Full Review

Luna Nuda

Luna Nuda
2020 Brut Rosé Prosecco, Treviso

Pair this wine with:
Chicken

Category: Rose Prosecco

Date Tasted:
Country: Italy
Alcohol: 11%
93 Points
Gold Medal
Exceptional
$13
Best Buy
2022 Best Rose Prosecco

Luna Nuda
2020 Brut Rosé Prosecco, Treviso

Pair this wine with:
Chicken

Category: Rose Prosecco

Date Tasted:
Country: Italy
Alcohol: 11%
Silvery pink color. Creamy, floral aromas and flavors of dried wild strawberry, raspberry cream, candied nuts, and white and red flowers with a round, lively, fizzy, fruity medium-to-full body and a tingling, delightful, medium-long finish with notes of strawberry sweet tarts, quince, tangerine, and lime leaf with no oak flavor. An interesting and more nuanced Prosecco with added red fruit structure and complexity.

Tasting Info

Wine Glass Style: Crisp & Lively
Aroma Aroma: dried wild strawberry, raspberry cream, candied nuts, and white and red flowers
Taste Flavor: Same as aromas with notes of strawberry sweet tarts, quince, tangerine, and lime leaf
Sweetness Sweetness: Fruity
Enjoy Enjoy: Now Enjoy on its own
Recipes Pairing: Oven Fried Chicken, Chicken Kebobs, Cobb Salad
Bottom Line Bottom Line: An interesting and more nuanced Prosecco with added red fruit structure and complexity.

The Producer

Blue Ridge Spirits

The Producer
3445 Peachtree Rd NE, Suite 1175
Atlanta, GA 30326
USA
1 404-219-5072

Rose Prosecco

Wine Glass Champagne.jpg
Serve in a Champagne Flute
Prosecco is one of Italy's most beloved sparkling wines and now wine lovers the world over can fall in love with its newest recognized category: Rose Prosecco. Made primarily from the Glera grape (formerly known as Prosecco), it is generally made in two styles, frizzante (lightly sparkling) or as a traditional sparkling wine.

Most versions of Prosecco are made according to the Charmat (or Martinotti) method; unlike the classic method of Champagne, where the secondary fermentation takes place in a bottle, fermentation for Prosecco occurs in a steel tank. This is done as Prosecco is a lighter-styled sparkling wine and winemakers want to preserve as much freshness as possible. (Recently, a few producers have produced Prosecco via the classic method, but this is the exception.)

The most famous examples of Prosecco are from the Conegliano-Valdobbiadene area of the Veneto region, but the wine is also produced in other parts of Veneto and even in the neighboring region of Friuli. As the name has not been protected, Prosecco is also used as the name for inexpensive sparking wines made in such countries as Brazil, Argentina, Romania and Australia.

As Rose Prosecco is generally priced in the low to mid-teens and has a reputation as a fun, easy-drinking sparkler, it has enjoyed tremendous sales success in the US and many countries. Consume these upon release; while a few examples can age, there is no reason not to enjoy Rose Prosecco as fresh as possible. Drink on its own or with lighter meals (seafood, white meats, risotto) or with fresh fruit.