Google

 
     


Sicily Wine
 


SeeItaly.org

Small group
tours in Italy.


 

Freelance jobs
Properties In Italy

View 100's of properties to find Property In Italy including Calabria Property For Sale and Property In Puglia for investment opportunities in Italy.


Oranges and vineyards under the Etna vulcano
Oranges and vineyards under the Etna Vulcano - Photo (c) joe_ripa

Sicily Wine:

Sicily (Sicilia in Italian), the largest Mediterranean island, has more vineyards for wine than any other region. Production in recent years has reached awesome levels - frequently the greatest in volume among the regions. The westernmost province of Trapani alone turns out more wine than the entire regions of Tuscany or Piedmont or such wine nations as Hungary, Austria or Chile. But the proportion of DOC wine in Sicily's total is a mere 2.5 per cent and a major share of that is Marsala, which with some 22 million liters a year ranks among Italy's top ten DOCs in volume.

Marsala, which was devised by English merchant traders nearly two centuries ago, has remained Sicily's proudest wine despite decades of degradation when it was flavored with various syrups and sweeteners. Recently it has enjoyed a comeback with connoisseurs, who favor the dry Marsala Vergine and Superiore Riserva with their warmly complex flavors that rank them with the finest fortified wines of Europe.

The only other DOC wine made in significant quantity in Sicily (about 2.5 million liters a year) is the pale white, bone dry Bianco d'Alcamo. Moscato di Pantelleria, from the remote isle off the coast of Tunisia, is among the richest and most esteemed of Italian sweet wines in the Naturale and Passito Extra versions. Malvasia delle Lipari, from the volcanic Aeolian isles, is a dessert wine as exquisite as it is rare.

 

 

Sicily Wines:

I Love Italian Wine and Food - The Sicily Region

An article by: Levi Reiss

...We’ll start by quoting the marketing materials. “Made with the local grapes Inzolia, Greciano, and Catarratto, this wine is matured only in stainless steel and is not put through acid-softening malolactic fermentation. The producer chooses this approach to retain the bright fruitiness and racy crispness of the wine. Enjoy with steamed mussels, chicken or summer salads.” And now for my thoughts on the wine...

...I first tasted this wine with broiled chicken burgers accompanied by a hot pepper relish, and red peppers. The wine was light, perhaps a bit intimidated by the relish. It was delicate, but not weak. When I finished my glass with the red peppers, the wine was quite fruity and sweet...

...Isola is a Sicilian fresh cheese made from sheep’s milk. The Isola cheese was powerful, strong smelling and strong tasting, especially when you crunched into a peppercorn. Unfortunately, the cheese overpowered this relatively light wine. In contrast, when paired with an Asiago cheese from northern Italy, the wine became quite full bodied and fruity. Sometimes rules such as local wines with local cheeses are meant to be broken...
read the entire article...

 

Italian Wine
 



(c) 1997-2008 E. Massetti
TangoItalia - Food Wine Travel in Italy - Home