The Prosecco hills of Conegliano Valdobbiadene -- the UNESCO landscape is steep, manually harvested, and produces wine that has nothing in common with the supermarket Prosecco that uses the same name

Prosecco Superiore DOCG Conegliano Valdobbiadene (UNESCO World Heritage 2019) covers 15 communes on the steep hillsides between Conegliano and Valdobbiadene in the Treviso province of the Veneto -- the original and most prestigious of the three Prosecco production zones, where the Glera grape was first cultivated and where the Charmat (tank fermentation) method for producing sparkling Prosecco was developed in the 19th century. The Prosecco name problem: the name 'Prosecco' now covers three very different quality levels. The DOC zone (expanded in 2009 to cover 9 northeastern Italian provinces from Friuli to the Adriatic) produces the inexpensive, largely industrial version sold globally. The DOCG zone (Conegliano Valdobbiadene only) produces the terroir-specific version with genuine complexity. The Rive (single-vineyard or single-commune designations within the DOCG) are the most specific and most complex. The specific landscape challenge: the Conegliano Valdobbiadene hillsides have gradients up to 30-35 degrees -- mechanisation is largely impossible; the harvest is done by hand by workers using the specific 'ciuga' container (a plastic basket worn as a backpack). The UNESCO inscription (2019) recognised this specific human-landscape relationship. Veneto guide

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Prosecco Superiore DOCG at a glance

Zone: 15 communes, Conegliano to Valdobbiadene, Treviso province  |  UNESCO: 2019  |  Grape: Min. 85% Glera (also Verdiso, Perera, Bianchetta)  |  Method: Charmat (Martinotti) tank secondary fermentation  |  DOCG wines: Prosecco Superiore Brut, Extra Brut, Extra Dry, Dry; Cartizze DOCG (the premium sub-zone)  |  Rive: 43 single-village designations

The three Prosecco tiers -- what the label actually means

The Prosecco category confusion is a genuine quality-communications problem. Prosecco DOC: the large zone covering 9 provinces (Treviso, Venezia, Padova, Vicenza, Treviso, Belluno in Veneto; Trieste, Gorizia, Pordenone, Udine in Friuli-Venezia Giulia), producing approximately 600 million bottles per year; flat terrain, mostly mechanised, the basis for supermarket Prosecco globally. Prosecco Superiore DOCG Conegliano Valdobbiadene: the original zone, approximately 100 million bottles per year, the steep hillside UNESCO landscape; the DOCG requires higher minimum alcohol, lower maximum yield, and manual harvest on the steep plots. Rive: a single-village or single-vineyard designation within the DOCG (43 Rive communes and specific sub-zones); the Rive must be vintage-dated, from a single commune, manually harvested, and show the specific terroir character of their location; the most terroir-expressive Prosecco. Cartizze: the most prestigious sub-zone (a 107-hectare south-facing amphitheatre above Valdobbiadene, producing approximately 1 million bottles per year); Prosecco Superiore di Cartizze DOCG is the rarest and most complex Prosecco; price EUR 20-35 at the producer versus EUR 8-15 for standard DOCG. Prosecco 3-day itinerary

Visiting the Prosecco hills -- the cycling route, the producers and the food

The Strada del Prosecco e Vini dei Colli Conegliano Valdobbiadene is the official wine road through the UNESCO zone -- a 44 km route from Conegliano to Valdobbiadene passing through the 15 DOCG communes. The route is primarily designed for driving with producer stops; a gravel-bike version of the route (the steep gradients make standard road cycling challenging in sections) has been developed as an alternative. The specific Conegliano approach: Conegliano (the eastern anchor of the DOCG, where the oenologist Giovanni Battista Cerletti established the first Italian wine school in 1876 -- the Istituto Cerletti, still operating as a school and producer) has the best infrastructure for wine tourism; the Enoteca Regionale di Conegliano (Via XX Settembre) serves the full DOCG range. The producer direct visit: many of the DOCG producers accept visitors by appointment for cellar tours and tastings; the most accessible in English: Col Vetoraz (Valdobbiadene), Adami (Colbertaldo), and Nino Franco (Valdobbiadene -- the Rustico is the DOCG benchmark non-vintage). Price for a producer tasting and cellar tour: approximately EUR 10-20 per person. The specific accompaniment food: the soppressa (the Treviso province cured pork salumi), the radicchio di Treviso (the bitter red chicory grown in the Treviso area, eaten raw as a salad or grilled), and the tiramisu (the dessert with the most contested origin claim in Italian cuisine -- Treviso argues the originality against Friuli and Venice).

What is Prosecco Superiore DOCG?

Prosecco Superiore DOCG Conegliano Valdobbiadene is the highest-quality category of Prosecco -- the original 15-commune zone on the steep hillsides between Conegliano and Valdobbiadene (Treviso province, UNESCO 2019). Produces approximately 100 million bottles/year versus 600 million for the broader DOC zone. The DOCG requires higher minimum alcohol (11% versus 10.5%), lower maximum yield, and manual harvest on the steep plots. The Rive sub-designation (single-village) and Cartizze sub-zone (107 hectares, the most prestigious) are within the DOCG.

What is the difference between Prosecco DOC and DOCG?

Prosecco DOC covers 9 northeastern Italian provinces and produces approximately 600 million bottles/year -- largely mechanised, flat terrain, the inexpensive supermarket version. Prosecco Superiore DOCG Conegliano Valdobbiadene covers the original 15-commune steep hillside zone, approximately 100 million bottles/year, manual harvest, higher quality standards. The label difference: look for 'Valdobbiadene Prosecco Superiore DOCG' or 'Conegliano Valdobbiadene Prosecco Superiore DOCG' for the higher tier; 'Prosecco DOC' without the DOCG designation is the broad zone. Price difference: DOCG typically EUR 8-15 retail; Rive EUR 15-25; Cartizze EUR 20-35.

What is Cartizze?

Cartizze is the most prestigious Prosecco sub-zone -- a 107-hectare south-facing amphitheatre above Valdobbiadene with the specific combination of altitude (150-350 m), aspect (south-facing, maximum sun exposure), and the specific Cartizze soil (a mixture of clay, silt, and calcareous sandy material that is distinct from surrounding soils). Produces approximately 1 million bottles per year of Valdobbiadene Superiore di Cartizze DOCG -- the rarest and most complex Prosecco style, typically a Dry or Extra Dry with specific apple, pear, and white flower aromatics and greater richness than standard DOCG. Price at producer: EUR 20-35; retail EUR 25-45. Producers with Cartizze: Col Vetoraz, Nino Franco, Sorelle Bronca, Adami.

What is the Rive Prosecco designation?

Rive (from the local dialect word for 'steep slope') are the single-village and single-vineyard designations within the Prosecco Superiore DOCG -- 43 specific communes and sub-zones, each Rive wine must be vintage-dated, from a single commune, manually harvested, and show the specific terroir character of its location. The Rive system was introduced in 2009 as a terroir-expression tool to differentiate the DOCG from the large-volume DOC zone. The Rive wines are more expensive than standard DOCG (EUR 15-25) but give the specific character of individual Prosecco hillside positions.

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What is the Prosecco Superiore di Valdobbiadene DOCG versus Conegliano DOCG?

The DOCG designation covers the full 15-commune zone from Conegliano (east) to Valdobbiadene (west), with both towns permitted to use their name on the label in combination with 'Prosecco Superiore DOCG'. The Conegliano end of the zone: slightly lower slopes, the winemaking tradition associated with the Conegliano wine school (Istituto Cerletti), a slightly less intensely mineral character and more fruit-forward style. The Valdobbiadene end: steeper slopes, maximum manual harvest requirements, the Cartizze sub-zone at the southwestern extreme, more mineral and complex character. The Rive system allows specific vineyard locations within either end of the zone to be identified; the Rive wines from the Valdobbiadene hillside communes are generally considered the finest expression of Prosecco Superiore terroir. The Conegliano-Valdobbiadene Prosecco Superiore route (the 44-km Strada del Prosecco) runs east to west and can be driven in 2-3 hours with producer stops, or cycled in a full day on the flatter valley sections.

What is the difference between Prosecco and Champagne?

Prosecco versus Champagne: the grape (Prosecco uses Glera; Champagne uses Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, and Pinot Meunier); the fermentation method (Prosecco uses the Charmat/Martinotti method -- the second fermentation producing the bubbles happens in a pressurised tank; Champagne uses the Methode Champenoise -- the second fermentation happens in the individual bottle, which gives finer, longer-lasting bubbles and more autolytic/yeasty complexity); the resulting style (Prosecco is fresher, fruitier, with larger bubbles and less complexity; Champagne is more autolytic, creamy, with persistent fine bubbles and greater ageing potential); and the price (Prosecco DOCG ranges EUR 8-35; comparable Champagne non-vintage EUR 30-60; the value-for-money argument for DOCG Prosecco is strong). The Italian Metodo Classico alternative to both: Franciacorta DOCG from Lombardy uses Champagne method with Italian grapes and gives the closest Italian equivalent to Champagne at EUR 12-30.

What is the Treviso province and how does it combine with a Prosecco visit?

Treviso province combines the Prosecco hills with several other specific attractions: the Treviso historic centre (a small walled city with the Piazza dei Signori, the medieval markets, and the specific Marca Trevigiana food culture -- the radicchio di Treviso (the bitter red chicory, eaten raw or grilled), the soppressa (the local cured pork salumi), and the specific claim to tiramisu originality); the Castelfranco Veneto (the birthplace of Giorgione, with the only signed Giorgione painting still in its original location -- the Giorgione Altarpiece in the Cathedral); and the Asolo (the most beautiful small town in the Veneto, on the hill above Treviso, with the archaeological park of the Roman town and the Queen Cornaro castle). Treviso airport (TSF -- Ryanair hub) gives the most convenient access for the Prosecco zone from the UK and northern Europe; the airport is 5 km from Treviso and 25 km from Conegliano.

What food pairs best with Prosecco Superiore?

Prosecco Superiore DOCG pairing: the wine's specific character (fresh acidity, apple and pear fruit, white flower aromatics, clean finish) makes it ideal with: the classic Venetian antipasto (prosciutto di San Daniele DOP, soppressa, and the specific Treviso radicchio bitter salad -- the saltiness of the cured meat and the bitterness of the radicchio both work with the Prosecco's fruitiness); risotto con radicchio di Treviso (a specific Veneto autumn dish -- the bitterness of the radicchio balanced by the Prosecco's fruitiness); the cicchetti tradition of Venice (the Venetian small plate tradition, particularly the baccalĂ  mantecato and the sarde in saor -- the sweet-sour anchovy pairs beautifully with the Extra Dry style); seafood in general (the Adriatic and northern Tyrrhenian fish, oysters, shrimp -- the Prosecco acidity cuts the richness of the seafood fats); and the Cartizze DOCG specifically with tiramisu (the Cartizze Dry style -- slightly more residual sugar -- is the specific pairing for tiramisu that Valdobbiadene producers recommend). The specific Prosecco aperitivo: the Spritz (Prosecco, Aperol or Campari, soda, orange) is the most consumed Italian aperitivo cocktail internationally since 2010 and the standard consumption context for the broader Prosecco DOC category.

How does the Prosecco method work?

The Charmat (Martinotti) method for Prosecco production: the base wine (still wine made from Glera grapes) is transferred to a pressurised stainless steel tank (autoclave); sugar and selected yeasts are added; the tank is sealed and the secondary fermentation begins; CO2 produced by the fermentation has nowhere to escape and dissolves into the wine; after 30-60 days (the Prosecco Superiore DOCG requires a minimum of 30 days on the yeast lees in the tank), the wine is filtered, dosed to the target residual sugar level, and bottled under counter-pressure. The resulting bubbles: larger and less persistent than Champagne method bubbles (which form over 15+ months of bottle ageing) but fresher and more fruit-forward. The technical name: the method is called Charmat in France (after Eugène Charmat, who industrialised it in the early 20th century) and Martinotti in Italy (after Federico Martinotti, who developed the pressurised tank concept in the 1890s -- the Italian claim for the method's priority is documented).

Written by La Redazione di TourLeaderPro.comProfessional tour leaders and Italy travel specialists based in Rome. Every guide is written from direct on-the-ground experience.

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