As you may have noticed that The Fine Wine Source in Livonia, Michigan captures plenty of my wine tasting moments. This tasting was sponsored by the shop at a fund raiser at Our Lady of Redemption Melkite Catholic Church and not only had plenty of tables of wine, but a huge spread of food, for either making plates to sit down for dinner or just for grazing, and I found that I did both at times.

At the Italian Table there were seven wines, and I will mention three. My Bride who is always the logical one, was concerned that there were too many wines to taste. We started this table off with the Vite Colte “Tra Donne Sole” Sauvignon (Blanc) Piedmont 2023 and over the years this wine has carried both the Monferrato DOC and Piemonte DOC. The wine “Tra Donne Sole” (The Lonely Woman) is named after a work by Cesare Pavese. The members of Vite Colte ad their families, partners and winegrowers are the cornerstone of a modern winery with a combined goal to maintain the high standards that are part of the Piedmont tradition. The vineyards for this wine are in two different areas with different soils and microclimates, and also low yields, and these points are used to create a complex and balanced wine, as the regions ripen at different times. The earlier vineyards have grapes that are higher in acidity and have class aromas of Sauvignon, while the later vineyard displays tropical fruit. Ater the grapes are pressed; the juice is allowed to ferment in temperature-controlled Stainless-Steel vats and then the wine rests on the lees for three months until bottled. A straw-yellow colored wine offered notes of pears, apples, passion fruit, gooseberry, citrus and white florals and grass. On the palate this medium-bodied, well-balanced wine displayed tones of grapefruit, baked apples, vanilla with a touch of mint and licorice in an unfussy and very easy drinking wine that ended with a medium-count finish of fruit and terroir.

We then followed up with a glass of Casa Vinicola D’Angelo Aglianico del Vulture DOC Basilicata 2019. Casa Vinicola D’Angelo has spanned four generations and almost a century in the history of Aglianico del Vulture. While the winery was established in the thirties, in 1924 the wines were exhibited at the IV Commercial Fair in Bari. In 1971 Aglianico earned the DOC designation. Mount Vulture is an extinct volcano and is part of the landscape of norther Basilicata. The wine must be made exclusively from Aglianico, on volcanic soil, and altitude is an important factor in that it must be planted between 200m and 700m. The fruit is manually harvested, and basic Aglianico del Vulture wines must be aged in oak barrels for at least a year, before being released. The D’Angelo wine undergoes ten days of maceration on the skin and is aged for eighteen months in large barrels. Their first vintage was 1960, and the average age of the vines is from 30-35 years of age. The wine was a deep garnet color and offered notes of black fruit, Sous-bois, sage and licorice. On the palate this medium-to-full-bodied, well-balanced wine displayed tones of black cherry, earth and tar and a very chewy wine with firm tannins that ends with a medium-to-long count finish of fruit, spices and terroir.

We finished our Italian wines by tasting a glass of Enrico Santini “Montepergoli” Bolgheri Superiore DOC Toscana IGT 2018. The winery was founded in 1998 and is now a family-run business with fourteen hectares of vineyards in the heart of the Bolgheri district. This wine is a blend of twenty-five percent Merlot, forty percent Cabernet Sauvignon, twenty percent Syrah and fifteen percent Sangiovese. The vineyards have an East/Southwest exposure. The fruit is manually harvested with careful selection of bunches. The grapes go through the vinification process separately. The Initial Fermentation takes place in a controlled temperature with indigenous yeasts and m the maceration process is for about twenty-eight days. The wine then ages for a minimum of eighteen months in oak barrels, of which forty percent is new. Then the wine is aged in bottles for an additional eighteen months before being released. A deep red wine with notes of blackberries, currants, plums with smoky aromas, tanned leather, cloves, black pepper and toasted oak. On the palate this medium-bodied wine displays tones of the dark fruits, spices and rich tannins and then a medium count finish of fruit and spices.


























