Rosato Colline Pescaresi IGT Organic 3L - MorMaj

Rosato Colline Pescaresi IGT Organic 3L - MorMaj

€16,50
Skip to product information
Rosato Colline Pescaresi IGT Organic 3L - MorMaj

Rosato Colline Pescaresi IGT Organic 3L - MorMaj

€16,50

👉🏼 VAT EXCLUDED

Rosé wine by MorMaj winery is made with Montepulciano from Colline Pescaresi and is extremely juicy and easy to drink. It comes from Tocco di Casauria, between mount MORone and MAJella and is vinified in steel vats in contact with the lees. A craft rosé, unfiltered and little wild!

📍 Abruzzo
👉 Colline Pescaresi IGT - 13,5% alc.
💓 Rosé Wine 🌱 Organic Wine
💰🍷: 0,68€
Low stock

WHY WE LIKE IT

A tasty and characterful Montepulciano vinified in rosé method; not a Provence light rosé just to be clear! Perfumed on the nose with beautiful freshness in the mouth. Try it with some Abruzzo fish dishes or with some nice fatty local cold cuts.

MorMaj

MorMaj is an artisanal winery from Abruzzo based in Tocco di Casauria, in the hills of Pescara, founded by Andrea and Francesco; strengthened by their professional backgrounds, one in marketing and communication and the other in farm management, they wanted to invest in this area so rich in food and wine excellence. Together they have created a young and ambitious team which in just a few years has managed to make a name for itself well beyond regional borders, arriving with its bottles in the big cities.

The name MorMaj is a neologism inspired by the mountains surrounding Tocco di Casauria: Morrone and Majella. The first three letters of these mountains, put together, give rise to MorMaj. The vineyards are located 300 metres above sea level and the most cultivated varieties are Montepulciano, vinified in both red and rosé versions, Trebbiano and Pecorino. Between the rows they practise organic farming with copper and sulphur-based treatments and always respecting environmental sustainability and biodiversity.

In the cellar the experimentation is always a goal: they use different kinds of vats, such as steel, concrete and fibreglass and they try to keep the nature of the grapes intact. The fermentations are spontaneous with only native yeasts and then they try to touch the wine as little as possible, reducing racking to a maximum of two, without filtration or clarification.