Wine Region · Italy

Central Italy

Chianti's rolling hills, Brunello's power, the Super Tuscan rebellion — Central Italy is where Sangiovese becomes one of the world's great grapes, and where winemakers broke every rule to prove it.

Primarily Red Wine
Warm Mediterranean
Sangiovese Country
At a Glance

The Quick Picture

Central Italy means Tuscany — not exclusively, but overwhelmingly. Tuscany is the soul of Italian wine, the postcard image of rolling hills, cypress trees, and stone farmhouses that defines the country's wine culture in most people's minds. The dominant grape is Sangiovese — a late-ripening, high-acid, high-tannin variety that produces everything from simple, cheerful Chianti to the powerful, age-worthy Brunello di Montalcino.

But Central Italy is also where some of Italy's most radical winemakers broke the rules. In the 1970s and 80s, a group of Tuscan producers started making wines from non-traditional grapes (Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot) or in non-traditional ways — and because those wines couldn't qualify for Italy's quality designations, they were labeled as humble table wine despite being some of the best (and most expensive) wines in the country. These "Super Tuscans" rewrote the rules of Italian wine.

Key Grapes: Sangiovese Cabernet Sauvignon Merlot Verdicchio
Background

Why Tuscany Is the Heart of Italian Wine

Tuscany has been making wine since the Etruscans — centuries before the Romans. Chianti, the region's most famous wine, has been produced for over 700 years. But for much of the 20th century, Chianti's reputation suffered. The old rules required blending in white grapes (to lighten the wine), and mass production meant a lot of thin, acidic wine in straw-covered bottles. Chianti became a punchline — the cheap red you'd find at a red-checkered-tablecloth Italian restaurant.

The renaissance began in the 1970s. Quality-focused producers in the Chianti Classico zone pushed for stricter rules and higher standards. Meanwhile, a handful of visionary winemakers on the Tuscan coast — frustrated by regulations that prevented them from using international grapes — began making premium wines from Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot, deliberately classified as lowly "Vino da Tavola" (table wine) to sidestep the restrictions. These wines were spectacularly good and spectacularly expensive — and they became known as Super Tuscans.

The Apennine Mountains running down the center of Italy provide altitude that moderates the warm Mediterranean climate, creating conditions perfect for Sangiovese's slow, late ripening. South of Chianti, the warmer climate around Montalcino produces Brunello — Sangiovese at its most concentrated, powerful, and age-worthy.

Tim's Take: Chianti Classico is one of the great comeback stories in wine. Forget the straw bottles and thin, sour wine of the past. Modern Chianti Classico is genuinely excellent — medium-bodied, food-friendly, and complex — and it's still remarkably affordable. A good Chianti Classico for $15–20 with a bowl of pasta is one of life's simple, perfect pleasures.
What You'll Taste

The Wines of Central Italy

Sangiovese dominates — but it expresses itself very differently depending on where it's grown and how it's made.

Chianti & Chianti Classico

Chianti is a large zone in the hills between Florence and Siena. Sangiovese is the dominant grape, often blended with small amounts of other varieties. The wines have red cherry, dried herb, and earthy flavors with high acidity and medium tannins. Chianti DOCG is the broader designation; Chianti Classico DOCG is the historic, higher-quality heartland with higher altitude vineyards and more herbal, complex character. Chianti Classico Riserva and the top-tier Gran Selezione (estate-grown grapes, 30 months minimum aging) represent the pinnacle.

What to try: A Chianti Classico ($14–20) for the real Chianti experience — not the straw-bottle stuff, but a genuinely refined, food-ready wine.
Brunello di Montalcino

Tuscany's most powerful Sangiovese — made entirely from the grape (called Brunello locally) in the warm hills around Montalcino, south of Siena. The wines require minimum five years aging (two in oak) before release, and the best can age for decades. Expect deep red and black cherry fruit, leather, tobacco, earth, and dried herbs — with firm tannins and high acidity that demand food and patience. Rosso di Montalcino is the more affordable, earlier-drinking version from the same area.

What to try: A Rosso di Montalcino ($18–25) as an affordable gateway to the Brunello style — same area, less aging, more approachable young.
Vino Nobile di Montepulciano

From the town of Montepulciano (not to be confused with the grape Montepulciano, which is a different variety from Abruzzo). Made primarily from Sangiovese (called Prugnolo Gentile here), often blended with other local varieties. The wines are fuller-bodied than Chianti but more approachable young than Brunello — a middle ground that offers excellent value. Minimum two years aging before release.

What to try: A Vino Nobile di Montepulciano for Brunello-adjacent quality at a significant discount — often $18–28.
Super Tuscans & Bolgheri

The rebels. Super Tuscans are premium wines made from non-traditional grapes (Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Syrah) or non-traditional blends, often from the Tuscan coast. Originally labeled as simple table wine because they didn't conform to DOC rules, many now have their own appellations — most notably Bolgheri DOC. The wines tend to be full-bodied, rich, and internationally styled — more Napa than Chianti. Prices range from reasonable to astronomical.

What to try: An entry-level Bolgheri DOC ($18–30) for the Super Tuscan style without the prestige-cuvée price tag.
Montepulciano d'Abruzzo & Other Central Reds

From Abruzzo, east of Rome — confusingly, the Montepulciano grape (not the Tuscan town). It produces medium to full-bodied reds with dark plum and cherry fruit, medium tannins, and moderate acidity — simple, fruity, and great value for everyday drinking. Verdicchio from Marche is an underrated white — crisp, almond-noted, and food-friendly. Orvieto from Umbria (Grechetto and Trebbiano) is another light, refreshing white.

What to try: A Montepulciano d'Abruzzo for one of Italy's best everyday reds — $8–12 and reliably good with pasta.

The Super Tuscan Revolution

In the 1970s, a handful of Tuscan winemakers decided the local wine laws were holding back quality. The rules required specific grape blends and winemaking methods that they believed produced inferior wine. So they broke the rules — planting Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot, aging in French oak barriques, and making wines in the style they believed was best.

The catch: these wines couldn't legally be classified as DOC or DOCG, so they were labeled as "Vino da Tavola" — the lowest category, equivalent to "table wine." The irony was extraordinary: some of Italy's most expensive, most acclaimed wines carried the same classification as the cheapest bulk wine. The Italian wine authorities eventually responded by creating the IGT category and new DOCs like Bolgheri to accommodate these wines. The Super Tuscan revolution proved that great wine doesn't always fit neatly into traditional categories.

Finding Your Way Around

The Key Regions

Tuscany dominates Central Italy, but the neighboring regions have gems worth knowing — especially for value.

The Classic
Chianti & Chianti Classico

The hills between Florence and Siena — Italy's most iconic wine landscape. Chianti Classico (the historic heartland, with its Black Rooster symbol) occupies higher-altitude vineyards with more complex soils, producing wines with more herbal complexity and structure than the broader Chianti DOCG. Sub-zones like Chianti Rufina and Chianti Colli Senesi also produce excellent wines, often at lower prices.

What to try: A Chianti Classico with the Black Rooster (Gallo Nero) symbol on the label — it guarantees the historic zone.
The Powerhouse
Montalcino

South of Siena, warmer and drier than Chianti. Home to Brunello di Montalcino — 100% Sangiovese at its most concentrated and age-worthy. The long aging requirements (five years minimum, including two in oak) produce wines of remarkable depth. Rosso di Montalcino, from the same area with less aging, offers a more affordable taste of the terroir.

What to try: A Rosso di Montalcino as your gateway — same place, same grape, more approachable, half the price.
The Tuscan Coast
Bolgheri & Maremma

The flat coastal area of western Tuscany — cooled by sea breezes rather than altitude. This is Super Tuscan territory, where Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, and Syrah produce full-bodied, internationally styled wines. Bolgheri DOC is the most prestigious appellation here. Maremma Toscana DOC is a broader, more affordable designation that also permits international varieties.

What to try: A Bolgheri DOC for the Super Tuscan style — often more affordable than the famous single-estate cuvées.
Great Value
Montepulciano & Beyond

Vino Nobile di Montepulciano — Sangiovese-based, fuller than Chianti, more approachable than Brunello. East of Tuscany, Abruzzo's Montepulciano d'Abruzzo (different grape, confusing name) is one of Italy's best everyday reds. Umbria offers Orvieto (fresh white) and the rare, powerful Sagrantino di Montefalco. Marche produces Verdicchio — a crisp, food-friendly white.

What to try: Vino Nobile di Montepulciano for the quality-to-price sweet spot in Tuscan Sangiovese.
Buying Guide

Decoding a Central Italian Label

At the Table

Food Pairing

Sangiovese's high acidity and medium tannins make it one of the most naturally food-friendly red grapes in the world — and its home cuisine (Tuscan cooking) is built around the same principles of simplicity, quality ingredients, and balance.

🍝Pasta with Ragu
🥩Bistecca Fiorentina
🫒Bruschetta
🧀Pecorino Toscano
🍕Margherita Pizza
🥘Bean Soups & Stews

Chianti with pasta in tomato sauce is one of the world's most natural pairings — Sangiovese's acidity mirrors the tomato's acidity, and both taste better together. Brunello with bistecca alla fiorentina (the massive Florentine T-bone) is Tuscany's most iconic pairing. And simple Chianti with bruschetta, olive oil, and fresh tomatoes? That's a Tuscan summer in a glass.

Tim's Take: If there's one country where wine and food are truly inseparable, it's Italy — and if there's one region that embodies this, it's Tuscany. A $15 Chianti Classico with a simple pasta al pomodoro is proof that great wine-and-food pairing doesn't have to be complicated or expensive. The Italians figured this out centuries ago. We're just catching up.
Keep Exploring

More Italian Wine

Northern Italy Southern Italy All Wine Regions