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IGT · since 1999

Cannara

Wine · PGI · 3 municipalities

Recognized since 1999, the Cannara IGT is a highly specialized Umbrian wine designation limited to just three municipalities, including Bettona and Bevagna. Unlike neighbouring regional IGTs that permit a broad spectrum of white, rosé, and sparkling styles, Cannara distinguishes itself by restricting production exclusively to two red-grape variants: rosso and sweet rosso passito. Vines cultivated under this standard are permitted a maximum yield of 17.0 tonnes per hectare, with the concentrated passito style requiring a strict grape-to-wine yield cap of just 45% compared to the 80% allowed for base wines. The resulting dry red wines deliver a minimum alcohol of 10.0% by volume and a pleasantly bitter, herbaceous profile.

vitigni idonei alla coltivazione nella Regione Umbria (Allegato 1) %10% vol min170 q/ha maxsource ↗
Production zone
Producers0 verified

The facts

Colour
red: bright ruby red, more or less intense, tending to garnet with aging; passito: more or less deep red tending to garnet
Taste
red: full, smooth, harmonious, pleasantly bitterish, fruity, delicately herbaceous, pleasantly tannic, with hints of toasted wood when aged; passito: sweet, full, smooth, harmonious, fruity, characteristic

The producers 0

Frequently asked questions

Where is Cannara produced?
Cannara is produced in 3 municipalities in Umbria, Italy: Bettona, Bevagna, Cannara.
What grape is Cannara made from?
Cannara is made from vitigni idonei alla coltivazione nella Regione Umbria (Allegato 1), Sangiovese, Merlot, Cornetta.
What is the minimum alcohol content of Cannara?
The minimum alcohol content of Cannara is 10% vol.
What does IGT mean?
IGT (Indicazione Geografica Tipica) identifies wines typical of a broader geographic area, with more flexible rules than DOC/DOCG.
Cannara IGT — Italian wine from Umbria | ItalyTasteMap