Monday, June 24, 2024

Donnafugata Pantelleria wines: 2021 Lighea Sicilia DOC Zibibbo and 2021 Ben Ryé Passito di Pantelleria DOC

I have previously reported on the grape-growing environment, viticultural practices, and wine types associated with the Zibibbo grapes grown on the island of Pantelleria. Herein I explore two of the wines produced from grapes grown in that environment: Donnafugata Ben Ryé Passito di Pantelleria DOC 2021 and Donnafugata Lighea Zibibbo Sicilia DOC 2021.

"The Rallo family has been making wine in Sicily since 1851, adopting the Donnafuguta name in 1983." The company operates two estates in western Sicily, one in the southeast, a fourth in the northeast (on the slopes of Mt. Etna), and a fifth on Pantelleria. Each has distinctive growing conditions, allowing Donnafugata to produce an impressive range of fine wines using both indigenous and international grape varieties" (nuvomagazine.com). 

The grapes for Donnafugata Pantelleria wines are sourced from the Contrade highlighted in the map below. Not shown on the map is the fact that the vineyards are planted on terraced slopes hewn out of the deep, fertile, lava-origin, sandy, mineral-endowed soils.

(Source: Donnafugata)

Donnafugata has planted 68 ha of vines on Pantelleria; 2500 vines/ha for Ben Ryé (2500 - 3600 vines/ha for Lighea) with yields of 4 - 5 tons/ha (5 - 6 tons/ha for the Lighea). The vines average 60 years of age with some of the ungrafted Phylloxera survivors being in excess of 100 years old.

Grapes are ready for harvesting between late July and early August. Harvesting is done by hand, with portions of the earliest-harvested grapes placed in the intense sunlight to reduce the moisture content and concentrate the bounty.

A second harvest takes place in early September. The grapes are selected in the field and further sorted on a vibrating table prior to pressing, followed by fermentation in temperature-controlled stainless steel tanks.

It is at this point that the paths of the Ben Ryé and the Lighea diverge. The must intended for Lighea is brought to full fermentation, aged for 2 months in tanks, and further aged in bottle for 3 months prior to release on the market.

Ben Ryé fermentation, on the other hand, extends over one month. First, the previously dried grapes are destemmed, hand-selected, and batch-entered into the fermenting fresh wine must. During maceration, the dried grapes contribute "sweetness allied with freshness, acidity, and unique, persistent aromas." The Ben Ryé is aged for 7 months in stainless steel and an additional 12 months in bottle before release.

I tasted the 2021 vintages of both wines.



That was an excellent year for grape growing on Pantelleria. Rainfall levels were lower than normal and a warm August lowered grape quantity. Quality, however, was very high.

The Lighea was popped and poured. Hint of mint, green flowers, and green herbs on the nose initially. Sweet fruit coming to the fore with the passage of time. Bright on the palate, giving way to lime and dried citrus skin. Stony minerality and bitter finish. Over time settles down to a fresh, non-complex, young, dry white wine. Tasted 24 hours later and this wine was popping. Mint, turpentime, and lime on the palate with retention of the bitter finish. Brightness from beginning to end.

The Ben Ryé showed sweet citrus notes along with burnt orange, white raisins, and molasses. Complex, layered wine on the nose and palate. Thick, rich, viscous and enveloping of all aspects of the palate. Balanced. Rich, creamy, saline finish.

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Ben Ryé is a highly regarded Passito wine described by Millon (Italy in a Wine Glass) as "... a glorious, wondrous expression of the fermented grape: at once concentrated and complex, yet at the same time fragrant and exhilarating." It is a wonderful wine.


©Wine -- Mise en abyme

Sunday, June 23, 2024

PDO Muscat of Rhodes

My exploration of the Muscat family of cultivars continues herein with Greece's PDO Muscat of Rhodes. The Greek Muscat wines studied to date have been, with the exception of Muscat of Lemnos, drawn from the small-berried (Petits Grains) instance of this cultivar family. PDO Muscat of Rhodes is no exception.

Rhodes is the largest of the Dodecanese Islands and, based on archaeological evidence was one of the first Greek islands to engage in the cultivation of grapes.

PDO Muscat of Rhodes (indicated by arrow)

Wine exportation was a key aspect of ancient Rhodian commerce and the amphorae in which their wines were transported were engraved with either a rose or an image of the Sun God Helios. Wine production. Wine production and exportation retained their importance until Rhodes was overrun by Suleiman the Magnificent in 1522.

Rhodes experiences mild winters and long summers, the latter of which is moderated by cool winds form the north. Winters are short and rainy.

The island's early geological history shows deposits of cherry limestone in the shallow waters to the north in the 210 - 65 million years ago. Subsequent compression of the crust led to the formation of mountains which themselves eroded over time. Finally, basins developed and infilled with marls, which make fertile soils. The oldest limestones were erosion-resistant and represent the highest point on the island today. The dominant soil types currently are clay and limestone. 

PDO Muscat of Rhodes can be 100% Muscat of Rhodes or can be made from a clone called Muscat di Trani (called Moscato di Triani Reale in Puglia) which was introduced by the Italians during their rule of the Dodecanese from 1912 to 1947. Muscat of Rhodes vineyards  are few and "scattered on small isolated lanes of land" and today there are only "a handful" of vineyards planted to Muscat di Trani.
The wine is available in two styles:
  • Vin naturellement dour (sun-dried)
  • Vin doux naturel - Vin du liqueur (fortified).
If the grapes are sourced from a low-yield, producer-owned vineyard, the wine can be labeled Grand Cru. 

The white Muscat from Rhodes has "outstanding complexity" with notes of fragrant rose petals and ripe fruit. It is refreshing on the palate with moderate acidity and great aging potential. Muscat of Rhodes made from the Muscat di Trani has notes akin to the Muscat of Lemnos.


©Wine -- Mise en abyme

Thursday, June 20, 2024

Puglia's Moscato di Trani

I have been flipping between the Muscat wines of Greece, Italy, and Turkey and between the Petits Grains and Alexandria branches of the Muscat family and my hope was to close out the Greek phase of the review by reporting on the Muscats of Rhodes, Patras, and Rio Patras. But, the best laid plans ...

In studying the PDO Muscat of Rhodes, I discovered that the wine can contain both Muscat of Rhodes and Muscat di Trani. That was a blow because my approach does not allow passing mentions so I would have to contextualize Muscat di Trani before listing it as a component of PDO Muscat of Rhodes. Herein the contextualization of Muscat di Trani.

Moscato di Trani, is considered one of the oldest wines in Puglia, with a history stretching back to 1000 AD when the Venetians began to offer it in trade; even signing an agreement called the Trani Customs House. The wine eventually became so popular that, in the 14th century, the Count of Trani placed a limit on the export of quality wine from the ports of the Kingdom of Naples.

In the 16th Century, Moscato di Trani was described by the artist Leandro Alberti as "a product so excellent as to be very delicate in taste."

Today Moscato di Trani is grown primarily in Puglia's Bari province, in vineyards close to the Adriatic Sea. The climate is Mediterranean while the soils are limestone and clay. 

Moscato di Trani DOC (Map ©Federdoc)

The region gained its DOC status in 1974 and, under that regime, the following wines are allowed:
  • Dolce Naturale: > 85% Moscato Reale di Trani; < 15% other aromatic white grapes; 10% abv; RS > 3.5%; Aging > 6 months
  • Liquoroso: > 85% Moscato Reale di Trani; < 15% other aromatic white grapes; 16% abv; RS > 3.5%; Aging > 5 months.
According to Domenico Valenti of the Pandala Agricultural Company, the grapes for Moscato di Trani are dried directly on the plant without cutting the shoots or placing the bunches on racks. During the growth phase the grapes are subjected to green pruning.

Azienda agricola Francesco di Filippo

… continues the tradition by working its own Moscato Reale grapes through a refinement process based on naturalness, simplicity and professionalism, all essential elements to make its wines * Ecstasy * Unique and Unmistakable. The grapes are ripe for harvest in the first ten days of August, but by choice they are harvested late at the end of October, when the bunches have dried naturally on the vine until they reach an ideal concentration of intense and persistent aromas and scents. We wait for Mother Nature to take her slow and natural course, totally different from artificial drying in greenhouses more commonly called fruit rooms with artificial hot air to accelerate ripening or bunches spread out on racks in the sun.  

During the manual harvest, only the healthy bunches are chosen, while the bunches with mold (botrytis cinerea) are not collected, so as not to compromise the extraordinary organoleptic qualities of the wine's nectar, in order to obtain an elegant and entrancing wine.  

Another important and fundamental element is the Time factor (our ally) as the wine is left to rest and mature only and exclusively in stainless steel silos for several years so that it can refine and release its personality made of intense aromas and aromas, persistent and elegant deriving from the native vine and above all from its territory of origin (Trani).

Ilaria Introzzi, writing in marieclaire.it, describes the aromas and flavors of Muscato di Trani thusly:
First of all, the muscat grape, which is followed closely by honeyed and buttery notes, with a strong presence of hints of yellow fruit jam (apricot, peach, etc...) as well as the aromas of yellow and strongly odorous flowers such as acacia, linden, broom, to move on to dried flowers, withered rose in particular, until it then widens to pleasant hints of tropical fruit, from pineapple to mango, papaya, until it opens to elegant and clean citrus saline notes, to spicy aromas of vanilla, star anise, white chocolate, with a light and pleasant almond finish.
Rather breathless but captures the kaleidoscope of aromas and flavors inherent in the wine.

©Wine -- Mise en abyme

Friday, June 14, 2024

The Zibibbo (Muscat of Alexandria) wines of Pantelleria

In his book Italy in a Wine Glass, Marc Millon refers to the Donnafugata Ben Ryè Passito di Pantelleria as 
... a glorious, wondrous expression of the fermented grape: at once concentrated and complex, yet at the same time fresh and exhilarating. The bouquet is intensely fragrant, with aromas of dried apricots, candied citrus zest and notes of Mediterranean thyme and rosemary. The considerable sweetness that comes from the dried grapes is balanced by fresh acidity and minerality. The finsh is long and persistent, truly a vino da meditazione.
This wine is the result of heroic viticulture surrounding the Zibibbo variety grown on the island of Pantelleria. Zibibbo is the name given to Muscat of Alexandria grapes grown on Pantelleria. I continue my coverage of the Muscat family with a review of this region, the variety, and the wine (s).

Pantelleria
"Pantelleria is a tiny volcanic island located in the Sicilian Channel between mainland Sicily and the coast of North Africa. Its history of habitation mirrors that of Sicily, the native peoples taken over successively by Carthaginians, Romans, Byzantines, Arabs, Normans, Aragonese and more. It is a harsh and windswept land with severe climatic conditions" (Millon).

Pantelleria (Source: en-academic.com)

The island, according to vinipantelleria.doc.it, "... has developed a strong peasant tradition and culture over time" with three main habitation centers (Pantelleria, Scauri, Khamma) and numerous other smaller districts. Its landscape "is a rugged mix of black lava shapes, dramatic and jagged cliffs that descend straight into the sea, hot springs, a thermal lake, the occasional palm tree, terraced farms, and ... densely packed aromatic shrubs" (dreamofitaly.com). These "wild and uncontaminated" landscapes alternate with thousands of kilometers of dry stone walls, constructed by humans over an extended period of time.

The climate is subtropical Mediterranean with mild, low-rain (460 mm/year) winters but it is dry and hot during the growing season with strong, warm winds blowing in off the North African coast. The original Arab name for the island was Bint al-Riyāh (Daughter of the Winds) in honor of those strong winds. Constant sea breezes moderate the daytime summer temperatures.

The volcanic-origin sandy soils are deep, loose, and mineral-endowed.

Zibibbo
Zibibbo is the Sicilian name give to the Muscat of Alexandria variety. This triple-threat (wine, table and raisin) cultivar has been grown in the Mediterranean area for thousands of years and exhibits relatively insignificant genetic variation over that time. The origin of the variety is unclear but the official name suggests some association with the Nile Delta -- and the ancient city of Alexandria -- while the name Zibibbo (Arabic origin word that translates to "dried grape") attests to its use by the Arabs during their occupation of the area.

Two main Zibibbo biotypes have been identified in Pantelleria and they are characterized in the figure below.

Zibibbo biotypes: A -- Golden-yellow, loose bunches; higher alcohol potential;
milder acidity; wines with solid structure and great longevity. B -- Green berries;
medium compact bunches; lower-alcohol, higher-acidity, and thinner-structured
wines (Source: cantinebarbera.it)

Outside of the biotype differences, Zibibbo grapes contain high levels of terpenes and "super concentrations" of linalool, geraniol, and nerol, compounds responsible for the wine's intense aroma. The grape is resilient in that, while sensitive to extreme humidity, it is resistant to botrytis, drought, and hot climates. It is susceptible to downy mildew and highly susceptible to powdery mildew.

Viticulture
A typical Pantelleria vineyard landscape is illustrated below and the elements of the viticultural environment are immediately following.

Typical Pantelleria landscape with vines
(Source: wikipedia.com)


The viticultural scheme, as inscribed on the UNESCO Representative List of the Intangible Cultural List of Humanity (2014), is called Alberello Pantesco and is, according to donnafugata.it, both a creative and a sustainable practice:
Creative because founded on the 'hollow', the cradle dug in the soil to receive the vine, protect it from the wind, nourish it with the night-time humidity that is collected and not lost. Creative because the pruning system makes the plant grow horizontally and almost creeping along the ground, and therefore able to survive the constant wind that blows on the island. Sustainable because its cultivation is entirely manual, because the terraces sustained by dry stone walls delineate the landscape of Pantelleria and defend it from erosion.
Typical head-trained bush vines of Pantelleria
(Source: vinipantelleria.doc.it)

The Wines
The various Pantelleria DOC wine styles are shown in the chart below.


Sweet Wines
Grapes are harvested -- by hand -- early for dry and sparkling wines and late for the Passito wines.

A typical Pantelleria Passito wine has two components: a base wine (or fresh must) and the raisinated grape. "Grapes closer to the water achieve more ripeness and serve as the best candidates for raisination." 

Grapes for raisination are dried for between 2 to 4 weeks on mats under the sun in open-air racks (stenditoio), or in drying tunnels or tents (serre). The hot, dry winds that are a feature of the environment aid in this drying process; 8 lbs of fresh grapes yields 2 lbs of dried grapes.

For wine assembly, the raisinated grape is pressed then added to the base wine/fresh must. The pressing splits the grape, allowing the release of acid, sugars, and aroma and flavor compounds into the base when added.

Dry Wines
The first Pantelleria dry wine was introduced by Marco Di Bartolo in the early 1980s but today every major producer has a dry wine in its arsenal. 

In the case of Donnafugata, its Lighea dry wine is the base wine of its Passito blend. Di Bartolo currently has two dry wines on offer. The first is Pietranera, the first ever dry wine on the island. This wine is vinified and aged in stainless steel. The second wine -- Intiger -- is fermented in used barrels and amphorae and spends some time on the skins. It is aged on the lees. 

Most producers source grapes for dry or base wines from higher elevations in order to ensure the highest possible levels of freshness and acidity.

©Wine -- Mise en abyme

Wednesday, June 5, 2024

PDO Muscat of Cephalonia

The Muscat grape is one of the oldest and most widespread grape families in the world and I have periodically reported on instances of its implementation. Previous writings include Asti DOCG, Muscat of Samos, Muscat of Spina, Muscat of Lemnos, and Muscat of Bornova. I continue the work with this post on the Muscat of Cephalonia.

Cephalonia, largest of the Ionian Islands, is covered in mountain ranges, with the highest peaking out at 1600 m.

Cephalonia has a rich viticultural history "that dates back to ancient times, steeped in myth and legend ... but, after a lengthy down period, "it wasn't until the mid-1960s that interest was rekindled with the establishment of modern wineries. It was then that the island's excellent local wines ... became known internationally" (cephaloniawineclub.com).

PDO Muscat of Cephalonia was established in 1971and covers wines made from Muscat grapes grown in the western portion of the island on the Paliki Peninsula. As the below chart shows, Cephalonia is a sub-region of the Ionian Islands appellation. The Paliki Peninsula, home of the Muscat PDO, has distinct breccia and limestone and sandstone and conglomerate soil zones.


The climate is classic Mediterranean with mild winters and warm summers moderated by sea breezes. Annual rainfall ranges between 800 and 1200 mm.

Vineyard plots on the island are relatively small, averaging 4.5 acres/grower. 

Muscat PDO wines can be either vin naturellement doux (from sun-dried grapes) or vin doux naturel -- vin de liquer (fortified). If the grapes are sourced from the producer's vineyard, and the yields are low, the wine can be labeled Grand Cru.

I have used the 2019 Petrakopoulos to illustrate the production elements of a PDO Muscat of Cephalonia. This estate's grapes are grown on terraces on clay and sandy soil in a semi-mountainous area in the western part of the island. 

The grapes were subjected to "strict" pruning during the growing season. The late-harvested fruit were carefully sorted. Further concentration of the sugars was achieved by short, indirect exposure of the grapes to the sun. The grapes were fermented naturally and the resulting wine was bottled with no clarification or filtration.


©Wine -- Mise en abyme