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Centopassi, Sicilia Grillo “Rocce di Pietra Longa”

Sicily, Italy 2020 (750mL)
Regular price$30.00
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Centopassi, Sicilia Grillo “Rocce di Pietra Longa”

Located near the town of Corleone, south of Palermo, Centopassi is hardly a typical Sicilian cooperative (of which there are many). It is the winemaking arm of Libera Terra (“Freed Land”), an organization that produces an array of agricultural products on land that was once controlled by the Sicilian mafia. The Centopassi winemaking entity takes its name from a popular anti-mafia film, “I Cento Passi” (“The Hundred Steps”), which came out in 2000. The source vineyards for the wines sit at quite high altitudes in Western Sicily, and the wines are far more than sentimental picks: the quality, across the board, is stunning.


Centopassi’s grapes come from various vineyards in the high Belice Corleonese Plateau, near the town of Corleone, south of Palermo. “Rocce de Pietra Longa” is a single vineyard in the village of Monreale, a site marked by a tall stone (the Pietra Lunga, about 100 feet high) nearby. The site climbs to roughly 550 meters of elevation and has a southeasterly aspect, in a microclimate which would be considered “cool” by Sicilian standards. Soils are a mix of clay, sand, and silt.


This tangy white is 100% Grillo from a Certified Organic single vineyard in Monreale. The hand-harvested fruit is gently pressed and fermented in stainless steel using selected yeasts. It is aged in stainless steel, on its fine lees, for nine months and lightly filtered before bottling. It’s a pale yellow-gold in the glass, with scents of lemon pith, marzipan, tangerine, wildflower honey, and wet stones. It has mouthwatering minerality—a slightly saline feel, like a white grown closer to the coast. So many Sicilian seafood options in play here!


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Italy

Northwestern Italy

Piedmont

Italy’s Piedmont region is really a wine “nation”unto itself, producing world-class renditions of every type of wine imaginable: red, white, sparkling, sweet...you name it! However, many wine lovers fixate on the region’s most famous appellations—Barolo and Barbaresco—and the inimitable native red that powers these wines:Nebbiolo.

Tuscany

Chianti

The area known as “Chianti” covers a major chunk of Central Tuscany, from Pisa to Florence to Siena to Arezzo—and beyond. Any wine with “Chianti” in its name is going to contain somewhere between 70% to 100% Sangiovese, and there are eight geographically specific sub-regions under the broader Chianti umbrella.

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