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2019 Alto Adige Merlot-Cabernet Franc
Peter Dipoli
Brenntal is Peter Dipoli’s second and newest red Bordeaux blend from the mountainous Alto Adige region. These unexpected beauties tread a bit softer than their famous counterparts while maintaining structure and showiness: 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. This is a perfect choice for your next steak dinner—whether meat, mushroom, or both!
—Allyson Noman
Wine Type: | red |
Vintage: | 2019 |
Bottle Size: | 750mL |
Blend: | 80% Merlot, 20% Cabernet Franc |
Appellation: | Alto Adige |
Country: | Italy |
Region: | Alto Adige |
Producer: | Peter Dipoli |
Winemaker: | Peter Dipoli |
Vineyard: | Planted in 1998, .44 ha |
Soil: | Clay, limestone |
Aging: | Malolactic takes place in smaller barrels, and the wine is then aged in barrel for about 12 months (in 50% new oak) |
Farming: | Sustainable |
Alcohol: | 13.5% |
More from this Producer or Region

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.

2020 Alto Adige Pinot Nero “Filari di 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.

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.

2023 Südtirol Eisacktaler Kerner
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No lack of minerality in this perfumed white from the Italy-Austria border.

2022 Südtirol Eisacktaler Riesling
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Crisp and lean with mouthwatering minerality, Nössing’s Riesling is one of great finesse and precision.

2020 Lagrein Riserva “Di Ora in Ora”
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This cuvée is dark-fruited velvet in a bottle.

2019 Alto Adige Sauvignon “Voglar”
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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.

About The Producer
Peter Dipoli
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
2020 Alto Adige Pinot Nero “Filari di Mazzon”
Ferruccio Carlotto Italy | Alto Adige
2020 Lagrein Riserva “Di Ora in Ora”
Ferruccio Carlotto Italy | Alto Adige
2017 Alto Adige Merlot-Cabernet Sauvignon “Iugum”
Peter Dipoli Italy | Alto Adige
2017 Taurasi
Terre del Vescovo Italy | Campania
2022 Südtirol Eisacktaler Riesling
Manni Nössing Italy | Alto Adige
2021 Isola Dei Nuraghi “Familia”
Deperu Holler Italy | Sardinia
2021 Barolo “La Tartufaia”
Giulia Negri Italy | Piedmont
2023 Colline Savonesi Mataòssu “Vigneto Reiné”
Punta Crena Italy | Liguria
2023 Südtirol Eisacktaler Kerner
Manni Nössing Italy | Alto Adige
2019 Alto Adige Sauvignon “Voglar”
Peter Dipoli Italy | Alto Adige
2023 Roero Arneis
Tenuta La Pergola Italy | Piedmont
2016 Alto Adige Merlot-Cabernet Sauvignon “Iugum”
Peter Dipoli Italy | Alto Adige
2020 Alto Adige Pinot Nero “Filari di Mazzon”
Ferruccio Carlotto Italy | Alto Adige
2020 Lagrein Riserva “Di Ora in Ora”
Ferruccio Carlotto Italy | Alto Adige
2017 Alto Adige Merlot-Cabernet Sauvignon “Iugum”
Peter Dipoli Italy | Alto Adige
2017 Taurasi
Terre del Vescovo Italy | Campania
2022 Südtirol Eisacktaler Riesling
Manni Nössing Italy | Alto Adige
2021 Isola Dei Nuraghi “Familia”
Deperu Holler Italy | Sardinia
2021 Barolo “La Tartufaia”
Giulia Negri Italy | Piedmont
2023 Colline Savonesi Mataòssu “Vigneto Reiné”
Punta Crena Italy | Liguria
2023 Südtirol Eisacktaler Kerner
Manni Nössing Italy | Alto Adige
2019 Alto Adige Sauvignon “Voglar”
Peter Dipoli Italy | Alto Adige
2023 Roero Arneis
Tenuta La Pergola Italy | Piedmont
Kermit once said...

Kermit once said...
I want you to realize once and for all: Even the winemaker does not know what aging is going to do to a new vintage; Robert Parker does not know; I do not know. We all make educated (hopefully) guesses about what the future will bring, but guesses they are. And one of the pleasures of a wine cellar is the opportunity it provides for you to witness the evolution of your various selections. Living wines have ups and downs just as people do, periods of glory and dog days, too. If wine did not remind me of real life, I would not care about it so much.
Inspiring Thirst, page 171