
Grapes
Words OF Marco de Grazia
There was a grape producer in Burgundy who said a thing that I think was very wise. He said, “Pinot Noir is not a great grape. Pinot Noir is a great grape in Burgundy.” So Nerello is not a great grape. It’s a great grape on Etna. Outside of Etna, it doesn’t deliver. I’m not saying that Pinot Noir doesn’t deliver outside of Burgundy, but I haven’t ever tasted a Pinot Noir outside of Burgundy that can compare with great Pinot Noirs of Burgundy.
So the great appellation is the best place for its variety. Otherwise, people would be planting Cabernet in Burgundy and Pinot Noir and Bordeaux and so on and so forth. And it wouldn’t work. So I think the best thing about Nerello Mascalese is that it took whatever it took, centuries and centuries or millennia, to find the right grape.

And it’s not the only grape, because there’s also Nerello Cappuccio, there’s Nerello Mantellato, there’s some … They used to mix in some white grapes with the red. And in the old vines, you still find them. There are wines that like solitude, grapes that like solitude. There are wines and grapes that like company and enjoy company. And Nerello Mascalese is just the right grape for Etna, for red wines, just like Carricante is the right grape for white wines here. Then you can add a little bit of this and that that’s been added here for forever and ever.
But comparing it with another grape, that doesn’t really make much sense to me. Yes, I can say that, for me, it is the similarities between Nerello. There’s a kinship between Nerello, Pinot Noir and Nebbiolo. There’s some kind of kinship there. How, I don’t know.
If you taste them separately, one reminds you of the other. If you taste them together, you see how different they are, but that they share something ineffable, but that’s there. It’s like two brothers or two sisters. Sometimes they don’t really look alike, but you can tell they’re brothers or sisters. It’s something like that.
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About
Marco de Grazia was one of the leading figures in the modernist Barolo movement. He was a well-known wine distriubutor of small, up-and-coming producers when he discovered a fascination for the uniqueness of Etna, Sicily. It was in the late ‘90s that he first came to the region to check out the estates and wines, and realized the potential the area had to offer. Only a handful of wineries were operating in Etna at the time, as wine production had been virtually abandoned. Captivated by the volcanic soils, the variety of altitudes and microclimates, the native grapes and of course the people, Marco decided to put down roots, purchase land and invest in the future of Etna.
Marco’s commitment to his passion for Etna resulted in fairly immediate success with his winery Tenuta delle Terre Nere, and quickly generated interest from other major wine producers who followed suit and invested in the region as well. Nowadays the region boasts nearly 200 producers making highly sought after terroir-driven wines from the island’s indigenous varietals.
Stef Yim of Sciara: A Mount Etna Natural Wine Journey from Hong Kong via California