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Wine Dictionary A-Z

The document is an A-Z dictionary of Italian wine terminology, providing definitions for various terms related to wine, grapes, and winemaking practices. It covers a wide range of topics from grape varieties to wine classifications and production methods. This resource is essential for anyone looking to decode Italian wine labels and understand the nuances of Italian wines.

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teresacipriani3
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
80 views4 pages

Wine Dictionary A-Z

The document is an A-Z dictionary of Italian wine terminology, providing definitions for various terms related to wine, grapes, and winemaking practices. It covers a wide range of topics from grape varieties to wine classifications and production methods. This resource is essential for anyone looking to decode Italian wine labels and understand the nuances of Italian wines.

Uploaded by

teresacipriani3
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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com/blog/italy/italian-z-wine-dictionary\

Mastering Italian Wine: A-Z Dictionary for Decoding


Wine Labels

A-D
Abboccato – slightly sweet​
Acerbo – tart, “green”​
Acescenza – volatile wine​
Aceto-vinegar, usually made with a wine base​
Aglianico – ancient red grape is grown in the Campania region of Italy (south of Naples)​
Alcool – alcohol​
Amabile – off-dry (semi-sweet)​
Amaro – bitter​
Annata – a vintage year​
Appassimento – the practice of drying grapes before pressing them to concentrate
sugar and extract for the “Passito” style of wines such as Vin Santo​
Asciutto – bone dry​
Azienda – (Agricola, agrarian, and vitivinicola)- all terms used to describe a vineyard or
estate that grows all or most of its grapes to be bottled under its own labels (not sold
off in bulk)​
Barbera – semi-classic grape commonly grown in the Piedmont region and most of
northern Italy​
Barolo – top Piedmont red wine, made with the Nebbiolo grape​
Barrique – the Bordeaux term for a 225-liter wine barrel used to age wines​
Bianco – white (wine)​
Botte – wine Cask or Large Barrel. Usually made of oak, but sometimes also made of
chestnut wood, Slovenian oak is quite common in Italy, particularly in
Tuscany.Botticella – small wine cask​
Bottiglia – BottleBrunello di Montalcino – top Tuscan red wine, made with a clone of
Sangiovese​
Brut – dry (used for sparkling wines such as Franciacorta DOCG)​
Cantina – cellar, winery​
Cantina Sociale – co-operative winery​
Caraffa di Decantazione – decanter​
Carato – synonym of barrique, it refers to a small wine barrel (usually the 225-liter
barriques)​
Casa Vinicola – wine house or merchant (“commerciante)” who bottle wines made
with other cellar’s wines​
Cascina – – farmhouse, wine estate​
Castello – castle​
Cerasuolo – cherry colored rosè wine from Sicily​
Chiaretto – rosè wine from Garda​
Classico – the historic core of a DOC demarcated zone (such as Chianti Classico)​
Consorzio – a consortium of producers that sets standards and promotes wines of a
certain appellation or region.​
Cortese – Cortese is the white grape used to make Gavi in Piemonte​
Corvina – is a red grape used with two other grapes, Rondinella and Molinara, to create
the light red regional blends known as “Bardolino” and “Valpolicella” wines in northeast
Italy. Also called “Corvina Veronese”​
Cru – French term used internationally to mean the wine estate’s best vineyards​
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DOC – an acronym for “Denominazione di Origine Controllata” (controlled place of


origin), indicating details about where the wine comes from, the grapes used, and how
it was produced (down to the viticultural techniques).​
DOCG – an acronym for “Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita” (controlled
and guaranteed place name), which entails the same as DOC but with stricter rules​
Dolce – sweet​
Dolcetto – dry wine red grape, predominately grown in northern Italy (Piedmont
especially)

E-M
Enoteca – Wine shop or Bar​
Enologo – enologist (winemaker)​
Enotecnico – winemaking technician​
Ettaro – – hectare (2.471 acres)​
Ettolitro – hectolitre (100 liters), the technical standard used to measure wine volume​
Etichetta – wine label​
Fattoria – farm and/or estate. Usually suggests a number of small wine/olive oil estates
and working farms (called “poderi”)​
Fiasco – the classic Chianti bottles from the ’70s, covered in straw and symbol of low
quality!​
Frascati – light white wine that comes from the Lazio Region​
Freisa – medium-bodied red grape used to make still, sweet, and frizzante wines in
Piemonte​
Frizzante/ Frizzantino – slightly sparkling. Not fully sparkling or “spumante”.​
Frutti di Bosco – “forest fruits,” referring to wine flavors like blackberries, raspberries,
and strawberries.​
Grappa – Italian digestive made from the pomace of grapes. It can be aromatic and
flavored. Grechetto – the white grape​
Grechetto is the main grape used to make Orvieto in Umbria​
Governo – Tuscan practice (called “Governo all’uso Toscano) of drying late-harvested
grapes to add to the fermented wine, setting off a secondary fermentation to enrich
body, color, and flavor​
IGT – an acronym for “Indicazione Geografica Tipica” (typical place name), referring to
wines that can come from a large variety of grapes from one geographic area. Popular
with emerging wine producers, especially experimental ones​
Imbottigliato – bottled (“all’origine” implies estate bottled)​
Invecchiato – aged​
Liquoroso – fortified wine​
Madre – the “mother,” or “matrix,” which is residue from earlier vintages, left in barrels
to guide the transformation of musts into wine (such as “Vin Santo”)​
Malvasia – is an ancient grape cultivated in Europe for two millennia! There is a white
Malvasia and a red Malvasia. Malvasia Nera is grown in Puglia, in Southern Italy.
Malvasia is one of the two white varietals allowed in DOC Chianti. Malvasia is also a
main ingredient in the Roman Frascati.​
Marchio – brand name​
Maso – a vineyard holding in Trentino​
Metodo Classico – champagne method, where the 2nd fermentation takes place in the
Bottle, and wines rest in “pupitres” until their “degorgement.”​
Millesimè/ Millesimato – can be used for sparkling and still wines, indicating the year of
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vintage.​
Muffa Nobile – noble rot (Botrytis cinerea)

N-Z
Nebbiolo – the black grape used to produce rich Barolo and Barbaresco wines in
Piemonte​
Nero – black​
Passito / Passita – used to refer to partially dried grapes, and also the sweet unctuous
wines are made from them. Tuscan Vin Santo is an example of a Passito.​
Podere – small farm or estate- in Tuscany, a Podere is usually part of a larger “Fattoria.”​
Produttore – producer​
Recioto – wine made from partly dried grapes in the passito style. Usually sweet and
strong.​
Rosato – rosé wine​
Rosso – red wine​
Sangiovese – the main red grape varietal used in Tuscany​
Sans année – (abbreviated as S.A.) – a French phrase used in Italian winemaking to
mean “non-vintage.”​
Scelto – means “selected,” referring to certain DOC wines​
Secco – dry​
Semisecco – off-dry, medium-sweet. Used when referring to sparkling wines, mainly​
Soave – white wine from the Veneto​
Solaio – refers to the loft where the grapes drying to make Passito wines are kept. In
Tuscany, it is also referred to as a “Vinsolaio.”​
Spumante – literally means “foaming,” referring to sparkling wine​
Superiore – is a classification term that denotes a DOC or DOCG wine that meets
standards above the norm (longer aging, special single-vineyard, etc.)​
Super Tuscan – a term coined by English-speaking wine journalists to refer to the new
high-quality styles of wine that emerged in Tuscany in the ’70s, which were using
amounts of international varietals (Cab sauv, Merlot, etc), thus initially denying them
quality wine status for breaking local laws.​
Tenuta – Farm or wine estate​
Terroir – a French term that defines the harmonic relationship between vineyard site,
soil, climate, and grape variety​
Tonneau – Bordeaux term for 900-litre barrels. In Italy, it also means 550-litre barrels.​
Uva – grape​
Vecchio – “old,” used to describe some DOC wines (“invecchiato” means “aged,” and
“stravecchio” means very old.)​
Vernaccia – white grape varietal, used in San Gimignano​
Vinacce – grape skins, seeds, and pulp left after the must or fermented wine has been
pressed. This is the base used to make grappa.​
Vigna/ Vigneto – vineyard​
Vignaiolo/ Viticoltore – grape grower who cultivates grapes for wine production​
Vino Nobile di Montepulciano – top red wine from Tuscany, made with a clone of
Sangiovese called Prugnolo Gentile.​
Vino Novello – “new” wine, meaning young wine- to be drunk within a year of bottling
and produced using carbonic maceration​
Vin Santo – “holy wine,” this delicious wine is made from grapes dried after the harvest
and kept in small barrels in “Vinsantaia” (aging rooms), where seasonal heat and cold
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are essential to the extended fermentation process. Read more​


Vite – vine​
Vitigno – vine or grape variety​
Vivace – “lively,” used to refer to the slight sparkle in some wines​
Zuccheri Residui – residual sugar

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