A blend of both grape and terroir here. The chasselas comes from basalt and the chardonnay from old river beds. According to their habit, the fruit is destemmed and co-fermented... read more →
I visited Carolina and Alvaro last year and you can read about the journey here. They have been making natural wine because they are traditional people with a strong sense... read more →
Drink a sauvignon blanc from Chile? Ideologically, it’s not my favorite thing. But here, I did and did so happily. My first time drinking this was last January in Valparaiso.... read more →
Il Vinco is a project of three friends who are on a mission to save some of the older varieties of Lazio, most specifically canaiolo, the blending grape of Chianti.... read more →
Valentina Passalacqua has a lot of hectares—something like 60—in Puglia but when she noticed that the wines from her limestone terroir showed a more pronounced salinity she decided to birth... read more →
Loreline Laborde works in the Jura in a village near Poligny, southwest of Arbois. She makes more complex wine with every vintage. This trousseau, grown on blue grey marl, made... read more →
A pure expression of the prettiest side of the somewhat difficult 2018 vintage. It’s traditional carbonic fermentation and raised in tank. This medium-bodied beaujo, with its fleshy-fruity charm spiked with... read more →
There’s such a sense of place in this wine. It could only come from somewhere high and steep—Valtellina. For this I genuflect. Made from 95% nebbiolo, regionally known as chiavennasca,... read more →
From the Marsala area of Sicily, specifically the Contrada Rinazzo, comes a lovely skin contact wine. Ignore the label, which says bianco, because this wine is blessed with a stunning pinkish... read more →
Another wonderful debut from Vermont. This one is from Nicholas Kimberly who studied at the school of La Garagista. Here, his first solo effort. A 50/50 blend, the brianna came... read more →