Notify me
2021 Südtirol Eisacktaler Sylvaner
Manni NössingManni is a towering, stubbly, Alpine hulk of a man with a comical cynicism about the modern wine world, as if Woody Harrelson grew several inches taller, threw on a baseball cap, and launched into a bombastic tirade in a mixture of German and Italian, grunting and sighing about Italian consumers’ tasteless appetite for insipid bulk wines. All that is to say he shares our aversion to “pop wines” that reflect a winemaking formula—you’ll see that his wines are anything but banal. His Sylvaner from high in the Dolomites is a finely channeled mountain breeze, an exercise in textural delicacy that will leave your palate tingling with the sensation of crispy minerals.
—Anthony Lynch
Wine Type: | white |
Vintage: | 2021 |
Bottle Size: | 750mL |
Blend: | Sylvaner |
Appellation: | Alto Adige – Valle Isarco |
Country: | Italy |
Region: | Alto Adige |
Producer: | Manni Nössing |
Winemaker: | Manni Nössing |
Vineyard: | 2-8 years, 0.3 ha |
Soil: | Sandy, Granite |
Farming: | Sustainable |
Alcohol: | 13% |
More from this Producer or Region
2020 Alto Adige Pinot Nero “Mazzon”
Italy | Alto Adige
Always one of the dreamiest versions of the variety we import—ethereal and bright, with notes of orange peel and pink peppercorn.
2019 Alto Adige Pinot Nero “Mazzon”
Italy | Alto Adige
Exquisite Italian Alpine character that could come from nowhere else in the world—one of Italy’s most beguiling hidden gems.
2019 Alto Adige Merlot-Cabernet Franc
Italy | Alto Adige
Merlot and Cabernet Franc born from such high altitudes display classic cedar, graphite, and black cherry notes, but with smooth, velvety tannins that bely the bottle’s youthful age.
2019 Lagrein Riserva “Di Ora in Ora”
Italy | Alto Adige
This cuvée is dark-fruited velvet in a bottle.
2019 Alto Adige Sauvignon “Voglar”
Italy | Alto Adige
The uncommon location and treatment capture a different face of this very familiar variety, deep and mouth-filling yet carrying a bracing jolt of limey acidity.
2016 Alto Adige Merlot-Cabernet Sauvignon “Iugum”
Italy | Alto Adige
Notes of Cassis, black cherries, and espresso draw you into the glass and keep you coming back to decipher what makes this cuvée and terroir so special.
2017 Alto Adige Merlot-Cabernet Sauvignon “Iugum”
Italy | Alto Adige
Notes of Cassis, black cherries, and espresso draw you into the glass and keep you coming back to decipher what makes this cuvée and terroir so special.
2022 Südtirol Eisacktaler Sylvaner
Italy | Alto Adige
This Sylvaner, from high in the Dolomites, is a finely channeled mountain breeze, an exercise in textural delicacy that will leave your palate tingling with the sensation of crispy minerals.
2022 Südtirol Eisacktaler Riesling
Italy | Alto Adige
Crisp and lean with mouthwatering minerality, Nössing’s Riesling is one of great finesse and precision.
About The Producer
Manni Nössing
About The Region
Alto Adige
In the heart of the Dolomites, Alto Adige is Italy’s northernmost wine region. Having changed hands multiples times in its history between Italy and the Austro-Hungarian Empire (it shares a border with Austria), it boasts strong Germanic influence on its culture, language, cuisine, as well as its wines.
The mountainous geography is the principal determinant of local winemaking styles, with the high-altitude vineyards and cool Alpine climate favoring primarily crisp, racy, aromatic whites from varieties like Kerner, Sauvignon, Müller Thurgau, and Grüner Veltliner. A Mediterranean influence on climate is channeled north up the valley until Bolzano, permitting the cultivation of certain reds as well, among which Schiava, Lagrein, Pinot Nero, and Merlot fare best.
Small growers who once sold fruit to the area’s multiple co-ops are now increasingly bottling their own wines. The arrival of many quality-oriented artisans on the scene caught our eye years ago, and we now count three estates from Südtirol, as it is also known, in our portfolio. These high-acid mountain wines make for a beautifully invigorating aperitivo with thinly sliced speck, a local specialty.
More from Alto Adige or Italy
2016 Alto Adige Merlot-Cabernet Sauvignon “Iugum”
Peter Dipoli Italy | Alto Adige
2022 Veneto Frizzante “Primo Incontro”
Davide Vignato Italy | Veneto
2023 Lambrusco Grasparossa di Castelvetro “Monovitigno”
Fattoria Moretto Italy | Emilia-Romagna
2017 Alto Adige Merlot-Cabernet Sauvignon “Iugum”
Peter Dipoli Italy | Alto Adige
2022 Südtirol Eisacktaler Riesling
Manni Nössing Italy | Alto Adige
2019 Alto Adige Merlot-Cabernet Franc
Peter Dipoli Italy | Alto Adige
2019 Lagrein Riserva “Di Ora in Ora”
Ferruccio Carlotto Italy | Alto Adige
2020 Alto Adige Pinot Nero “Mazzon”
Ferruccio Carlotto Italy | Alto Adige
2019 Alto Adige Sauvignon “Voglar”
Peter Dipoli Italy | Alto Adige
2022 Südtirol Eisacktaler Sylvaner
Manni Nössing Italy | Alto Adige
2020 Barolo “La Tartufaia”
Giulia Negri Italy | Piedmont
2019 Alto Adige Pinot Nero “Mazzon”
Ferruccio Carlotto Italy | Alto Adige
2016 Alto Adige Merlot-Cabernet Sauvignon “Iugum”
Peter Dipoli Italy | Alto Adige
2022 Veneto Frizzante “Primo Incontro”
Davide Vignato Italy | Veneto
2023 Lambrusco Grasparossa di Castelvetro “Monovitigno”
Fattoria Moretto Italy | Emilia-Romagna
2017 Alto Adige Merlot-Cabernet Sauvignon “Iugum”
Peter Dipoli Italy | Alto Adige
2022 Südtirol Eisacktaler Riesling
Manni Nössing Italy | Alto Adige
2019 Alto Adige Merlot-Cabernet Franc
Peter Dipoli Italy | Alto Adige
2019 Lagrein Riserva “Di Ora in Ora”
Ferruccio Carlotto Italy | Alto Adige
2020 Alto Adige Pinot Nero “Mazzon”
Ferruccio Carlotto Italy | Alto Adige
2019 Alto Adige Sauvignon “Voglar”
Peter Dipoli Italy | Alto Adige
2022 Südtirol Eisacktaler Sylvaner
Manni Nössing Italy | Alto Adige
2020 Barolo “La Tartufaia”
Giulia Negri Italy | Piedmont
2019 Alto Adige Pinot Nero “Mazzon”
Ferruccio Carlotto Italy | Alto Adige
Where the newsletter started
Where the newsletter started
Every three or four months I would send my clients a cheaply made list of my inventory, but it began to dawn on me that business did not pick up afterwards. It occurred to me that my clientele might not know what Château Grillet is, either. One month in 1974 I had an especially esoteric collection of wines arriving, so I decided to put a short explanation about each wine into my price list, to try and let my clients know what to expect when they uncorked a bottle. The day after I mailed that brochure, people showed up at the shop, and that is how these little propaganda pieces for fine wine were born.—Kermit Lynch