ezio poggio
Domaine Overview
Year Founded: 2003
Winemaker: Ezio Poggio
Location: Colli Tortonesi, Piedmont
Size: 10 hectares
Grapes:
Timorasso
Farming:Organic, in conversion. It will be certified from the 2025 harvest.
Production: About 22,450 bottles/year
The Colli Tortonesi in Piedmont is home to the glorious white grape called Timorasso. From Monte Giarolo at 1473 meters, five valleys and their rivers have formed over the centuries to encompass today’s Colli Tortonesi. Each valley has its own distinct micro-climate, yet the subzone of Libarna [lee-BAR-nuh] in Val Borbera remains the most extreme. Here lie Ezio Poggio’s winery and vineyards.
It’s the most southern growing area of the Colli Tortonesi, yet it has the highest elevation by far, topping out at 650 metres. Winds howl on the limestone, marl, and clay soils; temperatures drop to 10/15 °C during summer nights. Many forest paths remain untrodden, with the exception of hikers and truffle hunters. Ezio Poggio is the only producer currently bottling here.
The extreme elements and conditions make for a later harvest than the other Timorasso growing areas; there’s little need for early picking. If the Timorasso valleys in the north exude wines with texture and complexity, Libarna’s terroir offers vertical wines – with marked acidity (verticalità ed acidità spiccata, Ezio says). They highlight Timorasso’s green herbal side (thyme, green tea, tomato leaf), along with under-ripe stone fruits and low alcohol (~ 12.5%).
The Poggio family does everything themselves, from the vineyard to the cellar. They have been farming organically – da sempre! – exclaims Mary Poggio, and will complete the certification process in 2024. They take a minimalist approach in the cellar without being dogmatic. Ezio’s sister Mary handles the back of the house, her husband Big Marco (Marcone) works with Ezio in the vineyards. They always seems to have someone who just dropped by to help, an extended family member or friend. Mary and Ezio’s parents, Maria and Angelo Poggio, though no longer with us, would not only be proud, but also pleasantly surprised by what they would find in their glasses: wines that speak piercingly of Libarna.