Native Italian Wine Grapes, Crossings and Hybrids: from Ancient to Modern Times, It’s “In with the Old, but also In with the New”

This article refers to the first guided tasting of a series of masterclasses held by Ian D’Agata on March 4, 2026 in NYC, a by-invitation only event that was part of the 2026 Ian D’Agata Wine Culture World Wine Tour program.

by Ian D’Agata

There are wineries that are able to think outside the box and ride that stream of thought to bigger and better heights. Other wineries are doomed to fail and never outgrow their small, wholly local, reality. This and other thoughts were crossing my mind as I tasted through the range of wines featured in this report, wines made by some of Italy’s very best wineries. “Best” in this case is in reference to not just the quality of the wines but also to the estate owner’s ability to chart a course, often an innovative one, and stick to it for their wineries. Each of the wineries in this report is characterized by a specific ability that has, over the years, helped it become what it is today. Abilities such as, for example, coming up with a solution to a to a specific problem that other have failed to solve; or to see a potential benefit where everybody else saw nothing but losses and to turn that to their advantage; or to be not the best at one thing but extremely good at everything it does; or to turn something previously thought of as cheap and cheerful and pull out the depth and complexity that was there all along; to tackle foreign markets and broadcast their wares rather than playing it safe in markets that might be comfortable but that offer little or no growth; and more. It is why these wineries are successful and much admired in Italy and abroad.

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Ian D’Agata
Ian D’Agata

Ian D’Agata is an internationally famous, multi-award winning author who has been speaking and writing about wine for thirty years. His latest books (Native Wine Grapes of Italy, Italy’s Native Wine Grape Terroirs, Italy’s Grapes and Wines: The definitive Compendium Region by Region and the most recent, Barolo Terroir) are considered the bibles of Italian wine and have received numerous prestigious awards such as the Louis Roederer International Wine Awards “Book of the Year” title, the Gourmand World Book Awards “Best European Wine Book” and being named to the “Best Wine Books of the Year” lists of newspapers and magazines such as the NY Times, the Financial Times and Food & Wine. For eight years, Ian has also been the co-author of the Italy section in Hugh Johnson’s Pocket Book of Wine, the world’s best- selling wine guide with 46 editions to date and over 12 Million copies sold all over the world; he has since been also put in charge of the Alsace and Malta sections.
He is the is currently the President of Ian D’Agata Wine Culture, one of China’s wine education platforms, that includes the Ian D’Agata Wine Review and the Ian D’Agata Wine Academy. Ian is a former staff writer at Stephen Tanzer’s International Wine Cellar, Contributing Editor of Decanter, and Senior Editor of Vinous. His writings have always focused on the wines of Italy, France, China and Canada, for which he has won numerous international awards and accolades, including the Comitato Grandi Cru d’Italia “Best Youngest Wine Journalist of Italy” and the “Best Wine Journalist of Italy” awards, as well as Canada’s 2018 VQA award (Out of Ontario section) and 2017 Cuvée Award of Excellence.
Intensely devoted to the research and study of native wine grapes, Ian was officially named in 2015 to Italy’s prestigious Accademia della Vite e del Vino (Italy’s official association of wine academicians, researchers, and university professors) and is currently the Vice President of the Association Internationale des Terroirs.

Contacts: Instagram: @ian_dagata

Email: ian.dagata@iandagatawine.com

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