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  • Posts Tagged ‘Italian wine’

    Selecting A Wine Tour In Tuscany

    Thursday, October 30th, 2008

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    Perhaps the most well known of all Italian wines is the Chianti. A wine tour in Tuscany will typically focus on that kind of wine. Therefore, in Tuscany most tours center on Florence with the result being a typical day or evening long wine tour in Tuscany. When selecting your particular tour there are two primary considerations, the first is cost and logistics, the second are the vineyards that you will be visiting.

    A Tuscany wine tour typically starts around nine in the morning and ends around six in the evening. Also, the preferred ones include lunch in a unique setting as well. The prices of these tours can start at two hundred Euros and go up from there, and this price is simply for the mini-van and guide. The primary form of transportation for tours in Europe is the European styled mini-van. The more folks in the van the less expensive the tour will be on a per person basis. Some of the even better tours may actually include lunch and the wine as part of the fee. There are also evening Citrus Wine tours in Tuscany. The events of wine tasting and dinner are spectacularly merged with dinner facing the vineyard. These occasions are extremely memorable for the guests attending the dinner. Of course there are all forms of wine tours in Tuscany available and may include chauffeured limousines and individualized service. The choice is, of course, all dependent on your needs and budget. The second component of the decision is the vineyard and the wine.

    The Perfect Chianti

    The resulting Fruit Wines from the fermented grapes of the sangiovese vines in the region between Florence and Siena in central Italy are known as Chiantis. These are the primary target of the wine tour in Tuscany, though other wines might be thrown into the mix. Cabernet Sauvignon may be added to the base wine to provide additional robustness and body to the Chianti. Regardless of the form of grape, the color of the grape in Tuscany should be red, with but one or two white exceptional wines only. When selecting your tour check out the vineyard, consider its age and the size and the forms of wine being produced. The last thought on selecting your wine tour in Tuscany is the area. Depending on the time of year you arrive the scenery will vary from exciting to breathtaking as the combination of rolling hills, verdant green and purple colors dazzle your mind.

    Preparing To Take The Tour

    A Fruit Wine tour in Tuscany should be fun, so prepare appropriately, and don’t let the occasion get you. If it is a day tour make sure you are prepared for a little hiking. If the tour is in the evening make sure you are dressed as the brochure indicates and make sure that you heed the drivers timelines or you may end up in the Tuscany hills all alone.

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    A Guide To Italian Wine

    Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

    Wine is one of the most universally loved drinks in the world, and one of the fan favorites has to be Italian wine. Italy’s glowing reputation for wine is not only due to the fact that it is a country which produces and exports more than any other country, but as well because of how it offers the greatest variety of types, ranging through nearly every color, flavor and style that you could possibly imagine.

    The vast majority of Italian Fruit Wines choices are red however there are some wonderful white wines to choose from as well. Of all the different white wine options, the most well known are those from the much maligned Soave region.

    The Different Regions

    Italian wine is basically classified according to the region in Italy where it was made, and the classification system for Italian wine then mirrors that for French. Northern Italy is one of the most predominant areas when it comes to wine production, and the northwest of Italy is divided into four separate regions, which are: Valle d-Aosta, Lombardy, Liguria and Piedmont.

    Some of the best Italian wine from this area is: Aldo Conterno, Giacomo Conterno, Enzo Boglietti, Pio Cesare, Elvio Cogno, Luciano Sandrone, and Michele Chiarlo. As well, nearby is Barbaresco, which is another red wine that is made from Nebbiolo, which is much more approachable in youth as well as more affordable as well.

    The central regions of Italy are well known for what is considered as quite possibly being the best red Citrus Wine of all time, Chianti. This wine hails from Tuscany specifically, which is the best known and most traveled to Italian wine region. Chianti is a red wine that is made from the Sangiovese grape, with small amounts of other grapes included, such as Cabernet Sauvigon.

    In the south of Italy the production generally centers around the red wine, which often results in rivaling the wines of France in terms of interest and good value. It also offers plenty of vintage Italian wine, although it is truly impossible to generalize with regard to vintages for Italian Rose Wines, because you are dealing with such a huge and vast country.

    Of all the locations in the world, Italy is definitely one of the most predominant when it comes to wine manufacturing and distribution, and some of the wines from this country are known as being the most well respected and well loved wines in the world.

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