The history of Vietti wines goes back four generations. Wine has been
vinified here since the 19th century but it took until the beginning
of the 20th Century for Mario Vietti to bottle under his own label.
Mario Vietti’s daughter Luciana married Alfredo Currado. In 1990 their
son Luca Currado joined his borther-in-law Mario Cordero to lead the
winery. Vietti now owns 31 hectares of vineyards in the provinces
of Cuneo and Asti.
Alfredo Currado proved to be a trend setter. In 1952 he was one of
the first to bottle single vineyard Barolo with his Brunate, Rocche
and Villero. In 1967 he turned his focus to rediscover and understand
the Arneis, an under-appreciated variety at the time, but one which
is now the most famous white wine in the Roero area.
In 1970 Alfredo and Luciana were inspired by a local artist to break
with the status quo of the region once again. To give freshness and
modernity to the labels they began featuring artwork by Gianni Gallo,
Eso Peluzzi, Pietro Cascella, Mino Maccari and Pier Paolo Pasolini.
In 1996, for the official presentation of the Janet Fish 1990 Villero
label, the entire collection was shown at the Museum of Modern Art
in New York.
The Barbera d’Alba Tre Vigne comes from 35 year-old vines in Monforte,
Barolo and Castiglione Falletto, harvested by hand typically at 54
hl/ha. Temperature controlled fermentation in stainless steel, then
into casks for eight months. It is then bottled unfiltered.
Just over 12,000 bottle are produced annually.
The information
on this page comes in a presentation-quality pdf file: here
Shelf
talkers in pdf: here