Tenuta Di Aglaea Mount Etna Wine Tasting with Special Guest Owner / Winemaker, Anne-Louise Mikkelsen

Wednesday, November 6, 2019 - 07:30 PM

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“The food we were given was no more than eatable, but the patron was not mean about drink; he allowed us two litres of wine a day each, knowing that if a plongeur is not given two litres he will steal three.”

- George Orwell, Down and Out in Paris and London

That’s why we let the employees drink on the job at Wine Watch, our drug test is one of the hardest in the industry to pass.  You must be able to do your job while under the influence of at least a few glasses of wine!

Italy has more different grape varietals that they turn into wine than any other country on Earth and there are a lot of them that can make very high-quality wines as a single varietal and the two hottest in Sicily today are Carricante and Nerello Mascalese.  I was just blown away when I first tasted the wines of Tenuta di Aglaea and that is why we’re opening the Wine Bar on a Wednesday night to break bread with the owner and winemaker of this up and coming producer from Mount Etna.

Join us as we welcome Anne-Louise Mikkelsen to South Florida for an evening of great wines and a special dinner prepared by Toni Lampasone.  The fee for this tasting which includes dinner is $95 + tax, for reservations call 954-523-9463 or e-mail andy@winewatch.com.

Tenuta Di Aglaea Mount Etna Wine Tasting
with Special Guest Owner / Winemaker, Anne-Louise Mikkelsen
Wednesday November 6th
7:30pm

See the source image
Tenuta Di Aglaea Bianco            2016 
Price: $30.00           Sale $26.40
This is 100% Carricante and has a bright-gold color in the glass. Fresh notes of apple, light tropical scents of pineapple, and toasted notes slowly unfold as the wine sits  in the glass. A fresh core of fruit gently opens up on the midpalate and is edged off with a good acidity that lingers on to the end. It is well-rounded, balanced with a smooth, long finish.

Tenuta Di Aglaea Rosso 2018  
Price: $23.50           Sale $20.68
Aglaea is name of the youngest of the Three Graces – the three sisters and daughters of God Zeus. The wine ‘Aglaea’ is the ‘youngster’ in our portfolio, and made from grapes of both old and young vines. It is bright cherry red. Dried herbs and minerals make up the gentle perfumes, while on the palate good acidity and hints of dry cherries capture the senses. A light savory mouthfeel lingers towards the end.

Tenuta Di Aglaea "Thalia" 2015          
Price: $29.50           Sale $25.96
Thalia is a word of Sicilian dialect and resembles ‘look’ as in ‘look there!’ It is also the name of one of the Three Graces in ancient Greek history. The wine is transparent dry strawberry red in the glass, and expresses itself in a light and elegant manner. It opens up perfumed with delicate mineral aromas particular of the lava soil, a firm body, and fresh fruit notes accompanied by gentle tannins soft and delicate. Smooth drinking now but if patience permits, even better in five years’ time.

Tenuta Di Aglaea "Annacare" 2012
Price: $59.00           Sale $51.92
Annacare is of the finest selection of grapes. The name is a word derived from Sicilian dialect and means ‘to lull’ like to gently lull a newborn to sleep. Annacare is the essence of our perception of Etna and 100 year old Nerello Mascalese that has all to tell. It is pure, like magic spring water, and offers lots of mineral notes from the many century old lava-streams from where it derives. Light fruit notes of strawberry and raspberry. Reveals velvety tannins, is elegant, complex and with a long lasting aftertaste. It shows gracefully, is extremely delicate, self-confident and sophisticated. Drinks well in five-12 years.
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Tenuta Di Aglaea "Santo Spirito" 2015        
Price: $60.00          Sale $52.80
Santo Spirito is my first official single vineyard wine. It derives from the vineyard and province of Santo Spirito – a vineyard made up of terrasses held up by ancient dry-built stone walls. The vines are trained by the Alberello system, and grow at 600 – 800 m. (1.200 – 2.400 feet) above sea level.
The wine to me is a prime example of the essence of Etna at its best: the boost of the mineral lava notes, the mix of mature red fruit, flowers and a touch of spice – a complex and evolving set of flavours that go together to form a very elegant, very balanced wine. Santo Spirito is finesse.

Menu
Selection of Cheese and Charcuterie
King Salmon Carpaccio with grapefruit citrus segments and Elderberry Olive Oil
Berkshire Pork Loin with Sundried Cherry Nerello Mascalese Sauce and Black Bean Salsa

The fee for this tasting which includes dinner is $95 + tax, for reservations call 954-523-9463 or e-mail andy@winewatch.com

Our messengers from Etna…
Aglaea – the youngest of the Three Graces or Charites as they were also known the three sisters, and daughters of the God Zeus. Aglaea was the goddess of beauty, splendor, glory, magnificence and adornment. At times she acted as messenger for Aphrodite, the goddess of love.
Aglaea is significant with all our sentiments for Etna; with what our wines try to express, and how they do so. In that sense, our wines, the wines of Tenuta di Aglaea act as our messengers from Etna.
The Vine & the Vineyards
An absolute unique terroir makes the vineyards – a direct consequence of Etna and its numerous eruptions since its volcanic activity began more than half a million years ago.
The lava flows hardened layers upon layers, and ashes filled on top. The result today is a very porous soil that is abundant in minerals and extremely fertile. The vineyards are cultivated in terraces held up and apart by ancient stone walls 3-4 feet high.
The vineyards are located at the North side of Etna 2300-2700 feet above sea level providing for a relatively cool climate but with lots of sunshine, and light not least from the reflections coming from the sea, and the surrounding mountains with their characteristically high proportion of chalk. All the vineyards are planted with Nerello Mascalese, and trained by the Alberello system.
The plant density is approximately 3,200 vines per acre, and yields at a very low 1.65 pounds grapes per vine.

Three Unique Locations
The miniscule and excellent vineyard Bocca d’Orzo (.75 acre) in the zone of Randazzo combined with Passo Cannone (2.5 acres) and Santo Spirito (1.2 acres) in the zone of Passopisciaro make up the 4.5 acre production site for our wines.
Nerello Mascalese is considered most likely to be an indigenous Sicilian varietal, and is found in a large variety of clones. In our vineyards, due to old customs, we find also a few of the white carricante vines. These, however are harvested separately, and the grapes sold off.
Nerello is a grape with unique characteristics and is genuinely capable of expressing its background. It ripens late and slowly – how slow depends on the altitude that automatically provides for a cooler climate hence longer maturation period. The consequence is a grape that can offer a very distinctive and elegant nose - a very refined and aromatic profile all together.
The grapes are harvested by hand at the peak of maturity – when phenolic ripeness reaches climax, when sugar levels are perfect, and when we taste the grapes and they tell us that it is time.

A bit about Anne-Louise Mikkelsen

“I was programmed from early childhood to prefer the ‘adult life’,“ Anne-Louise Mikkelsen explains, “I would rather work than go to school and I always worked my holidays. I couldn’t wait to conclude my studies.”
After secondary school in her native Denmark, she studied a year in the United States, then went to high school in Denmark and continued to Copenhagen Business School where she studied International Business while competing in kickboxing and developing her interest in wine. “I got so enthusiastic about wine – I couldn’t get it out of my head. And one morning I woke up, and wrote an unsolicited application to [wine merchant] KB Vin.”
She got a student job at KB Vin with owner Kim Bulow, a specialist in Burgundy, which became the first region she got to know in depth.
During the summer holiday of 2003 she departed for Meursault in Burgundy, and worked for Jacques Thevenot-Marchal. In her spare time, she drove around to taste with as many producers as she could, and she was often offered to taste the better bottles once she took out her notebook and her sincere interest became obvious.
In 2004 she got a consultancy job in Connecticut where she investigated new distribution channels for a Swedish wine company. Completing that, she moved to Grenoble, France, to study more business and once more spent the weekends tasting wines in Burgundy.
Early in 2007, Anne-Louise read an account of the Italian Count, Gelasio Gaetani d’Aragona Lovatelli in the Financial Times. He had been a wine consultant to George Clooney, Michael Douglas, Don Johnson and Sharon Stone. Her interest piqued, she sent him a letter that lead to an invitation to join him in Tuscany. They bonded immediately and spent several days tasting wines and discussing the industry. Upon her departure, Gaetani exclaimed, ““You need to stay here and work - you get it: you understand our challenges!”
Later in the year, Anne-Louise again met Gaetani at a wine auction in Rome where he announced that he had a job for her at Castello di Terriccio, and she became responsible for the estate’s wine export and website in January 2008. “I felt really good – I felt at home in Italy culture-wise and lifestyle-wise. It was where I wanted to live my life.”
Later that year, Anne-Louise met the celebrated Italian winemaker, Paolo Caciorgna, (who counts musician Sting as one of his many clients), who had been making wine on Etna’s northern slopes. The volcanic terroir, and the old prephylloxera Nerello Mascalese vines fascinated him. In 2005, he bought his first parcel, Passo Cannone, which was a little over one acre in size, and made the wine N’Anticchia which in Sicilian dialect means ‘little’. That ‘the little’ can become something big he expresses like this: “Even miniscule vineyards have their very own identity; an identity we seek to understand in the vines, and express in our wines.”
After their encounter at Etna, she left her post at Castello di Terriccio in the fall 2008 and collaborated with Caciorgna in making Etna wines as well as an independent consultant for smaller producers advising on pricing, sales strategy etc. Their partnership lasted several years. But the old friend Gelasio was still lurking in the background. He suggested that she take a job at Tuscany’s Tenuta di Argiano, which is owned by his ex-wife, Countess Noemi Marone Cinzano. In January 2009, Anne-Louise Mikkelsen was appointed to the Commercial Director chair at Argiano, and spent 3 ½ productive years there, until her resignation in 2013 in order to devote herself to her own projects.
As of now she lives in a forest in Tuscany. From here she commutes to Etna where she now owns a couple of acres herself, aside from what she tenants and buys from other growers.
Anne-Louise observes: “The direct way doesn’t exist – you can only do something at Etna if you have the right connections and people want to help you. You have to be part of the local community to work there. Several wealthy people have invested at Etna because it got trendy. But for many it became a backlash because they aren’t present.
[Wine] is a live product – incredibly faceted, you shouldn’t produce it just for fun, so to speak. To many it has become a drag; a smaller fortune that has turned into red figures. It must be something you really care for, and you have to be present yourself.
“In Sicily, life is lived in an almost melancholic way, very simple but also very present and real; very alive and intense as it was lived 60 years ago. You live the moment, every instant. Etna has its own unique rhythm – there is just something in the air. You live, just live. Life is what it is; simple pleasures, and in Sicily—and especially Etna—we breathe it every day. There is a gratitude, a friendliness and joy. For me it is paradise: To watch the dusty vines being able to produce so beautiful wines – the yearly- if not to talk life cycle that a vine goes through is absolutely fascinating.
The workers who work in the vineyards have hands the size of my thighs. Tough work, rough hands, and yet it delivers such elegant wines. It is about basic life conditions where all the unnecessary is eliminated. It is the weather that counts; everything depends on that. We are small human beings when we watch and consider the old vines that were planted in the beginning of the 1900. We are basically just passing through, whereas the vines produce grapes every year, and will still be standing there when I will be here no longer.”
Excepted and adapted from Vinbladet | February - March 2013

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