Argiolas Is Argiolas Vermentino di Sardegna 2016 Front Bottle Shot
Argiolas Is Argiolas Vermentino di Sardegna 2016 Front Bottle Shot Argiolas Is Argiolas Vermentino di Sardegna 2016 Front Label

Winemaker Notes

Soft straw yellow with green tinges. Intense primary aroma, delicate, lingering, excellent secondary aroma, great bouquet. The palate is lively, fresh, rich, balanced, delicate, and fine.

Pair with fish starters, culurgiones (ravioli) with potato and mint filling, seafood risotto, artichoke risotto, linguine (flat spaghetti) with seafood dressing, stewed and grilled fish, white meats, medium mature cheeses.

Professional Ratings

  • 90
    This is such a happy and cheerful wine. The 2016 Vermentino di Sardegna Is Argiolas offers a beautiful balance of freshness that is crisp and bright without being abrasive. The bouquet opens to sweet peach, orange zest and white almond blossom. The mouthfeel is lean, compact and perfectly suited to one of those epic Italian seafood lunches at the beach.
Argiolas

Argiolas

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A fantastic, aromatic white grape that grows with great success in Sardinia, Tuscany and in lesser proportions on the island of Corsica. Somm Secret—Vermentino is thought to be genetically identical to Liguria’s Pigato grape and Peidmont’s Favorita. It comprises a large proportion of the whites in southern France where it is called Rolle.

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Hailed for centuries as a Mediterranean vine-growing paradise, multiple cultures over many centuries have ruled the large island of Sardinia. Set in the middle of the Tyrrhenian Sea, the Phonoecians, Ancient Rome, and subsequently the Byzantines, Arabs and Catalans have all staked a claim on the island at some point in history. Along the way, these inhabitants transported many of their homeland’s prized vines and today Sardinia’s modern-day indigenous grape varieties claim multiple origins. Sardinia’s most important red grapes—namely Cannonau (a synonym for Grenache) and Carignan—are actually of Spanish origin.

Vermentino, a prolific Mediterranean variety, is the island’s star white. Vermentino has a stronghold the Languedoc region of France as well as Italy’s western and coastal regions, namely Liguria (where it is called Pigato), Piedmont (where it is called Favorita) and in Tuscany, where it goes by the name, Vermentino. The best Vermentino, in arguably all of the Mediterranean, grows in Sardinia's northeastern region of Gallura where its vines struggle to dig roots deep down into north-facing slopes of granitic soils. These Vermentino vines produce highly aromatic, full and concentrated whites of unparalleled balance.

Today aside from its dedication to viticulture, Sardinia remains committed to maintaining its natural farmlands, bucolic plains of grazing sheep and perhaps most of all, its sandy, sunny, Mediterranean beaches.

HNYARSIAS16C_2016 Item# 260409