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Montepulciano with its Vino Nobile, made from a type of Sangiovese known as Prugnolo Gentile
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You are looking for Accommodation in Tuscany, Italy. We are bringing you one step closer to finding your perfect accommodation solution.

 

In Tuscany we have holiday accommodation properties of the following types: 1 Star Hotels, 2 Star Hotels, 3 Star Hotels, 4 Star Hotels, 5 Star Hotels, Agritourisms, Apartments, Backpackers, Bed and Breakfasts, Campings, Castles, Cottages, Hostels, Houses, Inns, Lodges, Pensions, Residences, Resorts and Villas.

 

Some of our popular destinations for holiday accommodation in Tuscany include: Arezzo, Cortona, Florence, Forte Dei Marmi, Grosseto, Leghorn, Livorno, Lucca, Montecatini Terme, Montepulciano, Pisa, Pistoia, Prato, San Gimignano, Siena and Viareggio.

 

Our featured holiday accommodation properties in Tuscany include: Casale Gregoriano, Borgo Tre Rose, Villa Il Poggiale, Castello di Grotti, Hotel Cristina, Il Paganello, Hotel Derby, Residence and SPA S.Lorenzo a Linari, Locanda Daniel, Hotel Panoramic, Del Molino, Villino Il Cedro, Villa San Michele, Casa Marzocchi and Hotel Nella.

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Wines From the Region of Toscana

 

Florence's region has shifted its stance in the last couple of decades from a complacent supplier of flask Chianti to the nation's most creative producer of premium wines. Tuscany's revolution began in Chianti and the central hills around Siena but quickly spread to take in the coastal zones that were not previously noted for vineyards.

 

Much of the progress has come with classical reds, as illustrated by the fact that four of Italy's nine DOCGs are here - Brunello di Montalcino, Vino Nobile di Montepulciano, Chianti and Carmignano. But growing success with other reds (including the stylish table wines sometimes called "Super Tuscans") and a new breed of whites has enhanced the region's reputation.

 

Chianti, still the dominant force in Tuscan viniculture, has ranked as the most Italian of wines for decades. This is partly because it is the most voluminous and widely sold classified wine, but also because it has a personality that cannot be pinned do cover a vast territory of central Tuscany. In these often rugged hills variations in soil and climate contribute as much to the individuality of each authentic estate wine as do producers' quests for a personal style. These variations may be confusing, but for consumers who persist Chianti offers some of the best quality for value in wine today.

 

Since Chianti was elevated to DOCG in 1984,its production has sharply diminished and its quality has markedly improved. Chianti may be identified by its subdistricts, though only producers of Classico - whose consortium is symbolised by a black rooster - have made much of a geographical point so far. Many estates emphasise the name of a certain vineyard or area as a mark of distinction.

 

What Chianti has in common with all the classified red wines of Tuscany is its major grape variety Sangiovese. In the past varieties were often blended, but today the emphasis is strongly on Sangiovese. When the habitat is right, its superior clones - Montalcino's Brunello, Chianti's Sangioveto and Montepulciano's Prugnolo Gentile - must be ranked with Italy's, and the world's noblest vines.

 

Tuscany's wine of greatest stature is Brunello di Montalcino, a DOCG from a fortress town south of Siena with reds of legendary power and the longevity that have commanded lofty prices. Conceived by the Biondi Santi family a century ago, Brunello is now produced under scores of labels, representing small farms, established estates and even international corporations. Brunello production averages less than 2 million bottles a year, but producers also make the DOCs of Rosso di Montalcino (a younger wine from Brunello vines) and sweet white Moscadello di Montalcino (from Moscato).

 

Not far from Montalcino is Montepulciano with its Vino Nobile. The "nobile" entered the name centuries ago, apparently in homage to its status among the nobility. The poet Francesco Redi described Montepulciano's red as "king of all wines." After a lapse of decades, Vino Nobile has made an impressive comeback under DOCG and is once again living up to its name. Similar to Chianti in composition, Vino Nobile can stand with the finest reserves. The DOC Rosso di Montepulciano is a younger alternative.

 

Carmignano rates special mention as a wine singled out for protection by the Grand Duke of Tuscany in 1716. Today this rare red from Sangiovese and Cabernet has qualified as DOCG, through the town's rose' and Vin Santo remain as DOC. Pomino, which was also cited in the decree of 1716, is a high altitude DOC zone with a Chardonnay and Pinot. Among numerous other DOC reds, Morellino di Scansano, grown in the coastal hills of the Maremma, seems to have a promising future.

 

From good vintages, pure Sangiovese wines are rich in body and intricate in flavour with deep ruby-garnet colours. Some are smooth and round almost from the start, but others need years to develop the nuances of bouquet and flavour unique to well-aged Tuscan reds. When conditions aren't right, reds from Sangiovese can be lean, harsh and bitter. That explains why some producers have planted other varieties to complement the natives. Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot have made progress here.

 

By no means all the fine wines of Tuscany are classified. The production of upscale "vini da tavola," which began as a trend in the 1970s, is now an established fact. Sassicaia and Tignanello were the prototypes, but now there are dozens more that rank among the most esteemed and expensive red wines of Italy.

 

Tuscan whites rarely enjoyed much prestige in the past, probably because most of them consisted of the pedestrian varieties of Trebbiano and Malvasia. Exceptions to the rule stand out from the crowd. Vernaccia di San Gimignano, from the ancient Vernaccia vine, has enjoyed a rapid revival. The rich Vin Santo, pressed from semidried grapes and aged in small wooden barrels, can be an exquisite - or, sometimes, exotic - dessert or aperitif wine.

 

The best known white is Galestro, made by a group of producers equipped to process Trebbiano with other varieties in a fresh and fruity table wine that is deliberately light in weight. Recently, whites of more complexity and character have been devised in Tuscany, due to the introduction of such varieties as Chardonnay, Sauvignon and Pinot Bianco and Grigio, all of which are finding comfortable environments in cooler parts of the region's hills.

 

Since few of the new style wines are classified, a consortium of producers issues certain types under four categories: Predicato del Selvante for white based on Sauvignon Blanc; Predicato di Biturica for red based on Cabernet; Predicato di Cardisco for red based on Sangiovese.

This website is proudly edited by Alessandro Sorbello, a freelance travel writer and publisher based in Italy and Australia. Website architecture developed by Adam Luck, Information Technologies team leader at New Realm Media.

 

Articles supplied by Our Travel Partners; see the list here.

 

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You are looking for Accommodation in Tuscany, Italy

 

Our featured holiday accommodation properties in Tuscany include: Borgo Tre Rose, Casa Marzocchi, Casale Gregoriano, Castello di Grotti, Del Molino, Hotel Cristina, Hotel Derby, Hotel Nella, Hotel Panoramic, Il Paganello, Locanda Daniel, Residence and SPA S.Lorenzo a Linari, Villa Il Poggiale, Villa San Michele and Villino Il Cedro.

 

In Tuscany we have holiday accommodation properties of the following types: 1 Star Hotels, 2 Star Hotels, 3 Star Hotels, 4 Star Hotels, 5 Star Hotels, Agritourisms, Apartments, Backpackers, Bed and Breakfasts, Campings, Castles, Cottages, Hostels, Houses, Inns, Lodges, Pensions, Residences, Resorts and Villas.

 

Some of our popular destinations for holiday accommodation in Tuscany include: Arezzo, Cortona, Florence, Forte Dei Marmi, Grosseto, Leghorn, Livorno, Lucca, Montecatini Terme, Montepulciano, Pisa, Pistoia, Prato, San Gimignano, Siena and Viareggio.

 

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