Site icon Tony Aspler, the Wine Guy

A Wine Lover’s Diary, Part 562: Valpolicella


View of Verona from Corte San Mattia

Sunday, September 6th: Last night I caught a 10:25 pm flight for Rome and then a flight to Verona. I’m here for a bloggers’ tour in Valpolicella. There are five of us involved – Jane from Ottawa, Alexander from Hong Kong, Maxime from Beijing and Jung from Korea.

I was met at Verona airport by Federica from the Valpolicella Consortio, who arranged the tour and will be travelling with us. She dropped me at the hotel where we will spend five nights. It’s a delightful agritourismo called Fioravante set in a vineyard in San Pietro in Cariano with its own swimming pool. Dinner in Castelrotto di Negrarine. An English couple had a well-behaved Wheaten terrier named Lucy with them as they dined outside. Made me homesick for Pinot.

The menu: pasta e fagioli with Amarone, risotto with porcini, carpaccio of duck, pork. A dessert of millefoglie with Monteveronese cheese. The wines: Corte Sant’Alba Ca’ Fiui Valpolicella 2014, Secondo Marco Valpolicella Classico 2013, Cecilia Beretta Terre di Cariano Valpolicella Classico 2012, I Sartori Valpolicella Superiore 2011, Scriani Valpolicella Ripasso Classico Superiore 2013, Villa Bella Fracastoro Amarone Riserva 2006. If this is indicative of the meals we will be having I shall have to go on a serious diet on my return.


Duck carpaccio at Relais Castrum


Secundo Marco Valpolicella 2013

Monday, September 7th: Woke at 4:30 am and that was it for the night. By 8:45 we are on the road to our first winery: ARMANI (Località Ceradello – 37020 Dolcè). The Armani family have been grape growers in Trentino since 1607 – 16 generations. They own six wineries in three provinces, as well as making Prosecco. Outside the winery is a small vineyard that is resurrecting 12 local varieties that were on their way to extinction. After a cellar tour, the tasting:


Rondinella grapes

Next stop, SANTA SOFIA (Via Cà Dede, 61 – 37029 San Pietro In Cariano). I had visited this property on my last visit to Valpolicella. After the cellar tour by the owner, Giancarlo Begnoni, we drove up to Trattoria Caprini in Torbe for “a light lunch” as described in the program: lasagnette pasta with ragu sauce, beef cheek in a spicy sauce with polenta and bitter greens, followed by grana Padano and Vezzena cheese.

Next stop: LE RAGOSE (Località le Ragose – 37024 Arbizzano). Paolo Galli farms 18 hectares. His father planted Cabernet Sauvignon 35 years ago at an elevation of 350 meters. Paolo took us through the vineyards before the tasting:


Paolo Galli of Le Ragose

Next stop at 4:30 pm, CASA VINICOLA SARTORI (Via Casette, 2 – 37024 Negrar). Sartori is one of the oldest and biggest wineries in Valpolicella, exporting 80% of their wines. They are housed in a 17th-century villa. The chapel on the property dates back to the 15th century. They own 2,300 hectares of vineyards and have access to a further 2700 hectares with the acquisition of a co-op.

8:00 pm: Dinner at RISTORANTE LA DIVINA (via Conca d’Oro, 1, 37015 San Giorgio di Sant’Ambrogio di Valpolicella). The menu:

Braised Veronese radicchio with porcini mushrooms and grana Padano, served with Scriani Valpolicella Classico 2014 and Boscaini Carlo Ca’ Bussin Valpolicalla Classico 2013

Orecchiette pasta with tomato sauce and mozzarella, served with Massimago Valpolicella Classico Profasio 2012 and Sartori Monte Gradella Valpolicella Classico Superiore 2012

Amarone pork steak served with Villabella Valpolicella Ripasso Classico Superiore 2013 and Latium Campo dei Ciliegi Valpolicella Ripasso Superiore 2011

Veronese cheeses, served with Pasqua Amarone di Valpolicella Classico Riserva 2009 and Santa Sofia Amarone Classico 2009

Millefoglie with orange cream and chocolate drizzle, served with Cecilia Beretta Amarone Classico Terre di Cariano 2006 and Santa Sofia Amarone Classico 2009

Finally, Zonin Grappa

Tuesday, September 8th: 9:00 am to SCRIANI, Via Ponte Scrivan, 7 – 37022 Fumane. A 3-hectare vineyard here. Very impressive wines.


The Cottini family, Azienda Agricola Scriani

11:00 am: TENUTE SALVATERRA, Via Cengia, 8 – 37029 Loc. Cengia S. Pietro in Cariano. Five hectares on the estate with 300 acres spread around Valpolicella as well as producing Pinot Grigio and Prosecco. Great density of planting here, 9600 vines per hectare. Here we had a lunch tasting:


Tenute Salvaterra


Cellar at Tenute Salvaterra

2:30 pm BOSCAINI CARLO, Via Sengia, 37015. This quote from the website: “Our winery covers an area of 14 hectares overlooking the famous village of St. Giorgio Ingannapoltron, known around the world for its marvelous ancient church, cloister, and archeological excavation. In the beginning, the late Carlo Boscaini (who lived to the venerable age of 102 drinking wine in modest quantity but high quality) produced wine with great passion from leased land.”


Boscaini Carlo

4:30 pm SECONDO MARCO, Via Campolongo, 9 – 37022 Fumane. A beautifully appointed winery with a contemporary look. All his wine labels are made from fabric. Winemaker Marco Speri took us into the cellar for a barrel tasting, showing us Amarones from 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014 before a formal tasting upstairs. High quality across the portfolio.


Secondo Marco Amarone 2008


Marco Speri of Secondo Marco

6:30 pm VILLABELLA, 37010 Cavaion Veronese, Cordevigo. From the website: “In 2002, the wine and olive estate with Villa Cordevigo on its land, was acquired by the Delibori and Cristoforetti families. After ambitious restoration over a number of years, the nature and soul of the Villa were preserved while turning it into a superb country hotel with a wealth of art and history.”


Oseleta ristorante at Villabella

We dined in Villa Cordevigo’s restaurant, Oseleta. Chef Giuseppe D’Aquino has one star. We started with marinated porcini mushrooms, followed by Fassone beef, red onion sorbet, pistachio sauce, crispy raspberry; cappelletti filled with veal, pearà cream, Cordevigo red wine sauce, Parmigiano Reggiano cheese form; cheek of Fassone beef, Oseleta sauce, parsnip, sour cherries and chocolate. Two desserts.

Wednesday, September 9th: 9:00 am VILLA MONTELEONE, Via Monteleone, 12, Sant’Ambrogio di Vallpolcella. A traditional house started by an American neurosurgeon from Chicago whose wife now runs the operation. They cultivate 6 hectares, averaging 35,000 bottles.

11:00 am CORRADO BENEDETTI, Via Croce dello Schioppo, 1 – 37020 Sant’Anna d’Alfaedo. This amazing shop sells a variety of salumi and local cheeses as well as wine. Their website boasts, “The gastronomic range available is unimaginable and rather difficult to describe in writing: salami, soppresse, lards, cured meats, cuts of meat chosen for cooking at home or grilling with friends. And there’s more: fresh or mature cheeses, ‘pure’ or flavoured with local herbs, fruits and wines. But let’s not forget the fresh fruit jams, the wonderful preserves and pickles made from fresh vegetables, the creative jellies made with local wines such as Amarone and spicy mostarde for magnifying the taste of any cheese.” And they’re not exaggerating! We tasted a variety of their products washed down with the following wines: Zyme Vapolicella Classico Superiore 2011, Corte Sant’Alda Campi Magri Valpolicella Ripasso Superiore 2012, Albino Armani Valpolicella Ripasso 2012.


Cheese aging at Corrado Benedetti

2:30 pm PASQUA, Via Belvedere, 135 – 37131 Verona. The four Pasqua brothers founded the winery in 1925. I was please to run into Carlo Pasqua whom met first some thirty years ago.


Pasqua wine labelled with graffiti from Juliet’s house in Verona

4:30 pm LATIUM Via Fienile, 2 – 37030 Mezzane di Sotto. Seven petals of the flower on the label represent the seven family members involved in the company. Used to sell grapes to the cooperative and started their own winery in 2002. 60% Valpolicella wines and 40% Soave. Latius is the old Roman name of Illasi, a nearby village. 43 hectares, 140,000 bottles production of high quality wines.

8:00 pm Dinner at LOCANDA 800, Moron, 46 – 37024 Negrar. The menu:

Octopus with Valpolicella sauce, served with Santa Sofia Valpolicella Classico Superiore 2013 and Salvaterra Valpolicella Classico 2013

Gnocchi with arugula, pesto and pecorino, with Scirani Valpolicella Classico Superiore 2013 and Boscaini Carlo La Preosa Valpolicella Classico 2012

Filet of veal with mushrooms and potatoes, with Pasqua Valpolicella Classico Superiore 2013 and Sartori Amarone Riserva 2010

Cheeses with Secondo Marco Amarone Classico 2010

Thursday, September 10th: 9:00 am ZYMÈ, Via Cà del Pipa, 1 – 37029 S. Pietro In Cariano. This is a spectacularly contemporary winey, carved out of a 15th century sandstone quarry. Celestino Gaspari worked with Giuseppe Quintarelli from 1986 to 1997 and it really shows in the wines. He came across a Rondinella vine that had produced bunches of both black and white grapes. He managed to isolate the gene that produces the white bunches and cultivated a vine that produces white Rondinella.


Zymè’s modern winery


Zymè’s cellar carved out of a sandstone quarry


Zymè’s great 2003 Amarone – my top-scoring wine of the tour

11:00 am GIOVANNI EDERLE – CORTE SAN MATTIA Via Santa Giuliana, 2a, 37128 Verona. The winery takes its name from the local church. A beautiful estate high on the hills overlooking Verona. A working farm and agritourismo with a restaurant and 35 rooms. Giovanni Ederle drove us around the property in a reconditioned American army jeep to show us the vineyards, fig trees, olive orchard and kitchen garden that supplies the resaurant. All his whites are made with a blend of Garganega 60% and Chardonnay 40%. All the reds are Corvina, Corvinone and Rondinella.

We lunch outdoors on carrot flan on a bed of Monte Veronese cheese sauce and risotto with aromatic herbs.

2:30 pm MASSIMAGO, Via Giare, 21, 37030 Mezzane di Sotto. Camilla Rosso Chauvenet comes from a family of lawyers but she chose to become a winemaker. Wise decision. The wine is set high in the Mezzane hills – 28 hectares of vineyards, olive trees and woods. No-one who works here is over 35 and Camilla’s artistic sensibility is evident not only in the wines but in the winery’s promotional material.


Camilla Rosso Chauvenet of Massimago

Matteo, the oenologist, gave us berries to taste to show if the grapes are reading for harvest.

4:30 pm CORTE SANT’ALDA, Via Capovilla, 28, 37030 Località Fioi, Mezzane di Sotto. We arrived at this biodynamic winery high in the hills as they were beginning the crush. Marinella Camerani is a very engaging host who welcomed us even though the staff was crazy busy receiving and crushing grapes Garganega and Trebbiano for their Soave.


Corte Sant’Alda’s rose made in an amphora

Our final (farewell) dinner was at ENOTECA DELLA VALPOLICELLA, Via Osan di Sopra, 45 – 37022 Fumane. A great wine store in the basement. The menu:

Pumpkin flowers with basil sauce and olive oil, with Zyme Valpolicella “Reverie” 2014 and Le Ragose Valpolicella Classico 2014

Ravioli with white truffles with Boscaini Carlo Valpolicella Ripasso 2011

Duck breast with honey with Sartori Valpolicella Ripasso Classico Superiore 2012

Veronese cheeses with Latium Amari Campo Leon 2010 and Albino Armani Amarone Cuslanus 2009

With dessert, Secundo Marco Recioto della Valpolicella 2012 and Scriani Recioto della Valpolicella Maddelena 2012 – and grappa


Pasta with truffles


Chocolate dessert at Enoteca Della Valpolicella

Friday, September 11th: Flying home today. A great trip to Valpolicella and a new respect for Amarone.

Exit mobile version