Winemaker Notes
Don Antonio is a precious Nero d'Avola, with an intense purple color that offers voluptuous aromas of ripe cherry, rose, sweet spices, licorice and cocoa. It is a silky red wine but with an imposing structure and persuasive and refined tannins.
Don Antonio is a perfect match for aged cheeses, roasted red meats, and braised furred game.
Professional Ratings
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James Suckling
A dark, broody Nero here with lots of ripe dark fruit, tinged with black earth and licoricy notes. Full-bodied with a frame of firm tannin, but the fruit flavors push through to give a long, flavorful finish.
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Wine & Spirits
This voluptuous nero d’Avola offers dark plum flavors layered with notes of lavender, licorice and dark chocolate. The wine rested for 18 months in French oak bariques, gaining a round and polished texture along with notes of vanilla and spice, yet the deep and lively fruit flavors absorb the oak influence effortlessly, and the wine’s mouth-watering acidity brings the flavors to a bright, vertical finish.
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Wilfred Wong of Wine.com
COMMENTARY: The 2018 Morgante Don Antonio is a top-performing Nero d'Avola. TASTING NOTES: This wine exhibits aromas and flavors of black fruit and licorice. Pair its generous palate with an oven-roasted Porchetta. (Tasted: March 22, 2022, San Francisco, CA)
Boldly opulent and robust, Nero d’Avola is Sicily’s most widely planted red grape. Nero d’Avola performs well both as a single varietal bottling and in blends. It loves hot, arid climates and Sicily's old vines are aptly head-trained close to the ground, making them resistant to strong winds. A few pioneering producers in California as well as Australia farm Nero d’Avola in the same way. Somm Secret—Nero d’Avola's other name, Calabrese, suggests origins from the mainland region of Calabria.
A large, geographically and climatically diverse island, just off the toe of Italy, Sicily has long been recognized for its fortified Marsala wines. But it is also a wonderful source of diverse, high quality red and white wines. Steadily increasing in popularity over the past few decades, Italy’s fourth largest wine-producing region is finally receiving the accolades it deserves and shining in today's global market.
Though most think of the climate here as simply hot and dry, variations on this sun-drenched island range from cool Mediterranean along the coastlines to more extreme in its inland zones. Of particular note are the various microclimates of Europe's largest volcano, Mount Etna, where vineyards grow on drastically steep hillsides and varying aspects to the Ionian Sea. The more noteworthy red and white Sicilian wines that come from the volcanic soils of Mount Etna include Nerello Mascalese and Nerello Cappuccio (reds) and Carricante (whites). All share a racy streak of minerality and, at their best, bear resemblance to their respective red and white Burgundies.
Nero d’Avola is the most widely planted red variety, and is great either as single varietal bottling or in blends with other indigenous varieties or even with international ones. For example, Nero d'Avola is blended with the lighter and floral, Frappato grape, to create the elegant, Cerasuolo di Vittoria, one of the more traditional and respected Sicilian wines of the island.
Grillo and Inzolia, the grapes of Marsala, are also used to produce aromatic, crisp dry Sicilian white. Pantelleria, a subtropical island belonging to the province of Sicily, specializes in Moscato di Pantelleria, made from the variety locally known as Zibibbo.