Soave is produced on volcanic soils, Doudet Naudin’s Vin de France on the other hand is made from grapes from Occitania in the south of France.
Both have a heady scent of Mediterranean scrub that makes them incredibly pleasant and drinkable, in the nicest sense of the word.
Those wines will immediately make you want another glass.
The Vin de France is made from Chardonnay grapes and has a very brief passage in wood that gives it, from the outset, a complexity that Calvarino, on the other hand, achieves over the years. Calvarino, in fact, will have its revenge after a few years in the bottle.
Once again, we have found a good reason to put them both in our cellar.
In the WW catalogue at € 15.00.