We use cookies to make your experience better. To comply with the new e-Privacy directive, we need to ask for your consent to set the cookies. Learn more.
Vinnaioli Jermann W…Dreams 2021
Also available In Bond.
To purchase an In Bond product, please supply your VAT ID and address during checkout.
Vinnaioli Jermann W…Dreams 2021
- Grape 97% Chardonnay
- Country Italy
- Region Friuli Venezia Giulia
- ABV 13.5 %
- Producer Vinnaioli Jermann
- Case size 6/ 75cl
- 11 months in small 300 lt barrels made of French durmast
- Dedicated to U2’s “The Joshua Tree” album (1987) and specifically to the song “Where the streets have no name”, Dreams were created with the 1987 harvest and over the years its name and design had some variations. Since 2011 (the 25th anniversary of this wine) the whole production is made under screw cap – with Jermann being a pioneer of the closure in Italy
In the eighteenth century, the Jermann family migrated over 200 miles from Austria’s Burgenland to Biljana in Slovenia, tantalisingly close to their eventual home in Friuli. In 1881, Anton Jermann completed the final seven-mile leg of the journey to Farra d’Isonzo, where the historic family winery can be found. While the family brought a strong winemaking tradition with them, it was the vision of Anton’s great-grandson Silvio that turned the Jermann name into a reference point not only for the region, but also for Italy as a whole.
Country | Italy |
---|---|
Vintage | 2021 |
Bottles Per Case | 6 |
Bottle Size | 75 |
2 cases 10% off | No |
Winery | The release of Vintage Tunina, a pioneering blend of international and local varieties, sparked the revolution in 1975, but the arrival of Dreams Chardonnay in the mid-eighties, followed by Capo Martino in the early nineties, saw Jermann transcend from visionary to icon. With over 30 Tre Bicchieri awards from the Gambero Rosso guide, Jermann is rightly recognised as one of Italy’s finest producers. Jermann own a combined 170 hectares of prime vineyards at their two estates in Collio and Isonzo, and having been early advocates for sustainable agriculture, are well placed to continue their pioneering viticultural journey long into the future. |