Umani Ronchi leads the pack in the Marche. It's THE Marche producer, the one that transformed Verdicchio from Adriatic seaside pizza wine into something that ages like white Burgundy.
The story starts in 1957 when Gino Umani Ronchi founded a small farm in Cupramontana, the capital of Verdicchio. But the real magic began in 1968 when Roberto Bianchi and his son-in-law Massimo Bernetti took over. They had a vision: prove that Verdicchio could be one of the world's great white wines.
Fast forward three generations. Michele Bernetti now runs the show, having taken Umani Ronchi from regional hero to international powerhouse. Wine Spectator named them one of Italy's 34 Best Wineries. They're members of the elite Istituto del Vino di Qualità alongside Antinori, Sassicaia, and Jermann.
But awards don't make great wine—vineyards do. The Vecchie Vigne ("Old Vines") comes from 45-year-old plantings at 920-985 feet elevation in Montecarotto, one of Verdicchio's finest crus. These vines were planted in the early 1970s on deep clay-loam soils loaded with calcium—the perfect recipe for Verdicchio with both power and finesse.
The winemaking is obsessive. Hand-harvesting, Gentle pressing, cold settling, temperature-controlled fermentation with indigenous yeasts. There’s no malolactic to zap that electric acidity. Ten months aging on the lees in concrete tanks—not steel, concrete—because it lets the wine breathe while maintaining freshness. Another six months in bottle before release.
The result? The 2009 vintage was named Italy's White Wine of the Year. The philosophy, as Michele puts it: “Grandi vini ma non grossi vini”—“Great wines, but not big wines.”
WHY YOU'LL LOVE IT
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Capacity to Age: The 2022 Vecchie Vigne is just getting started. These old vines produce Verdicchio that evolves for a decade-plus, developing notes of lemon curd, poached pear, almond, and that distinctive, fascinating mineral edge that keeps you coming back to the glass.
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A Tre Bicchieri Dynasty: In Italy's most competitive wine guide, where thousands of wines compete, this bottle has triumphed eight times. It's like a restaurant keeping three Michelin stars, for decades.
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Old Vines, Young Vine Prices: Old vines mean concentrated fruit, complex flavors, and wines that age forever. Most producers in France would charge $100+ for such a noble, pedigreed white wine. Umani Ronchi charges a fraction of that.
HOW TO SERVE IT
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Serve cold: 44-48°F lets those citrus and herb aromatics sing while maintaining that mineral backbone. No need to decant.
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Drink now through 2032.
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The iconic pairing for this wine in the Marches is seafood risotto—just don’t you dare put cheese anywhere near the dish. Or do what the locals do: fresh pasta with clams and a bottle of this on ice.