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Spring Newsletter

posted on 4 April 2011
Vinitaly 2011 Every time that Vinitaly comes around it seems that time has just flown by… Like last year, we won’t be having our own stand, but those who want to taste our products will still be able to do so on the  Garda Classico Consortium’s stand, no. D8 in the Lombardy Pavilion at PalaExpo. The winery, naturally, will remain open for visits or tastings. Mission to New York My second trip in 2011 to New York was very hard work and very exciting at the same time. I had the chance to meet some more important restaurateurs and get a better idea about how that market really works. Now we’re in the phase of firming up orders… One thing is certain, I dragged my suitcase full of samples to show to restaurateurs for miles and miles: I think I’ve worn out the wheels! I shall preserve it lovingly as a faithful comrade-in-arms. The Issue Project Room Event The evening sponsored by Cantrina for the Issue Project Room went very well. In the setting of one of Brooklyn’s historic buildings our wine was sampled by contemporary artists, patrons and art lovers, accompanied by musical performances from Elliott Sharp and Jo Andres. We are now working on the follow-up to this operation. The 2007 Nepomuceno has been bottled The 2007 Nepomuceno, our highly individual blend of Merlot, Marzemino and Rebo was bottled one week ago, ready for the long period of bottle-ageing that normally precedes its release onto the market. In the style of this wine – whilst its typically substantial body and concentrated structure remain constant – the over-ripe notes are increasingly giving way to the freshness of the fruit, a consequence in particular of a more discriminating use of very ripe grapes. We think that the 2007 was an excellent vintage and we therefore hold out great expectations for this wine… 2010 Groppello The 2010 Groppello, too, is now in bottle, and in two months’ time, when it has had the chance to recover from the stress of bottling, it will be ready to go on sale. For those of you who don’t know it yet, Groppello is the indigenous grape variety and wine of our zone, the Valtènesi. We like to offer this wine in the fresh and fruity style that shows off the variety at its best, and the market is proving us right. However, we are now finishing off selling the last few bottles of 2009 Groppello, and we are also very happy with the spicy note it has developed after a year in bottle. Cristina and Diego

Befana 2015

posted on 6 January 2015
Warm wishes to all from the Befana!!! As always, we like to wait until the beginning of the new year to send everyone our best wishes for the holidays just past and our hopes that the new year will start off in the best way possible. Looking a bit down the road, and at our own life here, we are hopeful that 2015 will be a terrific growing year–and, who knows, perhaps even a great vintage! OK, maybe I’m going a little too fast here, or even just dreaming… so it’s best that I let you know what’s been happening with Cantrina.

2014 harvest… totally difficult, but not impossible

posted on 21 October 2014
The factors that characterised this growing season were huge amounts of rain, low average temperatures, little sun, and a summer that we saw only for brief moments. These conditions created a host of problems, with the grapes struggling to achieve ripeness and various fungal attacks, affecting both clusters and leaves. As a consequence, the picking went much more slowly than usual, and the crop was much lighter, in particular because we had to perform a very painstaking quality-selection of the grapes on the vine, since we want to vinify only the finest-quality clusters, the ripest and healthiest. We will now need to dedicate much more attention to the new wines in order to ensure good-quality final versions. But we are convinced that they will bring us unexpected...

Groppello and Valtènesi got married

posted on 1 September 2014
New Valtènesi DOC 1 September marks the official release of our first vintage of Valtènesi DOC, 2013. In point of fact, Cantrina’s Valtènesi is not a new product, since it simply takes the place of Groppello, with the same 100% of that variety and the same label design (in which the term Valtènesi replaces the name of the Groppello grape), but the change gives increased importance to the name of the growing area in which we live and produce our wines. It will just take a bit of time to get used to the new name and to communicate the message about the growing area, before that of the grape variety
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