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Valle d'Aosta Wine
 


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Aosta Valley Wine:

The vine has been cultivated in the Aosta Valley since the Roman period or perhaps even earlier, if various legends can be believed. According to those stories, the Salassi, who lived in the region before the Romans conquered it because of its strategic value, were already making wines from grapes grown in their own vineyards.

It is known with certainty that in 23 BC the Roman legions crushed a rebellion by the valley's inhabitants and celebrated their victory by looting all the cellars of their wine. It was during the Middle Ages, however, that the wines of the Aosta Valley established a widespread reputation. And they acquired something of a "sacral" character as well because, according to numerous reports, they were used in the rite of exorcism.

The physical layout of the valley favors the cultivation of vines because the mountains tend to block or turn aside the coldest winds, thereby creating suitable microclimates in which grapes have flourished since the remotest times. In the second half of the 19th century, the phylloxera epidemic devastated the Aosta Valley vineyards over a period of many years. Fortunately, although the devastation was enormous, destruction was not total. The vineyards slowly revived and flourished anew. The only lasting setback was the disappearance of several vine varieties.

Donnaz was the valley's first DOC wine, receiving that recognition in 1971. The following year, it was the turn of Enfer d'Arvier. Although other wines were in line and qualified to receive the DOC designation, all further movement was halted until 1985 while a plan was worked out to place all regional wines of fine quality under the common denomination of Valle d'Aosta-Vallée d'Aoste. The regional indication is followed by the name of the variety involved or of a restricted production area.
Courtesy of the Italian Trade Commission


 

 

  Aosta Valley Wines :

  The white wine of Morgex and La Salle

"Difficult and heroic", thus could be defined viticulture in the Aosta Valley.

In this region, the viticulture has run parallel to local human vicissitudes, so much so that it transformed the landscape.

History diverges on how viticulture was introduced into the region. On one hand there are some who believe that the Romans were responsible for the introduction of the first vines. On the other hand, there are those who believe that the plant was already present in the region long before the Romans showed up, and that it was known to the natives Salassi.

According to the second theory, it was thanks to the commercial exchanges with neighboring regions that introduced vine cultivation, where the culture found an ideal environment centuries ago. Vitiviniculture survived all this time thanks to the hard work and sacrifices of the local vignerons (or vintners, in French, the second language of the region).

It is is in most cases mountain viticulture, which required the typical stairway-shaped structure of the landscape, with its low dry-walls and minuscule strips of more or less flat land. The elevation of the vineyards ranges from 300-400 meters (around 984-1,312 feet) in the Bassa Valle (Low Valley), to 500-700 meters (around 1,640-2,300 feet) in the Vallata Centrale ( Central Valley), up to over 800 meters (over 2,624 feet) in the Valle Alta (High Valley). At Morgex, at 1,225 meters (over 4,000 feet) there is the highest vineyard in all Europe.

The thermal extreme excursion between day and night, the incline at which the sun rays hit the vines, because of the climbing nature of the fields, adds to the low amount of precipitation, and contribute to creating some of the favorable conditions for this type of cultivation. The result is a series of extremely typical wines, which manage to carve a top spot in the Italian and international markets for themselves.

Though renown for its quality, the production of these wines has remained modest in quantity. The total extension of the vineyards is around 500 hectares (around 1,235 acres), with a production of about three thousand metric tons of grapes. Of the total vineyard, 208 hectares (around 514 acres) are dedicated to the production of DOC wines, and produce around 1.4 metric tons of grapes.

The average wine production is around 27,000 hectoliters (around 713,265 gallons) 7,000 (around 185,000 gallons) are DOC. The total number of bottles distributed is 1.7 million.

It is worth noting that in 1985, the Aosta Valley was in among the first Italian regions to obtain a DOC recognition which, under the region's name, groups all the recognized production.

This Denomination of Controlled Origin includes seven sub-denominations by zone:

  • Blanc de Morgex e de la Salle,
  • Enfer d'Arvier,
  • Torrette,
  •   Aosta Valley
    Nus,
  • Chambave,
  • Arnad-Montjovet,
  • Donnas,

and 15 by grape variety:

  • Chardonnay,
  • Cornalin,
  • Fumin,
  • Gamay,
  • Mayolet,
  • Merlot,
  • Muller Turghau,
  • Nebbiolo,
  • Petite Arvine,
  • Petit Rouge,
  • Pinot Blanc,
  • Pinot Gris,
  • Pinot Noir,
  • Premetta and
  • Syrah.

There are 13 native vines in this small Alpine region, of which only one, the Prié, is white, while the other 12 are red:

  • Petit Rouge,
  • Vien de Nus,
  • Fumin,
  • Cornalin,
  • Mayolet,
  • Ner d’Ala,
  • Vuillermin,
  • Premetta,
  • Crovassa,
  • Bonda,
  • Roussin and
  • Roussin de Morgex.

Among the international varieties we find Chardonnay, Muller Thurgau, Pinot Blanc, Pinot Noir, Merlot and Syrah.

The production is mostly based on six large cooperatives which took a foothold in the region around the 1970s. In addition there are 24 privately owned small enterprises grouped in the 'Viticulteurs Encaveurs' (Vintners Winemakers) association as well as the Institut Agricole Régional, or Regional Institute for Agriculture), which in addition to conducting research and teaching, counts on its own production structure.

DOC and DOCG wines made with the main native vines

NATIVE GRAPES DOC WINES
DOCG WINES
Cornalin
  • Valle d'Aosta:
    • sottodenominazione di vitigno Cornalin

 

Fumin
  • Valle d'Aosta:
    • sottodenominazione di vitigno Fumin
Mayolet
  • Valle d'Aosta:
    • sottodenominazione di vitigno Mayolet
Petit Rouge
  • Valle d'Aosta:
    • sottodenominazione di vitigno Petit Rouge;
    • sottodenominazione d'Area Blanc de Morgex e de la Salle, Chambave, Enfer d'Arvier, Nus, Torrette
Premetta
  • Valle d'Aosta:
    • sottodenominazione di vitigno Premetta
Prié Blanc
  • Valle d'Aosta:
    • sottodenominazione d'Area Blanc de Morgex et de la Salle
Vien de Nus
  • Valle d'Aosta:
    • sottodenominazione d'Area Nus

Courtesy of italian-flavor.com

I Love Italian Wine and Food - The Aosta Valley Region - Piedmont Wine

An article by: Levi Reiss

The Aosta Valley devotes only fifteen hundred acres to grapevines, and ranks 20th among the 20 Italian regions. Its total annual wine production is about six hundred thousand gallons, also giving it a 20th place. About 90% of the wine production is red or rosé (only a bit of rosé), leaving about 10% for white. The region produces a single DOC wine, that is divided into 23 categories... read the entire article...

Italian Wine
 



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