The Denominazione di Origine Controllata (DOC) system was introduced in 1963 as a means of formalizing and protecting Italian wine appellations.
The French AOC system acted as a model for Italian authorities, as they established maximum yields, approved varieties and viticultural practices, set geographical boundaries, and authorized vinification techniques, styles, and minimum (or maximum) alcohol levels for each DOC wine. The Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita (DOCG) category, a more prestigious and—theoretically—higher quality designation designed to represent the best of Italian wine, was also introduced in 1963, although the first DOCG was not awarded until 1980, when Brunello di Montalcino, Barolo and Vino Nobile di Montepulciano were upgraded from DOC. Most DOCGs (and many DOCs) stipulate minimum aging requirements for the wines—a notable departure from the legal requirements set by most French appellations. Over time, the system became unwieldy and too lenient; yields and geographical restrictions became too generous. Hundreds of DOC zones were established, leading to consumer confusion. Even the DOCG category, which should only include the recognizable benchmarks of Italian wine, was watered down by such unlikely promotions as Romagna Albana. As criticism of the system amplified in the 1970s and 1980s, many of Italy’s finer producers resorted to the Vino da Tavola category, releasing experimental wines produced in a manner conflicting with DOC legislation. Vino da Tavola, or table wine, cannot bear any geographical designation other than “Italy” itself, yet some of Italy’s most iconic wines—in particular the “Super Tuscans” Sassicaia and Tignanello—got their start as simple Vino da Tavola.
I will be traveling to Turin and then Verona for VinItaly on April 10 an 11. Does anyone have recommendations on winery visits and/or VinItaly exhibitors who should not be missed?
Your suggestions are welcome.
A few comments on the Asti-text: Unless the wine is one of the rare Asti Spumante Metodo Classico there is no second fermentation with Asti Spumante/Moscato d'Asti. The juice is clarified and cooled down awaiting direct fermentation in pressure tank, so no base wine and second fermentation. For some years now Asti has only reached second place when it comes to largest DOCG. Since 2012 Chianti DOCG has turned out more volume. And the allowed maximum pressure in Moscato d'Asti is 2,5 bar.
The text on the wine law says the first IGT wines appeared in 1994. Which IGT wines? I can't find anyone with approval before 1995.
Are DOCG wines "retro" when they are established?
Sorry Matt, my bad. I had it in my head that the Vernaccia di San Gimignano was the first DOCG, not the first DOC. I should have known better (that's what I get for reading until 3 in the morning)... Thanks for the check-up.