Wines

Prosecco Rose Brosa Brut N.V.

Bright pink colour. Fine lingering perlage. Creamy mousse with good persistence. Elegant and persistent aroma of red and purple wild berries. A dry, fully developed and very persistent flavour. Aftertaste: fruity with hints of raspberry, blackberry and blueberry on the nose.

Technical Specifications
Area.Mugnai di Feltre.
Vineyards.Owner, vineyard management : Azienda Agricola De Bacco. Soils: Gravelly limestone alluvial fans.
Grape variety.100% Pavana del Feltrino.
Harvesting period.15 September.
Yield per hectare.90 quintals.
Harvesting.Harvesting.
Base wine fermentation.Primary fermentation in steel tanks at a controlled low temperature.
Sparkling wine production method.Colesel Spumanti, Valdobbiadene. Valdobbiadene method, secondary fermentation in tanks.
Prise de mousse.25-30 days at a controlled low temperature.
Aging.From 1 - 3 months in tanks.
Sparkling wine composition.Alcohol/Vol.: 12% Acidity: 7.5 g/l. Residual sugars: 9 g/l.
Vinification.Rose wine vinification method with cold maceration on the skins, without sulphur dioxide, for 12 hours, with a long period of soft pressing to extract the must.
Serving temperature.Serve in an ice bucket or at a temperature of 4-6°C.
Food pairings.Excellent as an aperitif or with appetizers and raw and cooked fish dishes. Try it with dark chocolate.

Colesel Spumanti

Colesel, a steep and tiring hill in the heart of the Cartizze area. A land filled with vines, where the hand of Man still carries its weight. Colesel, a society that combines the vinedresser’s persistence with the culture of tradition; the tenacity of work with the innovation of knowledge. A place that teaches you patience. That teaches you to wait. It is our land. Rows of vines like seats in the stalls of nature’s theatre. It is our land. A stage that cannot be reproduced in any other area of the world. An original show guaranteed to go on stage every year. 

Veneto

Veneto’s wines are some of Italy’s best known exports – the names of Soave, Bardolino and Valpolicella have long been associated with eminently drinkable Italian wines. Yet there is a lot more to this region, and indeed a lot more behind the names of its best known wines. With 26 DOCs and 13 DOCGs, Venice’s region has a substantial production of quality wine, as well as well-priced easy-drinking reds and whites bottled as IGTs. One of Italy’s most interesting wines is a product of these three grapes, the deep, dark Amarone della Valpolicella, recently promoted to DOCG status. Made from partly dried grapes in the vineyards north of Verona, it is a structured, complex and heady wine capable of great age that has gained a cult following among the wine industry’s elite. 

In Treviso, north of Venice, are the towns of Conegliano and Valdobbiadene where the popular bubbly Prosecco is made using the Charmat method where the second fermentation takes place in large tanks. 

In 2009 Prosecco di Conegliano e Valdobbiadene has become DOCG, encouraging reduced yields in the vineyards. Prosecco is also produced in the neighbouring Montello e Colli Asolani zone. White wines from Pinot Grigio, Sauvignon and Chardonnay are gaining in popularity and recent versions are responding well to oak ageing.