This Thursday evening taste the wines of Piedmont's late great Matteo Correggia. Join us to taste arneis, anthos (brachetto), barbera d'alba, nebbiolo 'roero', and val dei preti (nebbiolo d'alba)! Correggia is one of our very favorite Italian producers. These wines are delicious, well crafted and an amazing value.
As an added bonus we are offering special discounted event pricing on these wines. Save 10% off any single bottle purchase and 15% off 12 bottles or more. This Thursday 10/18 from 5:30 to 7:30. $9 tasting fee. -a+j

from skurnikwines.com (importer) - "...The Roero district is located in the lower-altitude, rounded, sandy hills north of the Tanaro River and northwest of the Langhe. Young Nebbiolo and Barbera from this region have a particularly fresh and lively character. In 2001, Matteo Correggia tragically passed away just as he entered Piedmont's winemaking elite. With the help of Giorgio Rivetti (of the famous La Spinetta estate), Matteo’s wife Ornella took over the estate, carrying on her husband's passionate desire to expand the reputation of the Roero. The elegantly powerful cult wine Roero "Rocche d'Ampsej" comes from a tiny plot of 50 to 60-yr-old Nebbiolo vines, and is the culmination of Matteo’s life’s work. Barbera “Bricco Marun” is varietally pure, vibrant, and concentrated, with intense personality. Nebbiolo “Val dei Preti” is also classic Roero: from 30 year old nebbiolo vines planted in three hectares of sandy-limestone soil, the wine ages 12 months in new French oak. “Anthos” is the estate’s dry, still Brachetto, a great value with a nose of rose petals and licorice, while the Arneis, an incredible summertime thirst-quencher, has an ever-growing following (90 points from Wine Advocate for 2008). Correggia’s Nebbiolo “Roero,” aged for 12 months in used barriques, and an additional 8 months in stainless steel, provides access to their stunning line-up at an incredible value!
The estate defines the agricultural management as “natural and sustainable whenever possible”. The latest edition “Vini d’Italia” (Gambero Rosso Editore), sets the estate within the “natural agronomy” category. Sulphur- and copper-based products are utilized predominantly. Only manure is used as fertilizer. Spontaneous cover crops (grass cover) are left between the rows of vines, the grass is mowed and the soil is tilled so to work the plant substance (green manure) into the ground. No chemical weed-control products are used. There is a very limited use of SO2 in the wine. "
http://www.skurnikwines.com/prospects.cgi?rm=view_prospect_detail&prospect_id=343