

Bulli Rosso Colli Piacentini 'Cör' NV |
WHY BE CURIOUS: Traditional Emilia-Romagna producer of spontaneous fermentation metodo ancestrale farmer fizz; no added SO2; limestone rich soils. Practicing organic.
WHO: Leonardo Bulli (matriarch-boss is his mother La Signora Bulli).
WHERE: 12 hectares in the Colli Piacentini, the hills around the town of Piacenza
WHAT GRAPES: Barbera, Bonarda, Uva Rara; spunky white Ortrugo, and the semi-aromatic Uva Sampagnina (AKA Marsanne).
WHAT WINES TASTE LIKE: limestone and alkaline soils give direct and honest wines, with a rustic minerality and saltiness. As Italians say of an honest farmer wine: Semplice ma non banale. / Simple but not boring.
FUN FACT: Locals line up everyday for his fizzy metodo ancestrale that’s cheekily called ‘Sampagnino’ [ sham-pah-KNEE-know] in a mock-pronunciation of Champagne. La Signora Bulli says she drinks it in a gulp.
Bulli is our newest little gem from the northwest corner of Emilia-Romagna in the Colli Piacentini, those step hills, just south of Piacenza, squeezed between the Po river to the north and the Apennine mountains to the south. The area itself is sleepy, a time-capsule from the 1940’s, with farmers that still have that askance look of their forefathers, those ex-Roman soldiers who tended vines in retirement.
There’s a long tradition of making frizzante metodo ancestrale; in this area, and Bulli has been doing it for five generations, since the late 1800’s. Don’t get the idea that this is a family with a castle. The Bulli family is humble, easygoing, happy to serve locals everyday from their repurposed horse stall, where all the sparkling in the bottle fermentation happens. La Signora Bulli is especially proud of the medallion coins the family has won for its wines in the late 1800’s. They are a testament of it being a serious winery from the beginning. Her son, Leonardo Bulli, is especially proud of the fact that they never used SO2, in fact, senza solfiti aggiunti is written on their original vintage-kitsch style labels since the 1950’s. There’s no faux-retro going on here.
One key that helps preserve their wines without SO2, and gives them a sprightly character, is the soil. Bacedasco Alto is the town where the Bulli family has their house and horse-cellar, and it is right next to an important geological park that contains a series of ancient limestone calanques from the Pliocene period. Think of the calanques near the wine town of Cassis (without the sea ; ).

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