At an unknown time in the distant past, an odd geologic upheaval formed what is today the country of Italy, shaped like a long high heel boot. Economics and politics exerted a different force, in present day Italy, shaping the country into an industrial north and an agricultural south.
Milan, the great industrial city of northern Italy, developed as the economic force of Lombardy, the most populous region in the country. And, Milan became the center of a burgeoning wine culture in Lombardy and neighboring Piedmont.
In Lombardy, the cool growing climate is ideally suited for the production of much of Italy's best sparkling wine in the region of Franciacorta. Historically, while Franciacorta developed as Italy's leading producer of high-end spumante, the region did not come on the scene until the 1960s.
Franciacorta spumante (the Italian word for sparkling wine) is made in the hills near Brescia. The spumante is made by the traditional Champagne method from Pinot Nero (Pinot Noir), Chardonnay and Pinot Bianco (Pinot Blanc). Most of the top houses, like Ca' del Bosco, favor a higher percentage of Chardonnay in their blends.
There's a lot of speculation about when the French varieties arrived in Franciacorta, but the money seems to be during the replanting of the vineyards after the devastation of phylloxera had passed. In an homage to Champagne, Franciacorta spumante sports French label language and uses the same residual sweetness levels as Champagne.
While Champagne deserves its reputation for elegant, refined sparkling wine, Franciacorta produces an equally good bubbly. Unfortunately, the Italian wine does not enjoy the same prestige as the French wine.
Oltrepo Pavese, Lombardy's oldest sparkling wine region, in the Pavia zone, supplies Pinot Noir and Chardonnay grapes for the production of spumante in neighboring Piedmont. The spumante from Pavia is made according to the traditional Champagne method. Other authorized varieties include Pinot Bianco and Pinot Grigio (Pinot Gris), two grapes that give the sparklers a
decided Italian character.
The requirement for spumante is a minimum of 70% Pinot Noir, and the wines must be aged on the lees for at least 15 months, or 24 months for vintage wines. Oltrepo Pavese was granted DOCG status in 2007.
In the 1960s, English wine writer, Cyril Ray, did not mention Oltrepo Pavese in his book, "The Wines of Italy." Twenty years later, American writer, Burton Anderson, in his seminal book "Vino" declared the wines of Oltrepo Pavese, "conspicuously underrated."
Things have improved for Oltrepo
since Anderson wrote that in the early 1980s. Today, the area is best-known for still red wine, made from Pinot Noir.
The rest of Lombardy is divided into several DOCs, and with one exception, they are lesser known than the heavy hitters on the Italian wine list, like Barolo and Chianti.
While Lombardy's two sparkling wines follow the French methodology, Lambrusco became an international best seller as a distinctly Italian wine, taking the American market by storm in the 1980s. The popular Lambrusco is a version from four production zones in Emilia-Romagna, south of Lombardy, across the Po river. Lombardy's claim to Lambrusco is Lambrusco Mantovano, a lightly sparkling ((frizzante) red wine, made from the Lambrusco grape.
Exclusivity on Lake Garda |
Lake Garda is one of the loveliest spots in Italy; if you can afford it. Lugana, a dry white wine produced in a small area south of the lake helps ease the sticker shock of living large on Garda and nearby Lake Como. Lugana, made from Trebbiano di Lugana, has a trace of mineral, likely from the limestone and clay in the zone's best vineyards.
Not far from the border with Switzerland, in an alpine valley, is Valtellina, a DOC red wine, made from Nebbiolo (known locally as Chiavennasca), the same high-value grape in Barolo and Barbaresco, from neighboring Piedmont. The mountainous terrain and terraced vineyards of Valtellina give the Nebbiolo wines a certain "nervousness," the local way of describing the wine's brisk acidity.
Additionally, there are four single high-altitude vineyards in Valtellina, each with a different take on Nebbiolo: Grumello, Inferno, Sassella and Valgella. These four red wines are labeled Valtellina Superiore and are mostly available in major U. S. markets.
Piemontese wines may get a lot of attention for its stellar red wines, but neighboring Lombardy wines have plenty of sparkle.
(Italy "boot" - Getty image)
Next blog: Chablis: the alternate white Burgundy
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