Winemaker Notes
This wine is named after the volcanic hill where the vineyards stand. It is an area that gives a special charm to the wines, making them unique in elegance and finesse.
Straw yellow with green-gold reflections. On the nose, it is elegant and complex with mineral notes, acacia flowers, white peach and pear. On the palate, salty and spicy, with flint notes and a pronounced minerality. Notes of yellow apple, lemon, white peach, almond. Pronounced and velvety, of great balance. Suitable for long ageing.
Professional Ratings
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Wine Spectator
Juicy pineapple, blood orange peel and green almond flavors are enmeshed with sleek acidity, a streak of salinity, and chamomile and beeswax accents in this lightly fleshy, light- to medium-bodied white. Good length. Drink now through 2030. 1,650 cases made, 150 cases imported.
One of Italy’s classic white varieties, Garganega flourishes in the rolling vineyards surrounding the medieval village of Soave and is the dominant variety in the wine from the region, aptly known as, Soave. By law it makes up 70-100% of the blend with the remainder traditionally finished off by Trebbiano di Soave for its crispness. Somm Secret—The best Soave wines, measurably elegant and vibrant, come from the Soave Classico zone, in the center of Soave, where the hills are made of decomposed volcanic and granitic soils.
Among Italy’s classic whites capable of great potential, Soave is named after the medieval village and surrounding hillsides from whence it comes. The original, historical Soave zone, delimited back in 1927, covers the eastern, volcanic hillsides of today's general Soave zone and is called Soave Classico.
Garganega, the indigenous grape responsible for great Soave, produces medium bodied white wines with fine acidity. Typical in the best Soaves are lively flowery and fresh herbal aromas and flavors such as orange zest, peach, melon and marjoram. The best can take some age and in so doing, develop notes of chamomile, marmalade and honey.
By the 1960s and 70s, Soave was enjoying such a glorious global reputation, that its demand forced growers to push beyond the zone's original borders. Expansion led west out of the hills and onto the alluvial plain of the Adige River. This, coupled with an increase in yields and allowance of additional varieties such as Trebbiano, Chardonnay and Pinot blanc, met demand but created a softer, fruit-forward, everyday Soave. Today the broader region can be the source of charming and value driven whites. But those labeled as Soave Classico or in rare cases, as Soave Colli Scaligeri (nearby hillside vineyards abutting the Classico zone), will be the best quality and age-worthy Soaves. These are often 100% Garganega.