No products in the cart.
Active filters
Poggio di Sotto, Riserva 2010, Brunello di Montalcino DOCG
A wine produced each vintage in selecting the best oak vat in the cellar...
Ruberpan, Valpolicella DOC Classico Superiore
Ruberpan Valpolicella Superiore was launched in 2003 from grapes grown on vineyards in Cellore d’Illasi, on the slopes of mount Garzon, 500m above sea level. The new winery is in the famous Villa Cipolla Pieropan in Tregnago Verona. The name Ruberpan comes from the Latin, ‘Ruber’ which means ruby red, and Pan from the Pieropan family
Bricco delle Viole, Barolo DOCG
Bricco delle Viole is the vineyard that taught us patience and naturally guided the style of our craft.
Amarone della Valpolicella DOC Classico
It is our youngest Amarone, a perfect combination between tradition and present, between easy-drinking quality and intensity, able to face longer aged Amarone wines in terms of taste and peculiarity. The big deal of this wine is the origin from a land historically devoted to great wine production as the Valpolicella Classica is. Lively as its red colour, it’s an important wine, elegant and modern, food friendly.
Montepulciano d'Abruzzo DOC
t was the first wine produced at our estate. An elegant and personal interpretation of the Montepulciano in our territory, it is obtained from repeated harvests in the same plots of the whole Loreto Aprutino vineyard, followed by a further selection on the sorting table. ...
Rosso di Montalcino DOC
Produced with the same grapes as Brunello and with a similar vinification. Aged in oak casks for one year.
66, Tintilia del Molise DOC
Tintilia is a red Italian wine grape variety that is grown in the Molise region of east-central Italy. A red wine made from the grape was classified as Denominazione di origine controllata (DOC) in 2011. Its name could be originated from “Tinto”, meaning “red” in Spanish...
Macchiarossa, Tintilia del Molise DOC
Tintilia is a red Italian wine grape variety that is grown in the Molise region of east-central Italy. A red wine made from the grape was classified as Denominazione di origine controllata (DOC) in 2011. Its name could be originated from “Tinto”, meaning “red” in Spanish...
Arquatà, Montefalco Sagrantino DOCG
one vineyard in Bevagna (Pg) in Vocabolo Arquata at 250m height, exposure South on clay-calcareous. One vineyard in Montefalco, at 250m height, exposure South-East, on sandy-clay-calcareous soil. Plant density: 5.000 per hectare.
San Leonardo, 2003, Vigneti delle Dolomiti IGT
San Leonardo is the magical heir to a tradition known the world over as Bordeaux blending. Dreams and heritage mingle to bring you a wine that conveys all its land-rooted character and genuine territory-focused appeal.
San Leonardo, 2014, Vigneti delle Dolomiti IGT
San Leonardo is the magical heir to a tradition known the world over as Bordeaux blending. Dreams and heritage mingle to bring you a wine that conveys all its land-rooted character and genuine territory-focused appeal.
San Leonardo, 2015, Vigneti delle Dolomiti IGT
San Leonardo is the magical heir to a tradition known the world over as Bordeaux blending. Dreams and heritage mingle to bring you a wine that conveys all its land-rooted character and genuine territory-focused appeal.
Pinot Nero, Alto Adige DOC
Extremely sensible grape variety, most sensitive to all treatments up to harvest time.
This wine differ from others with his sophisticated elegant characteristics, exhibits an intense bouquet of red berries, cherries and wild berries which makes it easy to accompany to a wide variety of dishes.
Villa Gemma, Montepulciano d'Abruzzo DOC
Austere and important, Montepulciano D’Abruzzo Villa Gemma Rosso provides an unprecedented interpretation of this great autochthonous vine, helping it to be included in the map of the world viticulture that counts...
Terre di San Leonardo, Vigneti delle Dolomiti IGT
Classic Bordeaux style blend, Terre retraces the terroir path trod by its prestigious sibling San Leonardo, matching its intensity and refi ned elegance.
Foradori, Teroldego, Vigneti delle Dolomiti IGT
The Campo Rotaliano is a well-demarcated geographical area, a sort of recess of the Adige Valley tucked between the mountains. Its history and origin are closely tied to the Noce River, which, over the centuries, has deposited huge quantities of limestone, granite and porphyry debris.