15 - Intro to Italy Flashcards
Briefly outline important trends in Italian wine production since the 1960s
- Improvement in quality
- Increased value of exports
- Use of SST and temp control in Friuli in 1960s
- BDX blends in Tuscany in 1970s
- Emphasis on local grapes recently
- Commercial success of Prosecco recently
How has vineyard management and winemaking changed since the 1950s (4)
- Training systems: widespread Pergola and bush vines replaced by trellising (although still practiced in some regions)
- Monoculture: planting vines alongside olive trees, veg and grainless common
- Adoption of SST and temp control for whites (Germany influence)
- Use of small, new oak in place of large Savonian oak –> reversal towards large, old oak and concrete
Outline Italy’s system of wine regulation / PDOs including defined terms.
No GI - Vino
PGI - Indicazione Geografica Tipica (IGT)
- Introduced in 92 with large geographic areas and wider choice of variety and style, higher yields
- Incorporated as an EU PGI in 2008
PDO - Denominazione di Origine Controllata (DOC)
- Introduced in 67
- Similar to French AOC and incorporated into EU as a PDO in 2008
PDO - Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita (DOCG)
- Used from 1980s onwards
- Stricter controls on yields, wine must pass tasting panel
Defined terms:
- Classico – Wines made exclusively from grapes grown within a defined historical area of a DOC or DOCG e.g. Chianti
- Superiore – Wines with a higher minimum alcohol level, typically an additional 0.5% abv
- Riserva – Wine with at least 2 years for red wines, 1 year for white wines. Some individual DOC/DOCG specify that this ageing or part of it must be in oak.
Give two examples of HQ wines that didn’t qualify for DOC status
- Super Tuscans e.g. Sassicaia produced an area not covered by DOC - Bolgheri DOC later introduced
- Wine not following DOC rules e.g. Montevertine estate using 100% Sangiovese so didn’t qualify as Chianti Classico - now uses an IGT
How much wine does Italy produce? What proportion is Vin, IGT, DOC/DOCG?
~48mn hL - second largest after France
What is the average vineyard holding in Italy? What is Italy’s largest wine-producing company?
Small <2ha –> growers usually sell to co-ops and merchants
Caviro - giant co-op that operates across several regions and processes >10% of Italian grapes
Outline trends in domestic consumption and exports.
Domestic consumption in long-term decline - down 1/3 in 100 years
40% of wine exported - 50/50 still/sparkling by volume, still accounts for more value
Most important markets are US, Germany then UK, Canada, Switzerland