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Why has Tuscany’s Orcia Valley become a talent magnet?

The Orcia Valley in Tuscany is drawing ambitious winemakers from surrounding areas, such as Chianti Classico and Montalcino. Emily O'Hare investigates the source of this magnetic attraction.

In her autobiography, Images and Shadows, Iris Origo, an Anglo-American writer, social historian and philanthropist, recalls her and her husband’s search for a home in Italy in the mid 1920s.

Settling in the south of Siena, between the towns of Montalcino and Montepulciano in Tuscany, just north of Monte Amiata in the Orcia Valley, Origo wrote: ‘That vast, solitary, unspoiled landscape charmed and enthralled us: to live in the shadow of that mysterious mountain…that, we were sure, was the life we wanted.’

One hundred years on and the landscape is little changed, though its potential for wine production is beginning to be realised, attracting winemakers from those more famous hilltop towns.

Orcia is billed as one of the most beautiful DOCs in Italy – but there is substance behind the good looks.’ – Tim Manning


Orcia Valley: Eight to try


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