Burgundy, France Imported Red Wines
New Imported Reds have landed!
We taste hundreds of wines every year at the largest wine fair in the world, Prowein, which is staged in Dusseldorf over several days in March each year. Over 5,000 wineries from around the globe show up to promote their kit to wine trade buyers. To give this context, that is more than twice as many wineries as there are in Australia. With pre-booked meetings it is possible to taste up to 200 wines a day, and 500+ across the event.
We taste hundreds more at Vinitaly, a wine fair specific to Italian producers that presents the wares of over 4,000 producers across 5 days. Then there are tastings at the wineries we visit in person to gain a deeper understanding of what, why and how they make the superb wines they do.
Before we make a decision to import a wine, we’ve tasted it at least once overseas, often twice. From there, we collate a shortlist of samples and bring them into Australia, let ‘em rest for a couple of weeks and look at them with the entire tasting panel. A list of up to 1,000 wines tasted might be initially whittled down to 150 samples. Of these, somewhere between 15 and 20 will be chosen. This is the same level of care we take when choosing Aussie wines to offer you and as a result, we feel very comfortable, excited even, to be offering each of these wines to you. This care is the reason we are able to offer our Wine Goodness Guarantee... In the rare instance that you are not satisfied with a wine purchased from winedirect.com.au, then we are more than happy to replace the product or refund your money, whatever you choose.
No! There’s a bit of a misconception there as Italian wines sold in Italy don’t require a sulphite statement on the label. Our local labelling laws require it which is why you’ll see preservative 220 added listed on the back labels for all of the Italian wine we sell. These same wines in Italy don’t say they have had sulphites added... but they do.
With a magnifying glass and a copy of ‘Decoding the Rosetta Stone’!
It’s tricky, with so many regions to navigate and often no varietal statement on the label. Doc, Docg, IGT, IGP and VdT – what do they mean and are they a guarantee of quality?
- VdT – table wine - not poisonous, fair to average quaffing. Generally cask quality – but can sometimes be excellent.
- IGT and IGP – A wine from the area – has to be made from grapes from the area stated on the label. Generally, IGT and IGP wines are better than VdT – but not always.
- DOC – short for Vino a Denominazione di Origine Controllata. Must be made from varieties approved within the region using methods approved for the region. There are more than 300 DOCs in Italy. Generally, DOC wines are very good, but not always.
- DOCG - short for Vino a Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita – this is like DOC but is even more stringently regulated. Yields are tightly limited and wines must be individually assessed and approved by a government licensed committee before being bottled. Generally, these are among the best wines made in Italy but, it is still not a guarantee.
The wine names can be challenging too... you’d think a wine called vine Nobile di Montepulciano would be a wine made from Montepulciano... nope – these are made from Sangiovese grown in Tuscany, near the township of Montepulciano. Chianti is also made from (primarily) Sangiovese. Brunello di Montalcino is also made from Sangiovese. Barolo and Barbaresco and other wines are made from Nebbiolo...
We’ve had a crack at demystifying things for you. Any Italian wine on our site we have tasted overseas and then twice back in Oz before we make the decision to import. We also highlight in the Wine Specs section the varieties included in the wine, alcohol level, region, vintage and more...
That’s a moveable feast as there have been heaps of changes in Italian wine production and quality over the last 50 years. Fair to say though, that wine is an Italian tradition, with viticulture dating back perhaps as far as 4000 BC. It is the only country in the world where every region produces wine. It has about 1.7 million acres under vine which accounts for about 1 glass in 5 consumed across the planet. It is thought that Sicily is the first site of production, followed by Calabria, with vines heading northwards over time.
That's a curly one! Italy grows an incredible variety of grapes across a vast array of regions and regionality can have a marked impact on the flavour of what’s in the bottle... but we can answer by way of telling you which grapes are the most commonly planted; that will at least give you a useful pointer.
Sangiovese (Chianti), Nebbiolo (Barolo and Barbaresco), Montepulciano, Primitivo, Aglianico, Barbera (d’alba and d’asti) , and Nero d’Avola are very widely planted.
Corvina is pretty popular too, often blended with Rondinella and/or Molinara and/or Corvinone... This turns up in the relatively light wines of Bardolino and the much heavier wines of nearby Valpollicella. In Valpollicella it is quite versatile, turning up in light wines called Classico – light, fruity, acidic, no oak; richer wines called Valpollicella Classico Superiore – medium to full bodied, oaked; in Amarone Wines – concentrated, dark, rich, and powerful thanks to the extended air drying of grapes prior to fermentation; and in the Ripasso wines where high quality grapes are fermented on top of pressed Amarone skins. These wines are medium to full bodied, rich, plush and smooth.