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Badalucco de la Iglesia Garcia 'XI Perpetuum'

This singular, dry, oxidative wine is made in perpetuum, an ancient solera-like process marrying old wine with young, renewing a tradition that has been practiced on the island since the time of the Romans. Late harvest, third-pass Grillo ('Griddu') from the renowned Contrada Triglia is aged oxidatively for nearly twelve years and is married to Catarratto Lucido from the 2015 and 2016 vintages that spent nearly 60 days on its skins.

Produced in accordance with biodynamic and regenerative principles on the classic 'terra rossa' soils of western Sicily, 'Perpetuum' was foot-trodden and its 'free-run' juice fermented with native yeasts. Exhilarating notes of Seville orange, persimmon, almond, saffron and ginger are perfectly allied to the wine's complexity, balance and deep savor. This can be enjoyed with grilled tuna; with spaghetti con la bottarga; or even grilled wild game or lamb, as well as with roasted nuts and a variety of cured meats and cheeses. It will keep well thru 2040 and beyond.

unopened, store horizontallyunopened, store horizontally
keeps until 2035
(50-59ºF)
once openedonce opened
keeps 1-2 days
(55-59ºF)
serving suggestionserving suggestionserving suggestionserving suggestion
4-5 oz. pour
(55-59ºF)

About Badalucco de la Iglesia Garcia

Pierpaolo Badalucco and Beatriz de la Iglesia Garcia began Dos Tierras, their singular winemaking project, upon his return to western Sicily and Contrada Badalucco in 2000. They began slowly, restoring ancient vineyards and scouring the countryside for examples of perpetuo, the oxidative perpetual wine that could be found in homes of the local contadini farmers more than two millennia before the arrival of the British and the introduction of fortification.

Adherents of Ingham's seminal Decalogo, his family had produced Marsala in the small village of Petrosino from 1880 until the late 1960s, when his father and grandfather grew disillusioned with the industrial direction of the appellation. Piero & Beatriz renewed his family's commitment to Ingham's precepts, especially to the importance of la basa Marsala, the 'alto grado' base wine that is essential to region's greatest expressions, fortified or unfortified. In this, they were blessed with a three-hectare plot in Contrada Triglia, a celebrated zone less than 200-meters from the Mediterranean Sea that is universally recognized as 'ground zero' for the greatest Grillo on the island.

Badalucco de la Iglesia Garcia farm this plot and others along biodynamic and regenerative lines and now have 10.5 hectares under vine. Varieties include: Grillo, Catarrato Lucido, Grecanico and Verdejo, as well as Nero d'Avola, Tempranillo and some of western Sicily's best olives. (The Verdejo and Tempranillo were part of the agreement which convinced Beatriz to move to Sicily from her beloved Spain, thus 'Dos Tierras', or 'two lands'.) All are planted selection massale, and everything in the vineyard and cellar is performed manually, by hand (or foot), in keeping with three generations of Badalucco winemaking before them. The quality of the grapes, and especially the skins, is paramount, and all wines are produced entirely from 'free-run' juice. These reach their apotheosis in two wines, XI - Perpetuum and Pipa ¾, unfortified but long aged, oxidative expressions of rare energy and savor that are and among the best of their kind, from Marsala and beyond. Full details

About White Wine

White wine is typically produced by the 'direct-press' of grapes, regardless of their color, when the juice is separated from the grape skins gently and quickly enough, leaving wine that can be imperceptibly pale to golden in hue. As a result, while the large majority of white wines are made from grapes with yellow or green skins, they can also be made from red-, purple- or black-skinned grapes, as long as there is no maceration or skin contact. (The only exception to this is the red-fleshed Teinturiers.)

Roussillon and the Vinho Regional Lisboa are two up-and-coming white wine regions, as importers, distributors and consumers increasingly recognize them as a source of complex, mineral-driven wines that can be enjoyed in their youth and over the course of years. Both regions express their terroirs in inimitable ways, especially their respective proximity to the Mediterranean Sea and Atlantic Ocean. Bucelas DOC is regarded as the native home of one of Portugal's greatest white wine varieties, Arinto, while the complex geologies of Roussillon highlight autochthonous varieties Grenache blanc, Grenache gris, and Macabeu. Full details

SKU Vintage Region Origin Desc Cepage % Alc Size/Pack Finish BTL Barcode Cs Barcode Cs Wgt
HZ 6425NVSiciliaITOxidative/Oxidized Wine; DryGrillo; Catarratto14.0%500/6cork0806891860682108068918606897.00 kg

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