Levi Dalton
Levi Dalton
For a long time now I have wondered after the "Rovo" chinato of Poggio Gagliardo. Poggio Gagliardo is a winery in Tuscany, in the area outside of Pisa. They produce a range of wines, including the "Rovo" which is a blend of Sangiovese 70%, Malvasia Nera 20%, and Colorino 10%. Some of the "Rovo" wine is then taken and aromatized (and aged in acacia), for production of a chinato. This is interesting to me because every other chinato I am familiar with takes as a base wine made from grapes grown in Piemonte.
So, how would the difference manifest itself? This has been a question in the back of my mind for awhile now, because although it was imported to the US at one time, it would seem that the "Rovo" chinato is not being brought in at the moment.
How nice it would be to line up, say the Roagna chinato made from nebbiolo, the Vergano "Luli" made from moscato, and the Rovo chinato and see what and where the influence of grape variety lay. Unfortunately, this opportunity has not presented itself. I did get to try the Rovo chinato 2001 recently though, and I found it to be of high quality. The bottle sported the name of the old importer, so I would imagine it had been laying around for awhile. I felt the Tuscan influence was noticeable on the opening palate notes of the wine and in the richness of fruit. The highish acidity that one finds in certain Piemontese chinato was not present, and so the flavors were thrown in less sharp relief. The nature of the china was pretty "normal" for this kind of beverage and really took hold from the mid-palate on. In other words, I thought the Rovo Chinato was noticeably sangiovese and noticeably a chinato. Which is a combination that had been unfamiliar to me.
Does anyone know of other producers outside of Piemonte producing chinati?
So, how would the difference manifest itself? This has been a question in the back of my mind for awhile now, because although it was imported to the US at one time, it would seem that the "Rovo" chinato is not being brought in at the moment.
How nice it would be to line up, say the Roagna chinato made from nebbiolo, the Vergano "Luli" made from moscato, and the Rovo chinato and see what and where the influence of grape variety lay. Unfortunately, this opportunity has not presented itself. I did get to try the Rovo chinato 2001 recently though, and I found it to be of high quality. The bottle sported the name of the old importer, so I would imagine it had been laying around for awhile. I felt the Tuscan influence was noticeable on the opening palate notes of the wine and in the richness of fruit. The highish acidity that one finds in certain Piemontese chinato was not present, and so the flavors were thrown in less sharp relief. The nature of the china was pretty "normal" for this kind of beverage and really took hold from the mid-palate on. In other words, I thought the Rovo Chinato was noticeably sangiovese and noticeably a chinato. Which is a combination that had been unfamiliar to me.
Does anyone know of other producers outside of Piemonte producing chinati?