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Wine for Normal People

Ep 211: The Grape Miniseries -- Sangiovese

Wine for Normal People

Wine for Normal People

Alcohol, Lifestyle, Arts, Education, Food, Wine, Dining, Grapes

4.6 β€’ 1.5K Ratings

πŸ—“οΈ 9 December 2017

⏱️ 55 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, we revive the Grape Miniseries from podcasts of old to bring you: Sangiovese! The star of Central Italy that does amazing things when taken care of.

Here are the notes:

History of Sangiovese

  • Spotty history -- probably has existed a long time but wasn't mentioned until the 1500s.
  • The name likely comes from the monks in Santarcangelo di Romagna at foot of Monte Giove, who chose the name of sanguis Jovis when forced to call wine by name other than vino. It could have also come from the ancient language of Etruscans, who used similar to words for an offer to the gods

Grape origins

  • Probably from Sicily and Calabria – in 16th century there were grape exchanges between northern and southern Italian regions
  • A cross of two reds: Ciliegiolo and Calabrese di Montenuovo

Climate, land, soil

  • Needs warmth to ripen, but not too much
  • Ripens better in Montalcino than Chianti – nights are warmer, less rainfall in Montalcino
  • Chianti – only 10% of the land good for cineyards
  • Maremma – rich, broad, hot with short growing season. High alcohol, low aroma
  • Autralia – Canberra in NSW, other warm areas show promise
  • California – more intense sunlight, different character
  • Soils –Tuscan soil is varied. The best for Sangiovese is galestro and albarese
    • Soils are a challenge for New World Sangiovese winemakers

Winemaking

  • Important to get ripeness in the vineyard
  • Traditional aging in large casks of Slavonian oak or Chestnut
  • Modern styles use small French oak barriques
  • Sangiovese is often blended – Canaille Nero, Coloring, Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Syrah are popular partners
    • Sangio needs extra color, richness – low in acylated anthocyanins means light color

Sangiovese Flavors

  • Light juicy wine or huge complex ones or harsh
  • Traditional wines: cherries, violets, tomatoe, herbs, tea-like notes, high acid, high tannin, not fruity
  • International wines: vanilla, spice, oak, dark fruit, higher alcohol

Return of the Clones:

  • Clones – color, flavor, concentration of fruity, 102 clones of Sangiovese
  • 1988 – Chianti Classico Conzorzio with Universities of Pisa and Florence– launched Chianti Classsico 2000 project to improved quality

Found in:

  • Italy: Tuscany, Emilia-Romagna, Lazio, Marche, Puglia, Sicily, Umbria
  • US: Napa, Sonoma, Santa Barbara. Washington State, New Mexico
  • Other North America: Mexico, Ontario, BC
  • Australia – growing
  • Other New World: NZ, South Africa, Chile, Argentina, Brazil etc

The difference in Tuscan wines using Sangiovese:

  • Maremma: dark black fruit, herbal
  • Chianti Classico – cooler – sour cherry, red berry, violet, tea leaf
  • Brunello di Montalcino – 100% Sangiovese, different depending on where it's grown in the appellation
  • Vino Nobile di Montepulciano – earthy, rich, lovely
  • Emilia-Romagna – dark, dense, richer than Tuscan versions
  • Marche – Rosso Piceno, Rosso Conero – usually blended with Montepulciano – can be gloppy
  • Umbria -- fuller, denser than Tuscan versions

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Thanks for

0:08.0

downloading Wine for Normal People Radio,

0:10.0

the podcast for people who like wine but not the snobbery that goes with it.

0:14.0

I'm Elizabeth Schneider, a certified Silmaier and certified specialist of wine.

0:20.0

And I'm MC Ice, just a wine-loving normal person.

0:23.0

I have been looking at some potential topics, of course, as I'm always doing for the podcast.

0:31.0

Right.

0:32.0

And I realize we've been doing lots of conversations with

0:35.2

other people you haven't been involved I was gonna say actually hey

0:37.8

thanks for inviting me today I appreciate it oh my gosh first of all, if we can get our big, our next big get. When is he coming on?

0:46.5

It's going to be a couple weeks. Oh man. All right, so guys, we have a neighbor who's a kind of a famous.

0:55.1

He's kind of a big deal.

0:56.1

He is kind of a big deal.

0:57.3

And I don't mean just because his grass looks really good.

1:00.3

Well, and we're not talking about the wine and weed episode by the way.

1:03.0

Oh, right?

1:05.0

We're talking about his actual lawn, but we will definitely sass him on that when he comes.

1:11.0

We have a very famous actually weather meteorologist coming. But anyway, as I was

1:17.2

looking at that and all the conversations that I've been having without you, I have

1:21.8

missed you. Thank you. I have missed you. I looked at the back catalog and I

1:27.3

realized that at some point and I think this is by the way in large part due to

1:31.8

new listeners who have been awesome if you're

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