Wine Spotlight: A Sparkling Taste of Veneto

This week’s wine spotlight highlights a great style of sparkling wine from Italy called Prosecco. Have you heard of it? For this discussion, I chose a fantastic Prosecco emanating from its home in the Veneto region.

I recently sampled it when I was tasting some bubbly for a wine list I was constructing for a new wine bar called The Lucky Dog Bistro. It sure was a palate pleaser and I thought it would be a perfect sparkling addition to the menu. Thank you to Sarah from Soilair Selection for the awesome recommendation.

Isotta Manzoni ‘Cuvée Giuliana’ Prosecco (NV) is a crisp, value-driven, small production, sparkling wine from Italy’s Veneto region. Made 100% from the Glera grape, it is light, slightly acidic, and on the ‘fizzier’ side of prosecco making it very refreshing and ideal for mimosas or casual sipping.

The production is the Charmat (tank) method, which preserves fresh, fruity characteristics with a second fermentation. Sourced from vineyards nestled in the hills between Conegliano and Valdobbiadene, and produced by fourth-generation winemakers. The fermentation is 25 days in stainless steel tanks and then aged for 1 month in stainless steel tanks. The result is larger bubbles.

Cuvée in the name is a French wine term derived from cuve (meaning “vat” or “tank”). Depending on the context, it typically indicates a specially selected blend of multiple grape varieties, a winery’s premium or reserve batch, especially in Champagne, or the purest “first-press” juice extracted from grapes.

The Cuvée Giuliana is the standard, widely available Brut-style Prosecco. The Prosecco Rosé version is a delicate, dry rosé expression that features light notes of red berries, strawberries, and cream. This was also added to the wine list.

It is a well-balanced Prosecco with delicate and expressive aromas showing a good blend of crisp green and baked apple, sour lemon and grapefruit with a light, soft, silky and creamy mousse texture on the palate.

As you go back into the glass, some notes of pear and white peach appear on the nose followed by hints of apple and citrus. The Isotta Prosecco has a fair amount of body and mouthfeel with a pleasant lemon and mineral finish.

It’s refreshing acidity and elegant bubbles make it an incredibly versatile pairing option. It goes wonderfully with everything, including fresh seafood, shellfish, prosciutto/cured meats, vegetarian dishes, brunch favorites like eggs benedict or light pastries. Bon appétit!

The Isotta Manzoni Prosecco and Rosé version is now available at The Lucky Dog Bistro in downtown Clinton, NY where you can enjoy it at the beautiful new wine bar with inside and outside seating or in the restaurant. Try it in the special mimosas on the weekend. Hopefully I will see you there! Find them on Instagram @luckydogbistro and here About | The Lucky Dog Bistro.

Ancient Romans drank Prosecco to preserve youth and lengthen life. And based on how long the empire lasted, it may just work. Prosecco is a great alternative to Champagne and generally contains less alcohol. Every year, one bottle of Prosecco is produced for every 2 people in the US. That’s a lot of bubbles! It is currently in the top 25 of Italian Prosecco wines in New York and one of the popular wines distributed with Soilair Selection out of NYC.

A lovely, somewhat less popular, and often less expensive comparison to Champagne, Prosecco is a deliciously dry sparkling wine with crisp acidity, low sugar, with plenty of fruit and character. Associated with high value at low cost, Prosecco is the perfect option in situations where you want or need a easy drinking, everyday sparkling wine.

Traditionally from the Veneto (northeastern Italy), Prosecco refers to the name for a small village and is fermented almost solely from a grape called Glera. Most Prosecco is non-vintage, which means it doesn’t come with a year of production on the label.

This wine is not made in the traditional method of champagne with riddling, disgorging, rebottling, etc…, which, combined with non-vintage production, makes the wine more affordable than champagne minus the labor intensity. Prosecco is often described as a fresher and fruitier option than the French sparkler.

A few fun facts –

Styles of Prosecco – ‘Spumante’ means fully sparkling while ‘frizzante’ means lightly sparkling. It is rare but some Prosecco is a still wine, not sparkling.

“Extra Dry” Prosecco is actually sweeter than “Brut”. “Dry” is the sweetest of the three. This sweetness scale from dry to sweet: Brut – Extra Dry – Dry.

Prosecco isn’t a grape. The grape used to be called Prosecco, but it isn’t anymore. In 2009, Italy officially renamed the grape ‘Glera’ so that Prosecco could be protected as a place name rather than a grape variety. By law, Prosecco must contain at least 85% of the Glera grape.

Cheers & Sante,

Michael, michael@michaelpour.com

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