The Conti sisters started to take over Castello Conti during their father’s 2001 illness and then ultimately after his death. This is a traditional house, in the best sense. This... read more →
The Sera family works in Valtellina on seven steep hectares of vineyards of magical glacial rock in San Giacomo di Teglio. This is their entry level wine that ain’t so... read more →
Granddaughter Erica is working alongside Nino and the future looks promising. From 100-year-old vines, this is old school farmer winemaking. Whole bunch fermentation for two weeks followed by foot stomping... read more →
Another beauty from Lazio. Here the wine comes from young, bush-trained vines and is made with 50% whole cluster. The result is 100% delicious. Fermented and aged in a combination... read more →
Trivia alert! It seems popolka was the actual name of xinomavro before the 70’s. Finding a real one, no matter what it’s called, has been rare. In fact, all seem... read more →
This wine comes from the volcanic Aegean Island of Lemnos, and brings the ancient taste of the island with it. This is muscat with five months skin contact, three-quarters of... read more →
Bulli is situated in the Colli Piacentini, not far from Massimiliano Croci, where the two share a terroir. There’s a beachy quality to the soils here, and plenty of shell... read more →
The color on this one tells you something about the power of grechetto skins. With only one short week of skin contact (whole cluster carbonic), the effect is dramatic. The... read more →
The timorasso grape had been teetering on the verge of extinction in the 1980s. While it managed to hang on it’s still rare—and finding one made naturally is even rarer.... read more →
So what does assyrtiko taste like outside of Greece, in San Diego County, grown on decomposed granite 1400 feet above sea level? This bottle answers that question. The winemaking decisions... read more →