Engineer Zamuner’s millesimates

by Sissi Baratella 11/24/23
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Zamuner Cantina 06

They called him, and still call him, the most French of Italians-to everyone Engineer Zamuner. In that middle land between Verona and Lake Garda that would answer to the Custoza doc, it took an engineer to give us a glimpse of a little glimpse of Champagne.

This was Daniele Zamuner, a visionary engineer who loved wine or rather ... Champagne. It was the 1970s when the engineer went to France on business and began to come to terms with an all-French custom of drinking bubbly wines throughout a meal. That wine was Champagne, evidently; a wine whose allure Daniele Zamuner was so fascinated by that, with each trip he began to mature more and more with the idea of making a kind of "Italian Champagne."

Inherited from the family of the fields, there was no doubt about it, they would be vined to make a classic method... all that remained was to figure out how. Accomplice to his wife, a French teacher, they went to France again, literally rang the bell of the Enological Institute and had the secrets of how to make a great Champagne revealed to them. This story has the unbelievable, yet it is all true. On their return to Italy, soil analysis and study of the land followed; and it was here that the real breakthrough came. The portion of the moraine hills where the vineyards were to be established had limestone veins perfect for growing Pinot Noir and Meunier as well as (already present in the area) Chardonnay. Here the magical trio from France began to materialize in Sona, halfway between the city of Verona and Lake Garda.

The memory of engineer Zamuner, who died prematurely, is vivid not only in the memory and eyes of his daughter Alessandra, now at the helm of the winery, but also in the memories of all the people who knew him, personally or through his wines. And that is how I got to know him too, with full glasses, bubble after bubble.

But what wines are we talking about?

We certainly cannot talk about Champagne, woe to ape the French! This is the engineer's first, and inescapable, recommendation. But the inspiration is strong and the appeal immediate. The engineer's modus operandi is that the red grape varieties should be strictly and only vinified in white; we have to wait for Gabriella, the "strategic wife," to come along and put her hand to it in order to have a rosé. About 40,000 bottles a year, varying by season. All vintage. The Zamuner style involves long, very long, bottle aging on the lees. Hallmark is definitely the Meunier. Great relevance also for the date of disgorgement, declared on the back label, which is a real identity card of the wine. Splendid expressions still complex and fragrant a year after disgorgement are the wines you will taste in the cellar. To the creative flair of each sommelier, restaurateur or consumer experiment with more extreme refinements.

Joining the winery in 2016, two years later with the 2018 vintage, Alessandra, too, puts her own spin on it and politely and quietly signs the latest label born in the Zamuner Family. Cuvée Alessandra is blanc de noirs, the first zero dosage for the winery, with "only" three years on the lees. A very fine bubble, brilliant reflections, citrus notes and savory on the palate. If this Cuvée is synonymous with a lightheartedness that Alessandra had the courage to imprint in this wine, the most surprising label of all (yes, even more than the legendary Daniele Zamuner Reserve or Riserva Rosé, both with more than 10 years on the lees) is the Demi Sec. It is not that I can exactly reveal everything about this wine. But once again the story of its birth could be a chapter in the novel this winery has been writing over the years. 

It all began when Zamuner wine became part of a cocktail. Mixed the result was appealing but slightly sweet for the engineer's taste. So, pondering this umpteenth project, inspired by the bartender who created the cocktail, he began to study a demi sec label. 30 g/l sugar and the use of a very particular liqueur in the liquer d'expedition. Memorable, I assure you-it has become one of my favorite sparkling wines because it is the perfect, and never dull, combination of gluttony and depth.

Knowing the history of Zamuner wines and tasting them from time to time is always incredible. No one would ever have bet it all (the winery makes no other wines) on a metodo classico from that middle land between town and lake that would answer to the Custoza doc but in which, it took an engineer, today we can catch a glimpse of a little glimpse of Champagne.

Click on the name to read about the sparkling wines:

Related Products

  Product Producer Date of publication Author Read
Cuvée Alessandra Blanc de noirs Pas Dosé 2018
Zamuner 11/24/23 Sissi Baratella
Metodo classico Demi Sec 2012
Zamuner 11/24/23 Sissi Baratella
Logo Zamuner
11/24/23 Redazione




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