Tag Archives: UNA

Italian Indigenous Varieties: La Festa della Repubblica & “UNA”

Today is the “Festa della Repubblica” or Italy’s national holiday celebrating the creation of the Italian republic. This year is a special anniversary year, it is the 150th anniversary of the republic’s birth. All year long, the 150th anniversary has been celebrated in a variety of ways.

In fact, Eataly owner and entrepreneur Oscar Farinetti is celebrating by arriving on his sailboat in New York after a trans-Atlantic crossing with world class sailor Giovanni Soldini. The ship docked earlier today at the Chelsea piers. The initiative was more than just an Atlantic crossing with friends. The voyage called the “Seven Moves for Italy” also had a political bent. I wrote about the trip during Vinitaly 2011.

Veronafiere and Vinitaly celebrated the 150th anniversary by creating special bottles of wine that can be seen in the picture above. Ettore Riello, the President of Veronafiere, decided to create two bottles – one red and one white- with 20 indigenous Italian varieties each. He got the idea after speaking with Italian President Giorgio Napolitano last year at Vinitaly. The two bottles were beautifully made with a very long history and many significant references both in terms of the font used on the label – Bodoni, the creation of the bottle by a famous designer – Aldo Cibic and the packaging of the entire project.

Most exciting for me though is the blend. To make the “White wine of Italy,” a representative selection of wines made from autochthonous varieties harvested in 2009 were used. None of the wines were aged in oak.

To make the “Red Wine of Italy,” wines that were produced during the years 2005 to 2009, some of which were aged in wood were used.

I was lucky enough to taste these wines during a celebratory luncheon in March when President Giorgio Napolitano was in town. Riello and Giovanni Mantovani, CEO of Veroanfiere, presented Napolitano with the first bottles of the wines. The wines are given out to Ambassadors and dignitaries from around the world. Only 3400 cases of two bottles have been made.

The luncheon was held to celebrate the President’s trip to New York, the 150th anniversary of Italy, and the Italian and Italian-American community. The wine were served at a small apertivo before the lunch. I was serving them so I got to taste them. It was a moment that made me very proud and I was of course, wearing my distintivo or my pin from AIS

The wines were surprisingly good. The white wine was very minerally and absolutely ready to drink. It could also be kept for a few years thanks to great acidity. The red was not yet ready to drink but was also very pleasing.

The white is a blend of Priè blanc (Valle d’Aosta), Cortese (Piedmont)
Vermentino (Liguria), Trebbiano di Lugana (Lombardia), Garganega (Veneto),
Weissburgunder (Trentino-Alto Adige),Friulano (Friuli Venezia Giulia),
Pignoletto (Emilia Romagna), Vernaccia di San Gimignano (Tuscany),
Grechetto (Umbria),Malvasia (Lazio), Verdicchio (Le Marche), Trebbiano (Abruzzo),
Falanghina (Molise),Fiano (Campania), Fiano (Apulia),Greco (Basilicata)
Greco bianco (Calabria), Grillo (Sicily), and Vermentino (Sardinia).

The red is a blend of Petit rouge (Valle d’Aosta),Barbera (Piedmont),
Rossese di Dolceacqua (Liguria),Croatina (Lombardia),
Raboso (Veneto),Teroldego (Trentino-Alto Adige), Refosco dal peduncolo rosso (Friuli Venezia Giulia), Sangiovese (Emilia Romagna),
Sangiovese (Tuscany),Sagrantino (Umbria),Cesanese di Affile (Lazio),
Lacrima (Le Marche),Montepulciano (Abruzzo),
Tintilia (Molise),Negroamaro (Apulia),Aglianico (Campania),
Aglianico del Vulture (Basilicata),Gaglioppo (Calabria),
Nero d’Avola (Sicily),and Carignano (Sardinia).

The “UNA” bottles come with a beautiful little book with citations by many famed Italians and the national anthem at the end. My favorite quote is “L’Italia e fatto,tutto e’ a posto,” Camillo Benso conte de Cavour.

Auguri!

Leave a Comment

Filed under Italian indigenous Grape Varieties, Italian regions, Italian wineries, italy, New York, Travel, wines

Vinitaly Celebrates 150 Years of Italian Unification With UNA

I arrived in Verona yesterday and was so excited to see the signs for Vinitaly around this city. This year, part of the festivities is to celebrate the 150th anniversary of Italy. Veronafiere, the parent company of Vinitaly, created two special bottles of wine made from 40 indigenous grapes. Or better, each bottle is made from 20 indigenous grapes. The bottles which are called UNA are symbols of Italian unity. Italy has almost uninterrupted vines from the Valle d’Aosta to Pantelleria.

The idea was one that came to the President of Veronafiere, Ettore Riello in a conversation he had with Italian President Giorgio Napolitano last year at Vinitaly. I was actually standing outside of the building when Napolitano arrived at Vinitaly. It was the first time an Italian President had ever come to Vinitaly. There was much fanfare and excitement. This year, I was lucky enough to be in the room when Riello presented Napolitano with the first bottles of UNA in New York.

Each bottle of UNA is numbered and Napolitano of course received bottle number 1. The bottles themselves as you can see from this picture are beautifully created and very artistic. The reason that the bottles are called UNA is because before Italy was unified, when people referred to Italy they called it UNA.

Italy has more indigenous varieties than any other nation in the world. I am sure that the regional supervisors of agriculture had a difficult time choosing the varieties that went into the blend but in the end, they chose the ones that they felt were the most representative of their regions.

Here is a list of the top 20 white and top 20 red varieties that went into making UNA.

WHITE

Priè blanc
Cortese
Vermentino
Trebbiano di Lugana
Garganega
Weissburgunder
Friulano
Pignoletto
Vernaccia di San Gimignano
Grechetto
Malvasia
Verdicchio
Trebbiano
Falanghina
Fiano (Apulia)
Fiano (Campania)
Greco
Greco bianco
Grillo
Vermentino

RED

Petit rouge
Barbera
Rossese di Dolceacqua
Croatina
Raboso
Teroldego
Refosco dal peduncolo rosso
Sangiovese (Emilia Romagna)
Sangiovese (Tuscany)
Sagrantino
Cesanese di Affile
Lacrima
Montepulciano
Tintilia
Negroamaro
Aglianico
Aglianico del Vulture
Gaglioppo
Nero d’Avola
Carignano

Leave a Comment

Filed under Italian indigenous Grape Varieties, Italian regions, Italian wineries, italy, Wine Industry, wines