Island Girl
Hauner
Salina Bianco
IGT
12.5%
Isole Eolie, Italy
Now that I’m on the topic of Sicily (see “Dinner with Billy: A Taste of Frappato,” Sept. 15, 2009 post), let me mention a refreshing wine, the 2008 Hauner Salina Bianco, from the Aoelian island of the same name off the coast of Sicily. This wine shows how the blending of two generally characterless varietals, inzolia and catarratto, can produce a distinctively dry wine—a graceful, youthful sprite. An ingenue. Carlo Hauner came to Salina in the 1960s to produce the sweet malvasia wines for which his estate is well-known and well-regarded. However, more popular to American tastes should be this pleasant, dry, medium-bodied white with youthful aromatics like almond, pine and lemon and—on the palate—apple, grapefruit skin and pear (one taster I spoke to detected caper), along with a bit of spice. And brine. Indeed, this is among the briniest wines I’ve tasted recently. And why not? These grapes are grown organically on a tiny island in the sea. All this flavor for only $12.00. Importer: Bacchanal Wine Imports, Inc. 9/15/09.






