Along with Guido Grifoni and ampelographer Gianluca Moretti, Prof Seghetti is responsible for Pecorino resurgence and knows more than most about the variety. He says the Pecorinos of Abruzzo and Le Marche are all other things being equal “ broadly similar.
When the grapes are grown near the mountains (their traditional home), Pecorino wine is light and has a relatively low alcohol content. However on the medium to low-level slopes where the grape is mainly cultivated today, the wines are typically more alcoholic and structured very different from the one-dimensional, entry-level Pecorinos which predominate in the UK.
One of the leading Abruzzo producers of Pecorino is Faraone (imported into the UK by FMV). This family estate in Giulianova in the Teramane Hills first planted Pecorino in 2000, with the first vintage released in 2004. Oenologist Federico Faraone emphasises how this now ultra-trendy grape was shunned for so long because it was not high-yielding enough at a time when estates were only interested in vineyards that produced large volumes. Limiting yields, along with a little skin contact, has enabled Faraone to produce a Pecorino of remarkable structure and richness. Our clone is not very productive, about 6,000kg per hectare, Federico Faraone says. The result is a full-bodied, alcoholic wine up to 14.5% alcohol with extracts typical of red wines. There are more differences between the Pecorinos of Marche and our area if you compare with the Pecorino in the south of Abruzzo. There they are more light; ours is very powerful. It is a wine with a golden yellow colour also due to the maceration on the skin and sweet scents of honey, raisins and candied fruit. It can be combined with fish soups, baked fish and white meat. In terms of ageability, there is some debate about Pecorino credentials. Federico Faraone sees it as lasting no more than three to four years. But one of Abruzzo most legendary producers Emidio Pepe has a different take on it. Breaking a 50-year tradition of only producing one white wine " a varietal Trebbiano“ Emidio Pepe made its first vintage of Pecorino in 2010 from a north-facing 2.5ha vineyard plot planted in 2010 from a north-facing 2.5ha vineyard plot planted in 2006. Pepe vinifies Pecorino exactly the same way as its haunting Trebbiano the grapes crushed by feet and fermentation taking place in concrete tanks lined with glass. So although there is no skin maceration, there is a contact with skin and juice during foot crushing. But though the two varieties are treated in exactly the same way, they produce very different wines. It has been a long learning process lots of observation, lots of intuition,says estate representative Chiara de Iulis Pepe. We felt that in the last three vintages we got exactly what we want out of it, to have a wine with ageing potential and balance, structure and elegance. Pecorino is an aromatic grape variety, so more approachable from the beginning, more round, more flavourful and structured. All those characteristics made producers sell it too quickly, [but]for us, the balance, the delicacy and the real integrity of this grape only arrives with time. Such a huge growth in plantings as Pecorino has seen in recent years will have positive and negative consequences. A downside is that it will inevitably lead to lots more of that basic and fairly bland Pecorino becoming available. On the plus side, it will draw greater attention to the variety, and further refinement of what the grape can offer. So for those UK buyers and sommeliers looking for something exciting and different from the wealth of good stuff in Italy, Pecorino is definitely a variety to watch.
Four Pecorinos that scale the peaks of deliciousness Emidio Pepe Pecorino (Colli Aprutini IGT) Intensely flavoured with yellow plums, herbs, and a certain mineral feel. Though beautifully fresh and aromatic, this is a rich, structured white that should not be served too cold. A most interesting counterpoint to Emidio Pepe Trebbiano. Dynamic Wines Faraone Pecorino Collepietro (Colli Aprutini IGT) Collepietro is the name of the town where the Faraone family vineyards are planted. Short skin contact at controlled temperature followed by lees ageing. A wine with great structure " Federico Faraone goes so far as to call it a red‚ wine‚ dressed in white. Straw yellow colour, rich on the palate with scents of white flowers, a certain savoriness, herbal notes, stone fruits and hints of pineapple. £11.90, Tenuta Cerulli Spinozzi Pecorino Cortalto 2015, Colli Aprutini IGT Cerulli Spinozzi is one of the re-adopters of a kind of traditional pergola system for its pecorino vines " a measure to counter the effects of perceived climate change. This Pecorino sees some oak 75% of the wine being fermented in 500l barrels, the rest in steel tanks. An intense fruity-floral nose, with hints of white peach and clementine. Broad on the palate with tropical hints and definite richness a food wine for sure. Not yet in UK