich in character.

ANCESTRAL METHOD

CA’ DEI ZAGO Valdobbiadene DOCG Prosecco

BOTTLE FERMENTED

CA’ DEI ZAGO Valdobbiadene DOCG Prosecco Metodo Classico

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VENETO

Valdobbiadene

Treviso

Verona

Venice

Giovanna Tantini

Bardolino produced by one of northern Italy’s leading woman winemakers and grape growers, sourced from a top Lake Garda farm.

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• Family business owned and founded by the winemaker Giovanna. • Located in one of the best growing zones just south of Lake Garda ideal for crafting wines with rich mineral character. • 19 hectares (47 acres), mostly cultivated with traditional Garganega and Valpolicella blend grapes, Corvina and Rondinella. • The two pillars of Giovanna Tantini philosophy are: respect for the territory and valorization of the indigenous grape varieties. • Fresh and lively wines, alternative grape varieties ideal for by-the glass consumption. • A benchmark in the Bardolino Chiaretto DOC appellation. • Soil composition: glacial and alluvial deposits, calcareous. • Climate: Lake Garda, Italy’s biggest body of water, regulates diurnal temperature shifts, keeping the vines warmer in winter and cooler in summer.

In 2000, when Giovanna Tantini abandoned her law career and dove headfirst into the world of wine, she was one of just a handful of women winemakers in Bardolino. Today, she is considered one of the appellation’s pioneers thanks to her devotion to making high-quality, terroir-driven wines.

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Giovanna Tantini grows the grapes for her classic Bardolino on a small 11.5-hectare farm south of Lake Garda in one of the appellation’s best subzones, with morainic subsoils and maritime influence thanks to the nearby lake, Italy’s largest. Her benchmark wines are renowned for their vibrant aromas and flavors.

GIOVANNA TANTINI Il Rosé Chiaretto Bardolino DOC

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VENETO

Conegliano

Valdobbiadene

Asolo

Treviso

Venice

La Gioiosa

La Gioiosa, a leading producer of environmentally friendly and internationally renowned wines. The estate uses hydroelectric power to reduce its carbon footprint.

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• Founded in 1974 by the Moretti Polegato Family, it is located in the heart of Marca Trevigiana Area, in the Veneto region. • La Gioiosa represents the tradition of winemaking which the Moretti Polegato family has been carrying out for generations. • The name pays tribute to the old definition of the province of Treviso, “Marca gioiosa et amorosa” (“Joyous and Amorous March” in latin) underlining the sociable lifestyle of its inhabitants. • The grape used to produce Prosecco is Glera, a typical variety of the north east of Italy since the Roman age • Substantial vineyards holdings as well as long-standing relationships with wine growers in the region • TOP 5 Prosecco Brand in 2018 (IWSR September 2019 Harper’s mag). • The winery is also a leader in the production of environmentally friendly wines, and it strives to limit its carbon footprint by using alternative energy sources, including hydroelectric power generated by the nearby Piave river. • La Gioiosa is certified “Biodiversity Friend” by the WBA (World Biodiversity Association) • All of its wines are produced by immediately chilling the grape must to nearly freezing as soon as the bunches are picked ensuring freshness and high quality of the juice through the year. • The wines are available in more than 90 countries worldwide. • The winery sources grapes from all the subzones of the Prosecco appellation: Treviso, Asolo, Valdobbiadene, and Friuli, ensuring an all-round taste experience of the Prosecco terroirs.

La Gioiosa winery in Valdobbiadene follows strict biodiversity guidelines established by the World Biodiversity Association. Known as “biodiversity friend” protocols, they help to encourage insect and animal life in the vineyards, thus bolstering the vitality of the soils and the vines.

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La Gioiosa makes wines from nearly all of Prosecco’s subzones, including Valdobbiadene, Conegliano, Asolo, and Treviso province. They source their grapes from a network of family- run farms and local growers

with whom they have longtime relationships.

Other formats available: 0.187, 0.375 L

LA GIOIOSA Prosecco DOC Treviso Brut

LA GIOIOSA Asolo Prosecco Superiore DOCG

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LA GIOIOSA Prosecco Rosé Millesimato DOC

La Gioiosa employs a groundbreaking

approach to sparkling wine production: The winemaker chills the newly pressed must to near freezing so as to lock in the grapes’ natural freshness and flavors. Both fermentations are carried out in a single tank, without racking, thus minimizing the need for sulfites.

LA GIOIOSA Berry Fizz

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VENETO

Conegliano

Treviso

Verona

Venice

Nicolis

Family-owned, traditional-style producer of Valpolicella and classic Amarone wines, made using organically farmed grapes and spontaneous fermentation. It truly and proudly respect the vocal traditional method.

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• Nicolis family winery, founded in 1951, lies in the Valpolicella Classico area. • Tradition and family: three generations of winemakers working together to produce a high-quality collection of traditional bold red wines from Valpolicella. • 42 hectares (104 acres) of vineyards. • One of the few producers still using all four traditional grape varietals: Corvina, Rondinella, Molinara and Croatina, the rarest. • Although not organic certified, the winery employs organic farming practices - no herbicides, pesticides, or fungicides are used. • Valpolicella has a privileged climate, thanks to its southern exposure and the protection it receives from the nearby Lessini mountains. • The Nicolis family is the proud owner of some of the best Crus in the Valpolicella area. • Elevation between 200 and 480 meters above sea level (650 – 1600 feet). • Soil composition: morainic and calcareous, rich in stones.

Although not organic certified, the family at the Nicolis estate and winery uses no herbicides, pesticides, or fungicides in its vineyards. And it uses only native yeasts and spontaneous fermentation in the cellar, helping it produce what many Valpolicella lovers consider the appellation’s purest expressions.

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One of Valpolicella’s leading producers and

growers, Nicolis employs rigorously organic farming practices and spontaneous fermentation (native yeasts) to produce some of the appellation’s most iconic wines. The winemaking style is classic in character, harkening back to an era when food-friendliness and vibrant acidity were the appellation’s hallmarks.

NICOLIS Valpolicella Classico DOC

NICOLIS Seccal Valpolicella Ripasso Classico Superiore DOC

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NICOLIS Amarone della Valpolicella Classico DOCG

NICOLIS Ambrosan Amarone della Valpolicella Riserva DOCG

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VENETO

Treviso

Verona

Venice

Serafini & Vidotto

Ideal growing conditions, sustainable farming, and world- class winemaking have made Serafini e Vidotto a top producer of Bordeaux blends from Veneto.

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• One of Italy’s most iconic growers of Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot, a pioneer of international varieties in the Veneto region. • An “outlier”: One of the only producers of world-class red wines in the land of Prosecco, the sparkling white. • A solo township where partners Francesco Serafini and Antonio Vidotto grew up and make their wines, is renowned for its pebbly riverbed soils, ideal for long-lived Bordeaux-style blends. • Although not certified, the estate has used organic practices in the vineyards for decades. • The idea behind the winery is to make the wines “as natural as possible,” with minimal intervention, so that they are the pursest expression of the terroir. • Grower of Recantina, a grape once thought lost to the ages and now being made only in small quantities by lovers of traditional-style Veneto wines like Serafini and Vidotto. • The name of the estate’s Rosso dell’Abazia, one of the pair’s most recognizable and highly sought-after wines, is written with just one “b” (not the regular two). The word abbazia means abbey in Italian. The slopes are located close to the historical abbey.

A certified “Biodiversity Friend” estate where sustainable practices like composting, smart water management, and minimal intervention in the vineyards reduce the winery’s carbon footprint and make for vibrant wines with depth and nuance. Nearly all vineyard work is done by hand. And the winemaking is as “natural as possible.”

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