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Why Gioia del Colle is Italy’s best region for Primitivo you need to know about

Richard Baudains makes the case for the Primitivos of Gioia del Colle DOC in Puglia, which fly in the face of its reputation for warm and jammy wines.

It gets pretty warm in Puglia in June. I am at Gioia del Colle, in the centre of the region, exactly halfway between the Adriatic and the Ionian seas, and by mid-morning the temperatures are already above 30°c.

By the evening, however, I am reaching for a jacket. Gioia del Colle is on the high plateau of the Murgia, 400m above sea level, and at these elevations, night-day temperature variations through the summer can be as much as 20°c.

It is one of the key features of the growing environment that sets Gioia del Colle apart.

The other is the soil. The Murgia is a Karst plateau – basically a massive block of limestone tunnelled by underground streams, on which sit thin, red ferrous topsoils.

Put these two features together, and you have the perfect conditions for Gioia del Colle’s focus grape – Primitivo.


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Richard’s 10 Gioia del Colle Primitivo picks:


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