
Winery Sole di San MartinoBarolo Chinato
This wine generally goes well with
The Barolo Chinato of the Winery Sole di San Martino is in the top 0 of wines of Barolo Chinato.

Details and technical informations about Winery Sole di San Martino's Barolo Chinato.
Discover the grape variety: Lakemont
Seedless table grape variety with long clusters and golden, thin-skinned, crunchy berries, with a sweet muscat flavour. Early ripening and cold-resistant. Very rarely vinified, occasionally as fresh, fruity whites with muscat notes. Grown mainly in the north-eastern United States (New York) and Canada (Ontario) for fresh consumption. American seedless white variety obtained in 1972 by Cornell University (Ontario × Sultanina).
Informations about the Winery Sole di San Martino
The Winery Sole di San Martino is one of of the world's great estates. It offers 23 wines for sale in the of Barolo Chinato to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Barolo Chinato
Piedmontese DOCG aromatised wine (Barolo base 100% Nebbiolo, South American cinchona quinine, gentian, rhubarb, cinnamon, coriander, orange zest, clove): Nebbiolo is the signature fortified red — penetrating and ethereal with ripe fruit (blackberry, plum, strawberry), sweet spice, dry herbs, tobacco, tar, rose, dark chocolate and liquorice, distinctive bitterness from cinchona balanced by sweet botanicals, dry persistent finish, a meditation wine.
The wine region of Piedmont
Kingdom of Nebbiolo: Barolo and Barbaresco DOCG, long-ageing reds with firm tannins and lively acidity, complex aromas of withered rose, sour cherry, tar, truffle and undergrowth. More accessible, tangy Barbera on red fruit, supple, crisp Dolcetto. Sweet, floral sparkling Moscato d'Asti, mineral, lemony Gavi (Cortese) white, round, almondy Arneis from Roero. 50,000 ha across the Langhe, Roero and Monferrato, UNESCO.
The word of the wine: Food and wine pairing
It is the set of techniques that allow for the pleasant combination of food and wine. Food and wine pairing is based on a few basic principles, such as similarity, complementarity or contrast, and involves all the elements that make up the wine and the food (flavours, textures, aromas, etc.).




