Did you know that there are three styles of wine from the Moscato Bianco grape cultivated in the Asti region in Piemonte, Italy? Each style has unique characteristics that make...
It's fun! It's flirty! It's sweet yet balanced with acidity! It's delicious! It's Moscato d'Asti. I had the the pleasure to recently spend a week in Asti in Piemonte, Italy, visiting wineries and drinking lots and lots of Moscato d'Asti. This light and refreshing wine will transport you to a spring picnic in the park. But Moscato d'Asti, a wine made from passion, also has a serious side and I wrote about this wonderful wine in the Napa Valley Register which I am sharing here.
Rainy, cold weather getting you down? Longing for spring to come? Open up a bottle of Moscato d’Asti and transport yourself to a picnic in the spring. No matter the time of the year, no matter the temperature outside, Moscato d’Asti is fresh and is like spring in a glass.
Now, your first thought might be, “but Moscato d’Asti is a sweet wine.” It is OK to admit you like a little sweetness in your wine. When a little residual sugar is balanced by bright acidity, there is nothing not to like. And Moscato d’Asti is just that. It is fun, fruity, light and refreshing but it is also a serious wine with a lot of care is put into making it.
The first written records of the Moscato Bianco grape in Piemonte, Italy were in the 1300s. Today there are 10,000 hectares planted, of which 1,400 hectares are planted on hills, across 52 municipalities in the provinces of Alessandria, Asti and Cuneo in Piemonte.
Moscato d'Asti DOCG, the sparking wine made from the Moscato white grape and produced in the northwest Italy provinces of Asti, Alessandria and Cuneo, is a sweet wine that is...