
Winery Ca VisaGocce di Vita Lambrusco Tinto Espumoso
This wine generally goes well with poultry, beef or veal.
Food and wine pairings with Gocce di Vita Lambrusco Tinto Espumoso
Pairings that work perfectly with Gocce di Vita Lambrusco Tinto Espumoso
Original food and wine pairings with Gocce di Vita Lambrusco Tinto Espumoso
The Gocce di Vita Lambrusco Tinto Espumoso of Winery Ca Visa matches generally quite well with dishes of beef, pasta or veal such as recipes of beef lark, lasagne or casserons in the country style.
Details and technical informations about Winery Ca Visa's Gocce di Vita Lambrusco Tinto Espumoso.
Discover the grape variety: Zweigelt
Intraspecific crossing between the saint laurent and the limberger realized in 1922 and in Austria by Fritz Zweigelt (1888/1964) who named it rotburger. Very well known in Austria, it can be found in most Eastern countries, Japan, Germany, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, Canada, the United States, etc. In France, it is not very well known and yet this variety has interesting qualities when vinified as a single variety for both red and rosé wines. - Synonyms: rotburger, klosterneuburger, zweigelt blau, blauer-zweigelt in Germany, zweigeltrebe in Austria, Great Britain and the Czech Republic, blauer zwelgetrabe in Hungary, etc. (for all the synonyms of the grape varieties, click here !)
Last vintages of this wine
The best vintages of Gocce di Vita Lambrusco Tinto Espumoso from Winery Ca Visa are 2019, 0
Informations about the Winery Ca Visa
The Winery Ca Visa is one of of the world's greatest estates. It offers 11 wines for sale in the of Emilia-Romagna to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Emilia-Romagna
Romagna/emilia">Emilia-Romagna is a Rich and fertile region in Northern Italy, and one of the country's most prolific wine-producing regions, with over 58,000 hectares (143,320 acres) of vines in 2010. It is 240 kilometers (150 miles) wide and stretches across almost the entire northern Italian peninsula, sandwiched between Tuscany to the South, Lombardy and Veneto to the north and the Adriatic Sea to the east. Nine miles of Liguria is all that separates Emilia-Romagna from the Ligurian Sea, and its uniqueness as the only Italian region with both an east and west coast. Emilia-Romagna's wine-growing heritage dates back to the seventh century BC, making it one of the oldest wine-growing regions in Italy.
The word of the wine: Grafting
A method used since the phylloxera crisis, consisting of fixing a graft of local origin on a rootstock resistant to phylloxera.














