wein.plus
Attention
You are using an old browser that may not function as expected.
For a better, safer browsing experience, please upgrade your browser.

Log in Become a Member


Montalcino and Chianti Classico have been fortunate to have been the focus of wine media attention for the past 20 years. The more the buying public became involved with their wines, the more prices were able to rise. Prosperity moved into the country, which was not only expressed where rich new vintners refined run-down farms into villas and dusty front yards into ornamental lawns, but also among the simple vintners, where no other income than that from agriculture is available for investments. Certain wine regions of Tuscany have visibly blossomed in the past few years, others, less respected ones like Rùfina, have progressed only slowly in the same time.

Only two names were able to hold their ground outside Tuscany: Nipozzano and Selvapiana. While the reputation of Selvapiana's Chianti Rùfina has been lost in a small community of enthusiasts due to the small number of bottles, the Nipozzano brand is mainly linked to the producer Frescobaldi. Far from Florence, Nipozzano is hardly associated with the origin Rùfina. Everyone knows Frescobaldi, many know Nipozzano, but few know that Nipozzano is a winery in the Rùfina.

Frederico Giuntini leased Selvapiana in 2002

Lamberto Frescobaldi: "In fact, a foreign magazine recently wrote words of praise about Nipozzano, but unfortunately the author put the estate in the Chianti Classico area." Alfredo Massetti (Grignano): "Rùfina was asleep when Tuscany was booming. Until the 1980s, the sharecropping could survive here, there was no outside investment, with a few exceptions like Grignano and one or two others." Anyone who bought an estate here 35 years ago needed some imagination to guess at the creditworthiness of such an investment. For the Inghirami family, the math worked out: Grignano's value has increased about a hundredfold.

However, it is a meager consolation for a farmer that his farm is gaining in value, while his products do not fetch adequate prices. Nico Sartori is from the Veneto region and bought the Altomena olive and wine estate together with family members 15 years ago. The costs of wine and oil production, as well as the constant investments needed, still exceed the income at Altomena. Nico is the farm manager and has to answer to his family for the farm bill. Resignedly, he notes, "Unfortunately, the only serious justification for investing in such an estate is the hope that at least the market value of the property will increase."

Wine prices are too low, especially for small numbers of bottles, to bring in more than bare operating costs for the wineries. The export price of a Chianti averages about half that of a Chianti Classico, and things don't look much better for Chianti Rùfina: It may come as a surprise, but Chianti Rùfina only marginally outperforms Chianti in terms of image and selling prices.

Sabrina Tanini (Dreolino): "People are interested in Chianti Rùfina, for example at Vinitaly, but when they hear that it's more expensive than plain Chianti, the order quantity immediately shrinks considerably."

Sabrina Tanini runs the Dreolino winery together with her father and brother

Federico Giuntini (Selvapiana): "The Rùfina is the poor brother of the Chianti Classico. We have the same production costs, but in terms of bottle prices we are at least a quarter below Chianti Classico. Only Montesodi by Frescobaldi or our Bucerchiale come to higher prices."

Graziano Scopetani (Scopetani): "The grape price for Rùfina is about ten percent higher than for normal Chianti, and ten percent more expensive is the bottle of Chianti Rùfina, but the customer doesn't like to pay this small price difference." If the cask wine price of Chianti Classico was EUR 3.15 per liter in October 2007, the other Chianti were already available for EUR 1.35 per liter. (Source: ISMEA.)

Cesare Coda Annunziante (Colognole): "Tourism is an important communication vehicle: However, the travel and wine press writes only of the Classico, the Tuscan coast and Siena. The Rùfina is hushed up."

People look towards Siena, not entirely without envy, and look for ways to bring more attention and better prices to Chianti Rùfina. Federico Giuntini (Selvapiana): "We are only a few bottling producers and we should be able to enforce a minimum price for the Chianti Rùfina. The consortium wants to achieve that a minimum price is set for Chianti Rùfina sold in barrel to bottlers."

Graziano Scopetani markets over 80 percent of his annual production of 1%5 million bottles abroad

Graziano Scopetani (Scopetani) sees it somewhat differently: "100 years ago, Rùfina wine, not Chianti Classico, was shipped to America. If today Chianti Classico is more successful than we are, it's our fault. But I also see the positive: the Classico is a beautiful area, it's just that it's not Tuscan anymore. Neither are the owners. The Rùfina, on the other hand, still belongs to the old families."

Sure, Rùfina's lag has its advantages. The so-called quality revolution in "Chiantishire" has thrown a lot over the top. Not only are the owners no longer Tuscan, but worse, the wines are not. It could be a chance for Rùfina winemakers to learn from the mistakes of their Classico peers and not make Rùfina wines unrecognizable for vanity and commercial reasons. Whether they will, however, is more than questionable

Enrico Lippi (Frascole): "The Rùfina is characterized by the presence of the Frescobaldi. This is certainly an advantage, but also a disadvantage. I notice that actually none of us invests in the Rùfina name, we rather all put our own names in the foreground. There is unbridled individuality, a search for typicality is absent. Yet we really would have a unifying commonality with our particular mesoclimate."

Elisa & Enrico Lippi produce about 50,000 bottles per year


Why Chianti and not simply "Rùfina"?

The wine of Rùfina is called Chianti. It has officially done so since the 1930s, when half of Tuscany named its red wines after the small wooded area to the north of Siena. But apart from the grape varieties - mainly Sangiovese - the wines never had much in common. The Rùfina's misfortune was that 150 years ago there was no man of the stature of a Biondi Santi living here who was headstrong and far-sighted enough to give the special wine a special name. The name Chianti makes the Rùfina recognizable to the general public as a Tuscan wine. However, the additional name "Chianti" slows down the development towards an independent image of the "Rùfina"

It is the conflict between commercial necessity and long-term marketing. Abandoning the "Chianti" would be like jumping into cold water, which above all the bottlers have no desire to do. Successful producers like Frascole or Selvapiana, on the other hand, would be ready to take this step immediately. The supporters of the current situation say that the changeover and the promotion would be expensive. They are also worried about the amounts of wine produced in Chianti Rùfina vineyards but not bottled as such but declassified to Chianti. What would happen to these surplus wines if Rùfina separated from Chianti? If a price collapse and a decline in the quality of (Chianti) Rùfina are to be prevented, it must be possible to declassify wine that is not for sale or of lesser quality.

Vin Santo grapes on Travignoli

If the next lower level available for this is the simple Chianti, with the departure of Rùfina from the extended Chianti family, unneeded wine would have to be put on the market as Toscano IGT. This would entail a painful loss of value. (October 2007: Chianti: EUR 1.35/liter, Toscano IGT Sangiovese: EUR 0.60/liter.). The president of the consortium, Conte Giovanni Busi (Travignoli), is not fundamentally against the flight forward, but he believes the situation is not yet ripe for the "Rùfina DOCG": "We are a small appellation and have very limited means to make ourselves known. Nobody knows Rùfina, the little word Chianti, on the other hand, gives the consumer a clue about the origin." As long as the prices of Chianti Rùfina are low and not all the possible volume can be sold under this name, the number of opponents of "Rùfina DOCG" will be greater than those in favour.

The president of the consortium considers the most urgent task to make the appellation known. I wanted to know from him how this is to be done. Busi: "Our communication has to consist in bringing wine lovers to us, in the middle of our vineyards, only then they will be able to understand the particularities of our appellation. Outside our area, we are just a number like all the others."

Giovanni Busi is the president of the Rùfina Consortium

And what does he want written about his territory? "It pleases me when I read that we have invested, that we are entrepreneurs, that we believe in our territory and our wine. It annoys me, on the other hand, when the wine press awards wines from our ranks that are atypical of Rùfina." The noble presidente will have to be annoyed many times because a typical Chianti Rùfina, with its rough edges, does not exactly correspond to the ideal wine of influential opinion makers.

Valentina Libri (Cerreto Libri) thinks that the image of Rùfina must first be freed from old baggage, made lighter, that Rùfina still suffers from the inertia of the past. Enrico Lippi (Frascole) is more specific: "What is the point of putting our modest resources into communication if our appearance on the market is contradictory? We must strive for a solid appearance of price, quality and typicality. What is the use of writing nice things about our territory and our wines if the Chianti Rùfina of company X is offered for Euro 3,70 in the supermarket?

Valentina Baldini-Libri runs her estate together with her husband in a biodynamic way

It is certainly nice for Colognole, Selvapiana, Frascole and so on if some wine lovers know us and appreciate our wines, but it is unsatisfactory if we are seen as detached businesses and not as elements of an appellation. I want to be proud to belong to the Rùfina appellation!"

Click here for the first part

Click here for the third part

The above article was kindly made available to us by the Merum editorial team. Many thanks for this. If you would like to order a subscription to Merum, you can do so here:

Order Merum subscription

All photos © Merum

Related Magazine Articles

View All
More
More
More
More
More
More
More
More
More
More

EVENTS NEAR YOU

PREMIUM PARTNERS