Ramandolo

Last updated
Ramandolo
Wine region
TypeDOCG
Year established2001
Country Italy
Part of Friuli Colli Orientali
Size of planted vineyards39 ha in 2015
Varietals produced Verduzzo
Wine produced920 hl / 10,200 cases in 2016 [1]
CommentsSweet wines only

Ramandolo is a sweet white Italian wine from the village of the same name which is situated in the hills near Nimis in the Friuli-Venezia Giulia wine region of northeast Italy. It is made from a local variety of the Verduzzo grape. Since 2001, Ramandolo has been produced as a DOCG wine. Prior to this it was a subzone of the Colli Orientali del Friuli DOC. [2]

Contents

DOCG requirements

Verduzzo grapes destined for DOCG wine production are limited to a harvest yield no greater than 10 tonnes/ha with the grapes allowed to hang on the vine late in the season and may even receive extra drying after picking. This allows for a greater concentration of sugar which leaves a wine with noticeable residual sweetness even with the high minimum alcohol level of 14% required. [3]

Wine styles

Wine expert Peter Saunders describes well made examples of Ramandolo from favorable vintages as fragrant, full-bodied, slightly tannic and not too sweet. [3] Karen MacNeil describes Ramandolo as having a copper sheen to its deep yellow color with herbal notes. [4]

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Brachetto d'Acqui[braˈketto ˈdakkwi] is a red Italian wine that is classified as a Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita (DOCG) since 1996 and previously a Denominazione di Origine Controllata (DOC) region since 1969. It is produced in the Piedmont wine region around Acqui Terme in the province of Alessandria with some overlap into the province of Asti. The wine is produced from the Brachetto grape, a variety that is believed to be native to Piedmont, and can be still or sparkling with usually some sweetness.

Verduzzo Trevigiano is a white Venetian grape variety that is grown in the Eastern Veneto wine area. In the past the name Verduz referred to a wide range of grape varieties in the Venetian area. By the descriptions found, they were often morphologically very different, but shared the character of late ripening. However we can very frequently find the name Verduzzo in the ampelographic list of the 19th century, there is not any sign of this Verduzzo until the beginning of the 20th century. At that time just two varieties, with the same name Verduzzo, were still coltivated in the Veneto and Friuli area, they were what we today call Verduzzo Friulano and Verduzzo Trevigiano. The two varieties are clearly different, as demonstrated even with DNA profiling analyses in 2010 and 2011. However at the beginning of the 20th century, the two Verduzzo were called with the same name and often were present in the same vineyard and made wine together. Cosmo proposed to call the two varieties with different names: Verduzzo friulano for the varieties typical of Ramandolo production that was the only one present in that area of Friuli, and Verduzzo Trevigiano for the other one, that was present in the oriental zone of Veneto, where even Verduzzo friulano was spread, but which has a sure origin in the Treviso province how showed by the papers of Lepido Rocco.

References

  1. "Ramandolo DOCG". Italian Wine Central. Vindeavour. 2014-03-07. Retrieved 2019-06-08.
  2. Bastianich, Joseph; Lynch, David (2005). Vino italiano: the regional wines of Italy. Random House of Canada. pp. 38–40. ISBN   1400097746.
  3. 1 2 Peter Lionel Saunders (2004). Wine label language. Firefly Books Ltd. p. 193. ISBN   978-1-55297-720-0.
  4. MacNeil, Karen (2001). The Wine Bible . Workman Publishing Company. pp.  349-350. ISBN   978-1-56305-434-1.