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Wednesday, 15 October 2014

Tommasi Amarone diner at La Cucina, one of the best Italian wines available in HCMC!

If you like wine, especially if you are a fan of Italian wine, you must try Amarone, one of those gems that was discovered due to an error.

Unlike most of the wine we drink, Amarone is not made with fresh grapes but with dried wines. Amarone was in fact born by mistake and due to famine. The areas where Amarone is made used to be very poor so they used to dry the grapes to trade, which made them in fact the alternative currency. When you dry the grapes around half of the water evaporates and you get a high concentration of sugar.


Apart from being eaten, these dry grapes were also used to produce a sweet young wine, what we could call a sweet version of Amarone. However someone decided to keep the wine a bit longer in the barrels and they discovered that rather than sweet, the wine transformed into something dry and bitter, hence the name “Amarone” from the Italian word amaro which means bitter.





At the end of the 60’s Amarone started to become popular and it was officially named Amarone de la Vapolicella, as Vapolicella, situated between Verona and lake Garda, is the only area in the world allowed to produce Amarone.




Amarone is traditionally made in big barrels (65 to 85 hectolitres) made of slavonian wood, chosen to preserve the wine’s own flavours without adding any vanilla or wood taste.

Perhaps the most famous producer of Amarone wine is the Tommasi family who recently presented some of their wines with the Wine warehouse, their official distributor, in HCMC with a wine dinner at La Cucina in District 7.










Tommasi is one of the main Amarone ambassadors. Tommasi is a family business which has been making wine since 1902 and it is now on its 4th generation of family wine makers. 






Although they started growing vines in just a few hectares, over the years they have acquired 195 hectares of vines in different states, 100 of which are dedicated to Amarone and Valpolicela wines, with 15 hectares used to produce delicious prosecco.


As they own all their vineyards, Tommasi concentrates in producing quality rather than quantity, delivering wines with balance and elegance.



Amarone wines are made mostly out of Corvina, Molinara and Rondinella grapes, which are partially dried, in the case of Tommasi for around 100 days. By law wines then have to be aged at least 2 years in barrels, although Tommasi keeps them for a minimum of 3 years, aiming at even better quality, and released only when they are ready to drink, although these wines keep evolving and are usually good for twenty to twenty five years.



We had the pleasure of starting the dinner with a glass of prosecco (Italian sparking wine), which was light and crispy, to be followed by the Le Rosse Tommasi Pinot Grigio, a fresh and light white wine, ideal pair for the fresh hand made burrata cheese which was served with.








The Tommasi valpolicella classic, a fresh red wine full of fruit flavours, followed paired with risotto and grilled swordfish; and then the star of the night, the Amarone classico was perfectly paired by chef Ruben, with parpadella and scaloppini.

The dinner was finished with dessert and a glass of beautiful Grappa di Amarone. A beautiful dinner with amazing wines, which you can enjoy from any of the Wine Warehouse retail outlets.











These wines are very elegant, and if you are patient enough keep some bottles for a  few years and see how the same wines from young and vibrant to old and wise, the current vintage of Amarone classic is 2010, but soon the 2011 will be delivered, so if you want to try the 2010 hurry up before all is gone!






Side effects of great wines?...

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