Foradori Granato 2003
- Winery: Azienda Agricola Elisabetta Foradori
- Region: Italy » Trentino
- Varietal: Teroldego
Vintages
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Winemaker's Notes:
The cliffs of the Adige Valley change their appearance as the light shifts across them: awe inspiring when they are v...
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WS: 93
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SN: 88
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Vinothek Peutler & Aumuller Regensburg, DE (4,800 mi) |
EUR
35.40
€35.40 USD $47.41 750ml |
Buy Now |
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eBay.nl - Buy It |
EUR
38.00
€38.00 USD $50.89 750ml |
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| See 6 more prices » | ||
very tight on the nose with not much going on, some graphite and jammy black fruit with a nice mineral edge emerges with air. This is rich and soft... Read more
Deep black fruits, velvety smooth with a very mineral finish. Tasted at the New York Wine Experience Read more
Dark red in the glass. Black cherry, blueberry and vanilla on the nose. In the mouth this is rich and full with cherry cough syrup, tar, spices and... Read more
All Prices
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Vinothek Peutler & Aumuller Regensburg, DE (4,800 mi) |
Foradori Granato Teroldego (2003) » |
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eBay.nl - Buy It |
Foradori Granato Teroldego (2003) » |
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Enoteca Vanni Giulietta Lucca, IT (4,900 mi) |
Foradori Granato Teroldego (2003) » |
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Enoteca Bulzoni Roma, Lazio (5,100 mi) |
Foradori Granato Teroldego (2003) » |
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The Chicago Wine Company (Retail) Wood Dale, IL (590 mi) |
Foradori Granato Teroldego (2003) » |
Editorial Reviews for Foradori Granato
very tight on the nose with not much going on, some graphite and jammy black fruit with a nice mineral edge emerges with air. This is rich and soft in the mouth though there are solid acids here. The fruit is fairly dark at first then decidedly cherry and more opaque with some bitter wood tannin on the finish. A rich wine with goof length but one that lacks a bit of aromatic depth. 88pts
User Reviews for Foradori Granato
Add your reviewWinemaker's Notes:
The cliffs of the Adige Valley change their appearance as the light shifts across them: awe inspiring when they are veiled by shade or darkened by a heavy sky; and enchanting when the sun shines on them, as they are tinted with delicate shades of pink. The river too changes its mood as the weather changes: when there is bad weather, its rough waters become a whirlpool of green and blue, while on calm evenings they become a sparkling silver ribbon. No one with a sensitive soul can cross this land without being touched by its beauty. After the narrow Salorno Gorge, visitors travelling from the north are welcomed by the marvellous sight of a wide valley. Vineyards and orchards are scattered among these rocky outcrops. Near San Michele all'Adige, on the right bank of the Adige River, a wide plain unfolds beneath the mountains: its name is Campo Rotaliano. This is where the Teroldego, one of the country's best grapes, thrives. Despite its charm and beauty, this stretch of country is still waiting to be discovered in all its wonder. It is no coincidence that this striking landscape marks the linguistic and cultural boundary between the Tyrol and Trentino, between north and south - an invisible border, yet nevertheless a border. This is where Elisabetta Foradori was born. The Noce valley, Campo Rotaliano with the towns of Mezzolombardo and Mezzocorona, has seen tribes and rulers come and go - Rhaeto-Etruscan settlers, the Romans, Celts, Longobards, Franks, Tyroleans, Austrians, Bavarians, Italians. Whether conquerors or settlers, traders or mercenaries, all have left their mark at this crossroads where valleys, rivers and mountain ranges converge and diverge. Campo Rotaliano offers the opportunity of discovering a grape variety that has been cultivated for centuries in a context rich in contrasts and history. Always exceptional, Teroldego has for long been considered a grape of unique character giving wines with “the body and robustness of a Bordeaux”, being “somewhat rougher” and possessing “strong varietal attributes” and “a little acidity”. These are words used to describe it by a 19th-century wine connoisseur. The Teroldego grape is medium-sized and deep in colour. Its vines need rigorous pruning. Depending on the year and the weather, the grapes ripen relatively early. So says a contemporary compendium on grape varieties. Teroldego was very popular at that time especially in Austria-Hungary, Switzerland and Germany. The first written document in which Teroldego is mentioned by name is dated 1383, when one Nicolò da Povo undertook to give a certain Agnes, who lent him money, a 'tun' (around 250 gallons) of Teroldego by way of interest. Between the 14th and 17th centuries, Teroldego was grown between Campo Rotaliano and Rovereto. It is spoken of in 16th-century Mezzolombardo when it gained a foothold in Campo Rotaliano. Elsewhere its use has waned. Time and again the “great potential” of this wine is cited. It has even proven its robustness to mildew (1890) and phylloxera (1912). Today's area of cultivation is quite small, amounting to only about 400 hectares, 73 per cent of which yields DOC wines. The Campo Rotaliano vineyard has been divided up in the course of time into many small plots, all of which are cultivated with great care, since the land was scarce and hence precious. Of course, any attempt at forcing this process and any imbalance in the vineyard leads to a breach in the bond linking a grape variety to a territory. Easy and seemingly effective “technologies” increase the distance between the vineyard and hence the wine from its identity and its originality. These are the inspiring principles of Elisabetta Foradori's work in her vineyards. The climate and soil are elements that cannot be modified, while the work of man can lead to deep changes in the grapevine. Clonal selection in the 1970s led to the homogenisation of the Teroldego grape variety and hence to its genetic impoverishment: very few clones aimed exclusively at increasing the yield were developed. The limited area cultivated with Teroldego grapes (about 400 ha in Campo Rotaliano) was soon covered completely with the clonal material. The result is that today almost all of the vineyards are cultivated with only this variety of Teroldego. In 1985 Elisabetta Foradori started her work to recover the variety's diversity. After identifying the estate's oldest vineyard, she started with the careful selection and multiplication of the plant specimens that had the required quality features. Their monitoring over the years led to a further selection and it was followed by others reaching up to this day. Foradori has selected 15 Teroldego biotypes that she uses for replanting. They are the qualitative “backbone” of her wines. Ensuring a vineyard's utmost diversity is the best possible guarantee of obtaining great qualitative results. This is the idea behind all of the work that follows in the vineyard, aimed at reaching the variety's perfect balance thus allowing it to express itself in full and exalt its whole potential and uniqueness. There are two distinct levels of quality that Elisabetta Foradori has aimed at producing from Teroldego: the first is the 'Foradori', marked by the purity, dignity and intensity of the fruit. The second, called 'Granato' is a wine of greater strength, harmony, depth and nobility. The vines are cultivated on different terroirs (varying quantities of pebbles and gravel), with different exposures and with differing quality potential. Despite the area being quite small, Campo Rotaliano offers a great variety of soils at a distance of just a few hundreds of metres. Another element that distinguishes these two wines is the age of the vines, the planting density and the grape yield per vine. The grapes are vinified separately, plot by plot, and only after ageing in wood are the wines from different parcels of vines blended to obtain an ideal balance.
Dietary Information: Organic
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