Sagrantino is a vigorous, relatively disease-resistant yet low-yielding vine. Although it flowers early, and reaches veraison early to form thick dark skins and large pips, it requires a long hot season to ripen, producing small slightly conical winged bunches, late in the season; in Umbria usually late October. Its wines contain more tannin than those made from
Aglianico or
Tannat, and twice the level of
Cabernet Sauvignon or
Nebbiolo wines. It creates wines that are inky purple with an almost-black center. The bouquet is one of dark, brooding red fruits with hints of plum, cinnamon, and earth. Montefalco Rosso is a
Sangiovese-dominant
DOC red wine that requires between 10 and 25% of the blend to be Sagrantino.
Australia Sagrantino was first brought into
Australia in 1998 by the Chalmers Nursery, and the first wine to be produced in Australia was the Chalmers 2004 vintage from their vineyard in Euston,
New South Wales. Figures are hard to obtain for such a small segment of the Australian wine industry, but one source estimated about of Sagrantino vineyards in 2010. Sagrantino is grown in small lots right across Australia; wines are made in
South Australia by Lou Miranda,
d'Arenberg, Olivers Taranga and Mitolo, in
Victoria by Pizzini, Andrew Peace and Chalmers, and as far north as the
Granite Belt region of Queensland by Symphony Hill and Balancing Rock. Australian Sagrantino wines tend to be more immediately approachable and "fruit-driven" with less ageing used, and winemakers employing various techniques to moderate the high tannins present in the grape.
United States Sagrantino is being grown in small areas in the United States mainly in California, but also in Washington, Texas, North Carolina, and Sonoita Arizona. Producers such as DaVero, Benessere, Clesi, Raffaldini, and Messina Hof are growing and vinifying Sagrantino as a result of trialling grape varieties that handle hotter and drier conditions than
Cabernet Sauvignon and other traditionally grown varieties.
Brazil Sagrantino is grown on small properties in southern Brazil, in the region of Faria Lemos, a district of the municipality of
Bento Gonçalves, Rio Grande do Sul. ==References==