Showing posts with label winery tours near Rome. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winery tours near Rome. Show all posts

Tuesday, 3 August 2021

The Sabine Hills: an insider's guide


Are you dreaming of your your next holiday to Italy?
 

Would like to visit a magical destination that is off the beaten path and unknown to mass tourism?  
Please read on to be inspired!

Have you ever heard of the Sabine Hills area, in Italy? Find out more about Italy's Best kept Secret: the Sabine Hills in the article written by Chef Guido Santi for L'Italio Americano Magazine.

It is too good a secret, not to share again!

"For those looking for authentic, idillic rural Italy a stone’s throw from Rome, this is the perfect destination" writes Chef Guido, from Convivio Rome Italian Cooking Holidays. 


Thursday, 24 January 2019

The beautiful Sabine Hills captured - Guido's story.

Sabina, the Sabine Hills, a non-touristy area close to Rome, is quintessential Italy.

Every time I look out from my kitchen window, I am captured by the magic of this ever changing view I have before me. The vast expanse of agricultural land, medieval hilltop villages, ancient monasteries, olive groves, change in clarity and colour within one day and with the seasons.
View of our home, olive grove and valley below
I fell in love with the Sabine Hills ('Sabina') area when I was a child. When I was young, my father used to take me around the Roman countryside on weekend excursions to locate the finest cheeses and wines. Baskets of fresh ricotta were prepared in front of us by the local shepherd and loaves of wood-fired sour dough bread were bought hot from the bakery. It was an incredible education. 

Sunset as seen from our home terrace in the Sabine Hills
These experiences led me to return to this area to buy a home, in the medieval hilltop village of Toffia, to settle with Sally, my Australian wife, and our daughter. We have been living here in the Sabine Hills for over 13 years, and my passion for this region lead me to share this area with guests from all over the world. We have been offering Italian cooking classes and cooking holidays, wine tours and olive tours, within this area since we moved here, opening our family home in hope that you too, will be captured by the magic of this beautiful  and non-touristy countryside that is only 40 minutes away from Rome, yet feels like worlds away. 
Selected images from Instagram : conviviorome.Italy
More information about our Cooking Classes, 3 and 5 night Italian Cooking Holidays , Half Day Olive Tours and Half Day Wine Tours, in the Sabine Hills can be found on the following websites. If you wish to ask me anything about this beautiful area or any of the activities, experiences or holidays we offer, please just contact me: info@conviviorome.com



Wednesday, 26 September 2018

Rome Wineries and Wine Tours in the Sabine Hills in Italy

The smell of wine wafts from home cantinas ( wine cellars) as we wander around the cobbled streets of our medieval hilltop village. The vendemmia is about to begin and local families are cleaning out wine barrels, preparing for the new harvest. We breathe in deeply and appreciate the smell we associate with early Autumn, in the Sabine Hills.

Less than an hour north of Rome, still undiscovered by mass tourism, lies a green and fertile region called the Sabine Hills. Here, wine (as well as olive oil) has been produced for millennia and greatly appreciated in ancient Rome. The River Tiber, which eventually reaches Rome, provides the perfect soil composition for winemaking. Today, a small number of boutique wineries have emerged, thanks to the passion and creativity of their owners.

Some grapes that are grown here may be unusual, but they are the result of a process which involves reviving ancient traditional Italian varieties

The Italian Government has ruled that Sabine Hills 'D.O.C.' (Controlled designation of origin) wine should be a blend of Sangiovese and Montepulciano grapes for red wine and Malvasia and Trebbiano for white. The local wineries also produce other blends of predominantly Central Italian grapes and also a range of single-grape wines. Visiting these Sabine Hills wineries is a wonderful experience and an opportunity to witness how wine is made naturally on a small scale, in a beautiful environment. All wines can be purchased at the wineries.

Tenuta di Rome Wine Tours: The winery that we visit during our Rome Wine Tour produce high-quality wines, on 111 acres of land. Apart from DOC Sabine Hills wines, this winery also produces excellent single-grape wines, including Syraz, Sangiovese, and Falanghina, a traditional white grape from the south.
In the cellar, there are about 400 barriques (small french oak barrels) and a number of large, traditional Italian oak barrels. There's even a mini-museum where ancient winemaking tools such as timber presses, vats, and barrels from at least 100 years ago are displayed.
It is absolutely worth a visit. Rome Wine Tours

Colli Sabini
This winery is, in fact, a cooperative of small local wine producers. At Colli Sabini they are dedicated to producing excellent quality Sabine Hills DOC wines, and they have been the first winemakers in the area to be granted this 'stamp of quality', already by the 1970s. The Colli Sabini winery also has an interesting range of grappa, based on the distillation of grapes that are already used to produce wine.

Poggio Fenice
Back in 1974, a Scottish agronomist named Colin Fraser fell in love with the region and started a vineyard near the Village of Rocca Sinibalda. Today, the vineyard has been left in the hands of an Italian family of winemakers. Their passion is to produce slightly unusual wines, including Verzellino, which is white wine made out of the Sangiovese red grape and Cardellino rosé. Of course, the more traditional varieties, such as Sangiovese and Montepulciano, are also present.

Sabine Hills Winery Tours
Wine Tours Rome runs Sabine Hills winery tours in English, which include pick-up and return service to Fara Sabina Train Station (39 minutes from Rome Tiburtina train station). A winery tour, olive oil tour, or a visit to the Sabine Hills can easily be done as a day trip from Rome.

How to get to Sabine Hills from Rome
Fara Sabina is the main railway station for exploring the Sabine Hills wineries. A direct train departs every 15 minutes from several stations in Rome (Ostiense, Trastevere and Tiburtina) to Fara Sabina-Montelibretti station. At the Fara Sabina station, we will meet you and drive you to our local winery as the first stop of your Half Day Rome Wine Tour, with us.

If you are travelling with a car, the Sabine Hills is a beautiful place to base yourself, as there is so much to see and do.

©  Guido Santi of Wine Tours Rome, winery tours in the Sabine hills, near Rome.

Monday, 14 November 2016

Sabina D.O.C. wines, in the Sabine Hills, near Rome

One way to choose a good wine here in Italy, if you know nothing about the grape nor the winery is to look for the D.O.C. label. The Italian Government has ruled that the wines offered in our area, just north of Rome in the Sabine Hills: the Sabina 'D.O.C.' (Controlled designation of origin) wine, should be a blend of Sangiovese and Montepulciano grapes for red wine and Malvasia and Trebbiano for white.  There are many other ways to find a good wine, but this is a great way to start.

Visiting the Sabine Hills wineries makes a great Rome Day Trip and an opportunity to witness how wine is made naturally on a small scale, in a beautiful environment. Convivio Rome offers a Half Day Rome Wine Tour. For more information please contact us

                                               www.winetoursrome.com
                                               www.conviviorome.com

Wednesday, 11 March 2015

Ancient Roman Wines Rediscovered in the Sabine Hills, near Rome

The Sabine Hills (Sabina), a relatively unknown, yet very beautiful country area just north of Rome, wine (as well as olive oil) has been produced for millennia and greatly appreciated in ancient Rome. The River Tiber, which eventually reaches the Capital, provides the perfect soil composition for wine making. 
Today, a small number of boutique wineries have emerged, thanks to the passion and creativity of their owners. Some grapes that are grown here may be unusual, but they are the result of a process which involves reviving ancient traditional Italian varieties.

To read more, please read Guido Santi's full article on the Sabine Wines written for goitaly and About.com 'Rome Wines in the Sabine Hills of Northern Lazio



Convivio Rome Half Day Rome Wine Tours are conducted all year round. 

Further information can be found on http://www.winetoursrome.com