Wine and cherry flavour drink ml 500
FIRST VINTAGE BOTTLED 2007
VARIETY Montepulciano
HISTORY AND TIDBITS
In the past sour cherry wine was produced to make robust and tannic wine more enjoyable. According to his biographer and trusted librarian Vespasiano da Bisticci, the duke Federico da Montefeltro “hardly drink wine if it was not cherry or pomegranate wine” (“quasi non beveva vino se non de ciriege o de granate”). Lately, it was considered a wine for women for its fragrances, its smoothness and roundness. Currently, it is considered as a meditation wine, to be tasted and savoured in company, rediscovering ancient flavours.
The production of flavoured wines is an ancient tradition of Marche region, dating back to the Middle Age when it was the protagonist on aristocratic banquets and on the farmer’s table, and it survives to present thanks to the farmers’ heritage.
It is produced in the municipalities of Candiano and Pergola in the province of Pescara, and in the territories of Castelli di Jesi in the province of Ancona.
The recipes for this wine significantly differ from one place to the other, and from one winery to the other. The basic ingredient for this cherry wine is an ancient variety of wild cherry, namely “visciola” (Prunus cerasus), which has a deep red colour and sour taste. Based on the traditional recipe, sour cherries are harvested when ripe, during the first weeks of July, and left to soak in sugar, partly whole and partly smashed; thus fermentation starts and slowly brings the juice to a delicate and aromatic syrup. This product is then decanted for a few days and finally filtered. The result is a syrup with a high sugar concentration, which is added to the wine starting a second fermentation. So wine and syrup are blended together. Fermentation is stopped when 14% alcohol by volume is achieved, with a residual sugar which makes this product more enjoyable.