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THE way to Italian varietals in Australia was paved by the likes of Coriole's Sangiovese, Crittendon's "i" range and Brown Brothers' excellent Barbera. Now the old Italian tobacco growers-turned winemakers in Victoria's alpine valleys around Bright are making Italian varietal wines their specialty. Foremost among them is Emo Michelini whose winemaker Greg O'Keefe (ex-early Meadowbank days) was in town recently to show off Michelini's latest which include three of Italy's 200-plus native varietals, rare even in their homeland - Teroldego, Marzemino and Fragolino.
Of Teroldego, Victor Hazan's Italian Wines says: "[It] is the most important red in the Trentino half of the northeastern region of Trentino-Alto Adige but is virtually unknown elsewhere. The thick-skinned, blue-black grape produces a wine that, when young, has a very dark purple colour, intensely vinous odours and a racy, tart, slightly bitter taste. Most of it is produced for a market that does not object to a somewhat grating address to the palate. But careful selection of grapes, judicious blending with a small percentage of gentler varietals and one or two years ageing can beget a wine of highly polished quality, subtle in aroma, fluid and supple in the mouth with persistent length of flavour." Michelins 2004 Teroldego, $18.50: Marzemino rates no more than a passing mention in Hazan's book but Jancis Robinson's Vines, Grapes and Wines says it's another Trentino variety which "was once internationally acclaimed and its name lives romantically on at Don Giovanni s last supper. "The wine, typically, is a lightly plummy offering whose most distinguishing feature is its dark tint (although) it's still possible in very isolated examples to see the riches that presumably were offered by earlier, more concentrated versions". Michelini 2004 Marzemino, $18.50: Fragolino turns out not to be an Italian native varietal at all but an American hybrid which many Italians have growing over their pergolas ' as a table grape because of its plump sweetness - fragola meaning strawberry. O'Keefe says it's the biggest seller at their cellar door. Michelini Fragolino, $20: Michelin 2004 Pinot Grigio, $17.50: Michelini 2004 Sangiovese, $18.50: Michelini 2004 Barbera, $18.50: |
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