Matt Gregory The Italian Red 2019
Matt Gregory The Italian Red 2019
£19.45

Matt Gregory

Matt Gregory The Italian Red 2019

Country: Italy
Region: Piedmont
Grape: Barbera 100%
Colour: Red
Bottle Size: 75cl
Alcohol: 14%
Vintage: 2019
Vegan friendly
Production: 590 bottles

Working as a wine merchant in England for more than 20 years, Matt Gregory eventually started making his own wines in Sussex and in New Zealand, where he worked alongside Theo Coles (of The Hermit Ram in North Canterbury).

Matt’s wines originate both from England and Italy, and are all labelled as ‘The English Winemaker’. He has a natural approach to winemaking and allows the different terroirs to express themselves.

The English wines are produced from grapes grown at the organically farmed Walton Brook Vineyard (two hectares, south facing) on the Leicestershire Wolds. Soil includes 200 million year old Jurassic fine grained limestone (mud made up from carbonates of coral and shell) overlain with two million year old glacial deposits featuring limestone, flint and ironstone.

The Italian wines come from Villa Giada in Piedmont, grapes are sustainably farmed, no synthetic herbicides or pesticides are used.

The Italian Red is made with pure Barbera grapes from the La Quercia vineyard, located near the Villa Giada winery in Canelli, South of Asti in Piedmont. The soil is the typical calcareous marl of the Monferrato, and the vines are southwest facing at 350 metres above sea level. The Barbera ripen early here and Matt picks the fruit much earlier than anybody locally to keep alcohol levels down and retain acidity.

The grapes are hand sorted and fermented with wild yeasts in two six year old, 500 litre tonneaux. Very limited handling for a very gentle infusion: hand plunged just twice and not pumped over. Left on skins for 43 days before pressing in a traditional basket press, left on lees in stainless steel before bottling in October 2020 without fining or filtration but a very small (20 ppm) addition of sulphur.   

The label doesn’t disclose the grape variety for bureaucracy reasons. Matt says: “Although this wine is not the subversive one the Italian authorities think it is, it is pushing the boundaries of what is usual for Barbera in this particular corner of the world. The tradition is to handle Barbera quite a lot as the tannins can be quite shy and soft, so plunging and pumping help get more extraction, pressed off skins fairly smartly after alcoholic fermentation and then either a quick rest in steel or an extended stay in oak before bottling. Conversely The Italian Red is very much left alone, and for quite a long time before pressing, and again left alone in tank for an extended period before bottling. The result is a Barbera that has finesse and structure without oak as a supporting character.”

The label’s artwork is by Vanessa Stone. 

 

PRODUCER NOTES

Working as a wine merchant in England for more than 20 years, Matt Gregory eventually started making his own wines in Sussex and in New Zealand, where he worked alongside Theo Coles (of The Hermit Ram in North Canterbury).

Matt’s wines originate both from England and Italy, and are all labelled as ‘The English Winemaker’. He has a natural approach to winemaking and allows the different terroirs to express themselves.

The English wines are produced from grapes grown at the organically farmed Walton Brook Vineyard (two hectares, south facing) on the Leicestershire Wolds. Soil includes 200 million year old Jurassic fine grained limestone (mud made up from carbonates of coral and shell) overlain with two million year old glacial deposits featuring limestone, flint and ironstone.

The Italian wines come from Villa Giada in Piedmont, grapes are sustainably farmed, no synthetic herbicides or pesticides are used.

FARMING & WINEMAKING NOTES

The Italian Red is made with pure Barbera grapes from the La Quercia vineyard, located near the Villa Giada winery in Canelli, South of Asti in Piedmont. The soil is the typical calcareous marl of the Monferrato, and the vines are southwest facing at 350 metres above sea level. The Barbera ripen early here and Matt picks the fruit much earlier than anybody locally to keep alcohol levels down and retain acidity.

The grapes are hand sorted and fermented with wild yeasts in two six year old, 500 litre tonneaux. Very limited handling for a very gentle infusion: hand plunged just twice and not pumped over. Left on skins for 43 days before pressing in a traditional basket press, left on lees in stainless steel before bottling in October 2020 without fining or filtration but a very small (20 ppm) addition of sulphur.   

The label doesn’t disclose the grape variety for bureaucracy reasons. Matt says: “Although this wine is not the subversive one the Italian authorities think it is, it is pushing the boundaries of what is usual for Barbera in this particular corner of the world. The tradition is to handle Barbera quite a lot as the tannins can be quite shy and soft, so plunging and pumping help get more extraction, pressed off skins fairly smartly after alcoholic fermentation and then either a quick rest in steel or an extended stay in oak before bottling. Conversely The Italian Red is very much left alone, and for quite a long time before pressing, and again left alone in tank for an extended period before bottling. The result is a Barbera that has finesse and structure without oak as a supporting character.”

The label’s artwork is by Vanessa Stone.