Description
The Mandrarossa wines hail from a selection of the best sites within Cantine Settesoli’s 6,000 hectares of vineyard in southwestern Sicily, planted with 32 grape varieties. The vineyards are split between the cooperative’s 2,000 members and cover the area around Selinunte, the hauntingly beautiful ruins of a Greek town founded 2,600 years ago. Cantine Settesoli helps support the restoration of this archaeological site.
First produced in 1999, Mandrarossa opened its own winery in 2021. Solar panels fuel this completely sustainable winery, which is well integrated into the surrounding hills. They have since increasingly focused on single-site wines after mapping the diverse soils of their vineyards and identifying their best sites.
Under the leadership of co-operative president Giuseppe Bursi, consultant winemaker Alberto Antonini has also sought to improve viticulture, which has resulted in better wines. Working with terroir specialist Pedro Parra and head winemaker Mimmo De Gregorio, Alberto has selected 500 hectares of vineyards from 160 growers to produce the Mandrarossa wines. These vineyards are close to the sea, where intense sunlight, moderating sea breezes, mild temperatures, multiple elevations and a myriad of different soil types combine to create the quality of grapes that Mimmo and Alberto are looking for. Pedro has also singled out limestone as the soil with the highest potential for quality wines.
The sweet Serapias hails from Mandrarossa’s project on the island of Pantelleria. Made of partly dried Zibibbo (Muscat of Alexandria) grapes added to the fermenting juice, the resulting wine shows delicate aromatic notes.
The wine presents a good alcohol content and a bold minerality, which comes from the volcanic origin of the soils in Pantelleria. The bouquet is intense with aromas of citrus, roses, jasmine and raisins. The palate it’s full and round, with mineral and sweet flavours. The taste has a trace of flint stone. The finish is long and extremely persistent.