Jan 17, 2023
Tucked into the middle of the Italian
peninsula is the verdant, hilly land of Umbria. This small province
is overshadowed by its neighbor, Tuscany, for many things, but
Umbria has history, culture, and wine all its own. In this show, we
explore the long history of Umbrian wine, what makes the province
unique in its grapes and wine styles, and why Umbrian wine is too
often unfairly forgotten in the pantheon of great wines of Italy.
We review the three major wine regions of Umbria – Orvieto,
Torgiano, and Montefalco – and give many reasons to give these
wines a try.

Photo: Umbrian countryside. Getty
Images
Here are the show notes:
- As of January 2023, Umbria has just 2 DOCGs, 13 DOCs, and
6 IGPs, 48% is DOP wine, 42% IGP, 10% table wine. 12,400 ha (30,600
acres) is 7.2 million cases of wine
- The main grapes of the region are: Sangiovese, Trebbiano
Toscano, Grechetto, Sagrantino
- Umbria has had winemaking for more than 3000 years
- Climate: Landlocked Umbria has no sea breeze,
although its lakes do help moderate the temperatures. The climate
varies, but is mostly Mediterranean with cold, rainy winters and
dry summers with abundant sunshine to ripen grapes
Photo:
Chiesa in Assisi. Getty Images
Land
- Umbria is 29% Mtns, 71% hills, no plains. Most vineyards are on
terraces cut into hillsides. The vineyards have good diurnals,
which maintains acidity.
- Umbria is the only Italian region with no coastline nor a
common border with another country.
- It is partly hilly and mountainous from the Apennines, and
partly flat and fertile from the Tiber River Valley and the Umbrian
valley around Perugia
Grapes:
- 53% red/rose, 47% white
- Sangiovese 20% of plantings, Trebbiano Toscano –12%, Grechetto
11%, Sagrantino 7%
Whites:
- Grechetto is two distinct grape varieties,
Grechetto di Orvieto and Grechetto di Todi
- Grechetto di Orvieto: is light
bodied, high in acidity with apple, pear, citrus, white flower
notes
- Grechetto di Todi is Pignoletto
(called that in Emilia Romagna). It is very floral with a soft
mouthfeel
- Trebbiano Spoletino: Only found in Umbria
around Spoleto and Montefalco. This wine is like limes, it can
range from light to heavy and high in alcohol and can be barrel
aged, or made into orange wine – no set identity
- Reds: Sangiovese and Sagrantino with Colorino,
Mammolo, Vernaccia Nera
- International grapes: Cab, Merlot, Chardonnay,
Sauvignon Blanc for, Umbria Indicazione Geografica
Tipica (IGT)

Photo: Sagrantino. Getty
Images
Orvieto
- Producing wine since the Middle Ages when it was a famed sweet
wine, today this wine is more of a dry white. Despite a long
history, Orvieto was the victim of overproduction in the 1960s and
its reputation suffered
- There are many styles and it is Umbria’s biggest appellation –
10%+ of all Umbrian wine production
- Known for whites made of mostly Trebbiano and Grechetto, DOC
Orvieto and Orvieto Classico. Other grapes include: Malvasia
Bianco, Drupeggio, Verdello, Canaiolo bianco
- Styles: very simple and boring from Trebbiano or wines that use
more Grechetto
- Red wine and 8 varietal wines sold under Rosso Orvietano
DOC—French grapes plust Aleatico, Barbera, Canaiolo, Colorino,
Dolcetto, Montepulciano, Sangiovese, Cesanese, Ciliegiolo
- Wine made in hills around Torgiano, southeast of Perugia where
a tributary joins Tiber River
- Torgiano DOC is 81 ha/200 acres, 40K cases
- Whites: Chardonnay, Pinot Grigio, Trebbiano,
Riesling Italico (Welschriesling) (Labeled by grape, 85%+ of grape
in bottle), Torgiano Bianco – 50-70% Trebbiano
Toscano with Grechetto
- Reds: Cabernet, Merlot, Pinot Nero, Sangiovese
(known for elegance, high-quality Sangiovese). Rosso di
Torgiano DOC is made with 50–100% Sangiovese
- Rosato of Sangiovese min 50% and other
approved native grapes
- Torgiano Rosso Riserva DOCG, can age for
decades It must be made with 70–100% Sangiovese with other native
grapes. It must age at least three years before release
- The Lungarotti family is famed in Torgiano growing area

Montefalco and Sagrantino
Montefalco Sagrantino – DOCG
1992
- Montefalco is ancient hilltop town and its specialty is
Sagrantino – a dry, powerful, complex red grape with herbal notes
that is made into the Montefalco Sagrantino DOCG wine, a famed wine
that is aged a minimum of 37 months, 12 in barrel, 4 in bottle
minimum
- With vines on the slopes of the hills, around the ancient town
of Montefalco, and in surrounding villages, this area has a
continental, that is warm and dry.
- Montefalco Sagrantino used to be a sweet wine but evolved into
the dry version, which is one of the great reds of Italy
- Notable winerw are: Scaccia Diavoli, Fratelli Pardi and Arnaldo
Caprai
- Montefalco Sagrantino is on only 990 acres/400 ha, producing
just 108,000 case (5 year average)

Montefalco DOC
- Established as a DOC in 1979, and lying on just 524 ha/1294
acres, this DOC Makes:
- Bianco: Grechetto, Trebbiano (Minimum of
Trebbiano Spoletino with other native non aromatic whites). There
is a varietal Grechetto as well
- Rosso: 60-80% Sangiovese, 10–25% Sagrantino
with a maximum 30% with other native reds

Photo: The wine we drank during
the show.
Other DOCs: Assisi,
Amelia, Colli Altotiberini, Colli Perugini, Lago di Corbara,
Spoleto, Todi, Collie Martani, Colli del
Trasimeno
All are the same combo of grapes
- Whites: Grechetto and Trebbiano for whites
with supporting native and non-native grapes
- Reds: Sangiovese with native and French
grapes
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Sources:
https://italianwinecentral.com/