Top 100 red wines of Trentin-Haut-Adige - Page 5

Discover the top 100 best red wines of Trentin-Haut-Adige as well as the best winemakers in the region. Explore the varietals of the red wines that are popular of Trentin-Haut-Adige and the best vintages to taste in this region.

Discovering the wine region of Trentin-Haut-Adige

Trentino-Alto Adige is Italy's northernmost wine region, located right on the border with Austria. Production was once dominated by the local red varieties Lagrein and Schiava. Now white wines are becoming more important in terms of Volume. Increasingly, they are made from internationally renowned Grape varieties such as Pinot Grigio and Chardonnay.

Reflecting its Complex geopolitical history, Trentino-Alto Adige is composed of two autonomous provinces. Trentino is almost entirely Italian-speaking, while Alto Adige has a predominantly German-speaking population. The latter know their province as Südtirol (South Tyrol in English). This name is due to the former status of the region, which was Part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and was recovered by Italy in 1919.

Discover the grape variety: Pinot Nero

Food and wine pairing with a red wine of Trentin-Haut-Adige

red wines from the region of Trentin-Haut-Adige go well with generally quite well with dishes of beef, pasta or lamb such as recipes of beer goulash, salmon lasagna or lamb tagine with vegetables and preserved lemons.

Organoleptic analysis of red wine of Trentin-Haut-Adige

On the nose in the region of Trentin-Haut-Adige often reveals types of flavors of cherry, red fruit or dried fruit and sometimes also flavors of tree fruit, cola or minerality. In the mouth in the region of Trentin-Haut-Adige is a powerful.

News from the vineyard of Trentin-Haut-Adige

Bordeaux 2022: Our en primeur verdict and top-scoring wines

Bordeaux 2022 preliminary rating: Reds: 4/5  Dry white wines and Sauternes: 3.5 & 3.5/5 Bordeaux 2022 summary: Unprecedented hot and dry conditions led to small yields, highly concentrated wines with big tannin potential. Some vines suffered in the drought but many grapes adapted early on and, with careful and sensitive viticulture, were able to stay active and green until harvest with small but healthy berries. Picking dates and gentle extraction were crucial with varied strategies for vini ...

Arthur Coggill on Bordeaux: ‘This is not a political gripe, just an economic fact’

Rosé-tinted glasses aside, there is a reason – the modern economics of it mean that a €4 bottle of Côtes de Castillon or Montagne St-Emilion doesn’t translate into anything even comparable in price terms when on a UK shop shelf (assuming it could even get there). It’s the sad fact of commerciality. We taste hundreds of Bordeaux wines at every price point every year, to find those few gems that represent the best value for their quality. Even then, the volumes available might mean that a wine w ...

Louis-Fabrice Latour: Obituary

Latour was the 11th generation of his family to lead Maison Louis Latour (and the seventh named Louis Latour). The house of Latour was formally founded in 1797, although the roots go back to the first vineyards purchased in 1731 by Denis Latour. The Latour family originally worked as coopers, and Denis’ son Jean moved to Aloxe-Corton to set up an independent cooperage and later to found Maison Louis Latour, naming the business after his son. The house of Latour remains closely associated with th ...