Rechercher dans ce blog

Thursday, January 21, 2021

Castellucci restaurant group introduces its own wine label - Atlanta Journal Constitution

sela.indah.link

The concept of a family dinner with wine is something that has been instilled in the Castellucci family. “When we first opened restaurants,” Fred Castellucci said, “we would all work six days, and Sundays would always be the day off, to get together and have family dinner.”

Good wine was a sort of social lubricant, and a Sunday tradition. “We’re passionate wine people,” he said.

As an embodiment of the restaurant group’s historic roots, Fred and Stephanie Castellucci began their wine pursuit a year and a half ago. They did a fair amount of wine travel, and partnered with importers Olé & Obrigado.

“Co-founder Alberto Orte said to us, ‘Let’s make wine together; we can use fruit from these plots,’” Fred said. Orte became their winemaker, as they set out identifying flavor profiles, regions and great values that would be a fit for their restaurants.

“After going through different iterations and names, a couple bubbled to the top,” Fred said. They landed on Más Asi, which translates to “more like that.”

Rioja, the biggest winemaking region of Spain, and the region from which the Castellucci group sells the most wine, was an obvious first choice. Made from grapes grown in two plots of Rioja Alta, Más Asi Tempranillo is “young, but complex,” he said, and great with food. “It’s very much like a food-driven Italian wine.”

“Juicy red fruit, peppery, spicy, and a little dusty,” Stephanie Castellucci added.

Their alvarinho was made with grapes from the Portuguese side of the Minho river (which borders Portugal and Spain). Stephanie described the white wine as light and delicate, with flavors of lemon and fresh apple. It has great salinity and bright minerality.

“It’s a nice balance,” Fred Castellucci said. “Softer and creamier, because it has no added carbon dioxide.”

Sustainability also was a factor when developing the wines, with a focus on organic and biodynamic viniculture.

The Rioja and alvarinho are available in all Castellucci restaurants, for $40 and $44 a bottle, respectively, and $10 and $11 per glass. You also can purchase them for takeout via each restaurant’s website, for $20 a bottle.

In the future, look for the Castelluccis to jump into the wine business in a bigger way, perhaps with a new concept.

Read more stories like this by liking Atlanta Restaurant Scene on Facebook, following @ATLDiningNews on Twitter and @ajcdining on Instagram.

About the Author




January 21, 2021 at 10:54PM
https://ift.tt/2Nl5CHn

Castellucci restaurant group introduces its own wine label - Atlanta Journal Constitution

https://ift.tt/31lUVcw
Wine

No comments:

Post a Comment

Featured Post

PBR Created a 1776-Can Pack of Beer | Food & Wine - Food & Wine

sela.indah.link PBR Created a 1,776-Can Pack of Beer | Food & Wine Skip to content ...

Popular Posts