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A list of the Italian IGT (indicazione geografica tipica) wines, in alphabetical order by region. Note that IGT wines are not produced in Piedmont and Aosta Valley. Note that IGT wines are not produced in Piedmont and Aosta Valley.
Italian wine (Italian: vino italiano) is produced in every region of Italy. Italy is the country with the widest variety of indigenous grapevine in the world, [ 1 ] [ 2 ] with an area of 702,000 hectares (1.73 million acres) under vineyard cultivation, [ 3 ] as well as the world's largest wine producer and the largest exporter as of 2024 [update] .
This is a list of the 77 Italian DOCG (denominazione di origine controllata e garantita) wines ordered by region. [1] The four original DOCGs were Brunello , Vino Nobile , and Barolo (all approved by a presidential decree in July 1980) and Barbaresco (as approved in October 1980).
Cerasuolo d'Abruzzo is an Italian DOC classification of a rosé (Italian: rosato) style wine made from the Montepulciano grape in Italy's Abruzzo wine region. [1] The name cerasuolo (lit. ' cherry-red ') relates to the deep color the wine obtains from even very brief skin-contact with the highly pigmented skins of the Montepulciano grapes. [2]
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This is a list of the 329 Italian DOC (denominazione di origine controllata) wines ordered by region. [1] The wine making regions of Italy are equivalent to its twenty administrative regions. Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol, however, is subdivided into its two constituent parts.
The son of vine growers, Guido Berta took to managing his family business and opened a wine cellar at a young age in the 1990s. Berta largely focuses on growing Barbera, farming sustainably (and ...
In the late 19th century, the Italian wine writer C. B. Cerletti wrote a book for the French market that described the wines of Italy. Of the wines of Lombardy, he noted that the Valtellina were still being made in a Greek style and the wines of Oltrepò Pavese were the preferred wines of the Milanese. [5]