Wines

Rosso Lazio - Pancarpo igp

Intense ruby ​​red colour, Black currant and spices defining the taste too. Full bodied wine with power and a great long linger taste.

Technical Specifications
Typology: Lazio IGP red
Grapes: (65% Cabernet Sauvignon - 15% Petit Verdot - 10% Syrah - 10% Merlot)
Format: 750 cc
Alcohol content: 13.5% Alcohol Vol
Production Area: Le Ferriere
Soil: clayey with little sand
Training system: espalier (Guyot)
Density of planting: 4000 vines / Ha
Harvest: September 25th - October 10th
Vinification: submerged cap
Pairings: red and succulent meats, aged cheeses
Pancarpo Rosso Lazio Igp 2015

Donato Giangirolami

Like his father, Donato Giangirolami has looked far and made decisive choices for the growth of the company. He has been passionate of his land since he was a child, he learned his work looking at Dante. He observed with curiosity the process that allows grapes to turn into wine.

In the 1990s, the company expanded and purchased the land in Doganella, Ninfa and Borgo Montello.

For him, a quality product first must be healthy, as well as good.

In 1993 he was among the first on the territory to start the procedures for obtaining organic certification. It has purified the land, has eliminated any trace of product harmful to health.

He wants his products to be as genuine as the food he grew up with. In 2003 he became a direct producer. The Donato Giangirolami organic label was born.

In the first decade of 2000, Laura and Federica, Donato s daughters, started working in the company, continuing the family tradition and the work started two generations before by grandfather Dante.

Lazio

Historically the vineyards around Rome have been important areas for the production of white wine. The ancient Romans praised the local wines, although it is fabled that Horace most admired the red Falernian and Caecuban from the southern coast and Campania. The name Frascati is synonymous with Latium as well as the legendary white wine Est! Est!! Est!!! di Montefascione. It is said that this last wine gained its unusual name, meaning "It is!" repeated three times, after it was scrawled on a cellar door by a servant who was sent to seek out drinking establishments that served wine suitable for the bishop for whom he worked.