Sparkling red wine
It was the end of January 1943, the Russian campaign had ended dramatically, and among the soldiers waiting to be repatriated was Luigi Calatroni. He had to reach his home town as quickly as possible. At stake was a contract that had been handed down from father to son for three generations and had to be signed so that Luigi could become a sharecropper. Armed with his tenacity, between long walks, underground trains, wagons and makeshift vehicles, in two months he crossed half of Europe, from Leningrad (now St Petersburg) to Montecalvo Versiggia.
To Luigi - known as Vigiö - we have dedicated this Bonarda from pure Croatina grapes, cultivated with the same tenacity with which he was able to obtain what he wanted. Macerated about 7 days on the skins, naturally re-fermented, it is a Bonarda with structure, tannic and austere, with a rich and decisive nose. To be drunk with local dishes, cured meats, stuffed pasta or even a tasty boiled meat. To enjoy the pleasantness of the bubble we recommend serving it at 14 °C.
The Bonarda project
Bonarda Vigiö is part of the Bonarda project, devised and promoted by the Distretto del Vino di Qualità dell'Oltrepò Pavese (Quality Wine District of the Oltrepò Pavese area) to promote the territory's most typical wine. The project is publicised on social media with the hashtag #laMossaPerfetta.
The project envisages a production regulation that is much more restrictive than that of Bonarda DOC and a bottle with a special shape (called Marasca) that can only be used by companies associated with the District.
When you drink #laMossaPerfetta you are guaranteed to drink a wine produced by companies that grow the grapes in their own vineyards, vinify them in their own cellars and market the wine made from those grapes directly.
On the eleventh of November 1964, Luigi Calatroni was sitting at a table: in front of him was a sheet of paper with the stamp of the Montecalvo Versiggia municipality, a document that would change his life forever and that was just waiting for a signature... his!
That sheet of paper was a contract attesting to the transfer of ownership of the Casa Bella land from the Vecchietti family to Luigi. Until 1964, Luigi had cultivated those pinot noir vines as a sharecropper, like the four generations before him. The sharecropper was a winegrower who paid rent for the land with half of the vineyard's yield (and you know: for a winegrower, his grapes are like his children).
After years spent in the sun and rain tending the vines, after the terrible campaign in Russia during the Second World War and an adventurous return to his homeland with makeshift means, the Vigiö d'la Cà Bela (as he was called) had succeeded: he had conquered a strip of land in the Versa valley and would hand it down with pride to the next generation.
But let's move on to the present day. So many things have changed over the years: tractors are almost perfect machines, technology in the cellar has evolved and the concept of wine is no longer what it once was.
It's midday and from the kitchen comes the smell of freshly prepared agnolotti: Marisa calls everyone to report... "It's lunchtime! Fausto gets off the tractor, making sure that the hose isn't leaking oil, Cristian comes out of the cellar after making sure that all the barrels are in place and Stefano, back from deliveries, calls the girls into the office "It's ready!".
A family is sitting at a table in front of a plate of steaming agnolotti accompanied by a bottle of Pinot Noir. Amidst the hubbub of the table, a thought occasionally crops up... Would all this have been possible if Vigiö's tenacity had not pushed him to fulfil his dream?