Central and Southern Italy

Table of Contents
  1. Tuscany (Toscana)
  2. Umbria
  3. Marches (Marche)
  4. Abruzzo
  5. Latium (Lazio)
  6. Molise
  7. Campania
  8. Apulia (Puglia)
  9. Basilicata
  10. Calabria
  11. Siciliy (Sicilia)
  12. Sardinia (Sardegna)
  13. Review Quizzes

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Tuscany (Toscana)

On the Tyrrhenian Coast of Italy, the region of Tuscany has become a byword for Italian culture. A famous artistic legacy and rich history match the natural beauty of the Tuscan countryside, unfolding in waves of golden and green hills that ebb and flow between the Apennine Mountains and the sea.



Wine is deeply embedded in Tuscany’s cultural heritage—the famous medieval Florentine poet Dante Alighieri praised the Vernaccia of San Gimignano, and legislation delimiting the Chianti zone dates to 1716. The first DOC and DOCG zones to be authorized in Italy were Tuscan. Wine and commercial agriculture are big business in Tuscany, and the hills are a patchwork of olive tree groves, vineyards, and wheat fields—a natural evolution of the “promiscuous” agriculture that ancient Romans practiced, wherein these three staple crops of Tuscany were planted side by side in the same fields. In the past, Chianti was synonymous with Italian wine—and a reminder, not unfairly, of its troubled quality. Historically bottled in a fiasco due to the inferior quality of Italian glass, the squat, straw-covered Chianti bottles came to epitomize the rustic, cheap nature of Italian wine in the late 1960s, ‘70s, and ‘80s. Tuscany’s winemakers have responded with a surge in quality over the last quarter century, slashing vineyard yields and building on the successes of the “Super-Tuscan” trailblazers Marquis Mario Rocchetta, who released the first commercial vintage of Sassicaia in 1968, and his nephew Piero Antinori, whose Tignanello bottling soon followed. While the benchmark for quality has been raised significantly, it may be at the expense of typicity—the Bordeaux grapes and model of winemaking extend great influence over the modern Tuscan
Comments
  • I like how the comment thread from nearly one year ago begins with Emily and Mariya, the top 2 of Top Somm 2012! Just goes to show how powerful a tool Guildsomm is! Thanks, as always, for all the hard work in making the site such an incredible resource!

  • Andrew, sorry, maybe not the clearest, but yes it is correct.  About 15% of the 24,000 hectare area is actually planted to vineyards.

  • "and encompasses 24,000 hectares—although only around 5,000 acres are authorized and planted for Brunello" I noticed this sentence under Brunello in which both metric and imperial measurements are used.  Should that read 5000 ha?

  • @ankush nice list but there should be an indication of wines that have changed their blends over the vintages, for example Paleo didn't go to 100% Cab Franc until 2001 and it was continuously adjusted from a Cab Sauv based blend on it's first release until then (www.thewinecellarinsider.com/.../bordeaux-wine-varietals-bolgheri).  I am not sure if there are others that might have evolved from their first release.

  • The Brunello consorzio website claims that Brunello was the first zone promoted to DOCG, but everything else contend that Vino Nobile di Montepulciano was the first.  They were both in 1980 but does anyone know exact dates or why the consorzio might be mistaken?