Andreola: sparkling Valdobbiadene excellence!

Andreola

Unless mentioned, all images provided by Ana Alves, Social Media & Marketing Manager at Brasseria Family Restaurants

Over the years, there have been several reports on The Write Taste about high quality Prosecco. For example, one article here discusses whether Prosecco is the world's most misunderstood wine due to misconceptions about what it really is and can be. The globally successful Italian sparkler continues to benefit from its popularity and brand familiarity. However, at the same time, its all-too-often perceived image as a cheap, light, sweetish, easy-drinking bubbly for celebrations and after-work chilling out is not advancing the category's reputation. One winery trying to do something about that is Andreola.

Andreola Winery

In 1984, Nazzareno Pola founded family estate, Andreola, in the heart of Valdobbiadene DOCG. Today, his son Stefano manages the business, which covers 110 hectares of vineyards, divided into 250 individual parcels. Exports account for 35% of sales with USA and UK among the most important markets.

After a complete brand redesign in 2009 and relocation to a larger and more modern, state-of-the-art winery, Andreola launched its Valdobbiadene DOCG line of wines. Last year, the company created the new Rive line in honour of their 40th anniversary. These single-vineyard wines showcase the unique terroir's influence on seven different expressions of the Glera grape.

Valdobbiadene DOCG region

Andreola is located about 50km from Venice between the sea and the Prealps, 100km south of the Dolomites. The steep, south-facing hills of Valdobbiadene, which became a DOCG region in 2009, generally range from 100 to 500 metres altitude and contain a mix of conglomerate rock, marl, sand and clay soils. A temperate climate with summer rain, cooling breezes and a large diurnal range ensure good growing conditions for the glera grape.

The production area of Valdobbiadene DOCG, which allows for Extra Brut, Brut, Extra Dry, and Dry expressions, is limited to 15 municipalities in the heart of Valdobbiadene Prosecco Superiore.

Winemaking philosophy

Andreola uses a non-invasive and eco-friendly approach to winemaking, avoiding the use of chemical sprays in the field and through gentle and fractional pressing of the grapes. The winery building itself has solar panels, allowing them to cover around 57% of energy needs.

Mirco Balliana, who became the winemaker in 2018 and has been named this year in the Drinks Business 'Master Winemaker 100', sees a clear difference between their approach and others. "Nowadays we are the company [committed] to single vineyard production", he explains. "We are now the main company producing eight types of Rive … grapes from a single village. We vinify single vineyards, keeping everything divided. If you have high quality grapes, or medium, or low quality and you put everything together, you will have average quality wines. Every year, we do more than 200 single vinifications. It's hard to manage, but that's the only way to guarantee high quality products."

Mirco Balliana

Mirco Balliana: image by Robin Goldsmith

Winemaking style

"The unique style that defines Andreola's sparkling wines is creaminess on the palate with intense, elegant aromas and a low tendency to oxidation."

They also harvest the grapes in very small baskets, rare for the appellation, in order not to crush any fruit prematurely. Using free-run juice from the press for all their wines, they avoid extracting bitter polyphenols. "We preserve the noble part of the juice", he says, "without too much tannin and richer in sugars, acidic compounds and aromas. That's why we have very fresh and intense aromas in our wines."

Their additive-free oenology approach means that wines are clarified by centrifugation and membrane filtration only, just to remove the lees. "This is very important for the integrity of the fruit, the creaminess of the bubbles and also for the shelf life of the products", Balliana adds.

Valdobbiadene or Prosecco?

"Territory, product, method are encapsulated by Valdobbiadene."

Another point of difference from most other producers in the region is that the winery does not call its wines 'Prosecco', preferring to use the name 'Valdobbiadene' instead. "We think that the power of this product is with the word Valdobbiadene", describes Mirco, adding that it encapsulates the product itself, the land it comes from and the winemaking method used. "If you use the word Prosecco", he adds, "you immediately relate to something else. Nowadays Prosecco is like a cheap industrial product and with Valdobbiadene we have a chance to disconnect this type of communication and quality. So that's why we've avoided the word Prosecco for the past five years."

Conegliano Valdobbiadene Rive

Conegliano Valdobbiadene's Rive: photo credit Arcangelo Piai

Heroic Viticulture

Since 2010, the winery has been part of Cervim, an international organisation founded in 1987 to promote and protect 'heroic viticulture'. This term refers to viticulture on high hills and mountains at altitudes greater than 500 metres with vines planted on terraced and stepped slopes greater than 30% gradient.

To create a clear identity, CERVIM developed, registered and introduced a European collective trademark called 'Heroic Viticulture', which certifies wines that meet these conditions.

In the Valdobbiadene DOCG area, manual viticulture has been defined as heroic and was one of several factors that led to the area's recognition as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in July 2019.

Le Rive

The name 'Rive' comes from the local dialect and refers to the steep slopes of the Valdobbiadene hills. So wines with the 'Rive' designation come from single vineyards in a particular municipality, village or hamlet of the region renowned for producing high-quality grapes with terroir-specific characteristics.

There are 43 Rive in the denomination and each of them expresses a different combination of soil, exposure and microclimate. Production is limited, all the grapes are hand-harvested and the name of the 'riva' is shown on the bottle label.

Andreola's Rive Collection

Having identified several plots on grassy ridges with unique characteristics that could be expressed through single vineyard wines, Stefano Pola and oenologist Mirco Balliana created the Rive Collection.

Today, Andreola produces and bottles the most 'Rive'-branded sparkling wines in the entire denomination.

Brasseria Notting Hill

Brasseria Notting Hill: image by Robin Goldsmith

Andreola wines

Recently, Andreola hosted a dinner at Brasseria Notting Hill, where Chef Gonçalo Bouceiro prepared a special menu to accompany a selection of wines. All the wines sampled were in dark glass bottles, protecting them from potential light strike.

Andreola wines

Andreola wines tasted at the dinner: image by Robin Goldsmith