Secret Wine Confession:
Il Portino Gavi
There are some wines you admire, and there are some wines you quietly fall for.
Il Portino Gavi sits firmly in the second camp for us. It is not loud or flashy. It does not need to be. Instead, it slips into the moment so naturally that it feels as though it has always belonged there.
Served properly cool, Il Portino Gavi has a way of transporting you somewhere else entirely. An Italian garden under Mediterranean sun. A gentle breeze in the air. A table slowly filling with delicious food. No one in any hurry to leave. That is the mood it carries with it, and a big part of why we love it.
Why we love Il Portino Gavi
What we love most about Il Portino Gavi is the ease of it. Fresh, dry and super smooth, it feels refined without being fussy, and effortless without being forgettable.
This is not a wine that tries too hard to impress. It simply gets on with being very enjoyable. It is crisp, clean and quietly elegant, with that lovely sort of freshness that makes the next sip feel like a very good idea. Served deliciously chilled, it is dangerously easy to quaff.
And that matters.
Not every bottle needs to be an event. Not every glass needs a long lecture. Sometimes you just want a white wine that tastes beautifully put together and suits the moment perfectly. Il Portino Gavi does exactly that.
What is Gavi?
Gavi is one of Italy’s classic dry white wines, produced in south-east Piedmont from the Cortese grape. It has a long-standing reputation for freshness, elegance and drinkability, which tells you quite a lot before you have even lifted the glass.
In simple terms, Gavi is the sort of white that tends to be crisp and composed rather than heavy or showy. It is a style that feels grown-up, but never severe. Clean rather than complicated. Refreshing rather than attention-seeking.
That is part of its appeal, and part of why it has endured.
Gavi and Gavi di Gavi, what is the difference?
People sometimes ask about the difference between Gavi and Gavi di Gavi.
The answer is fairly simple. Both come from the same wider Gavi wine area and both are made from the same grape. Gavi di Gavi just means the wine comes specifically from the commune of Gavi itself, the namesake town at the heart of the region.
So it is not a different grape, and not a completely different style. It is more a question of place within the same family. A narrower geographical origin, rather than a separate kind of wine.
For most drinkers, what matters more is the experience in the glass. Is it fresh? Is it dry? Is it smooth? Does it make you want another sip?
In the case of Il Portino Gavi, the answer is very much yes.
Wine Facts:
Il Portino Gavi
Everything you need to know about this fresh, dry and quietly elegant Italian white.
Country
Italy
Region
Gavi, Piedmont
Grapes
100% Cortese
Style
Dry, crisp and quietly elegant white wine
Alcohol
12%
Taste
White blossom, stone fruit, fresh herbs, citrus freshness and a hint of minerality
A very easy confession to make
So yes, this is a confession.
We have a soft spot for Il Portino Gavi because it tastes like ease. Because it is fresh, dry, smooth and beautifully straightforward. Because it brings to mind Mediterranean sun, good food, soft conversation and the simple pleasure of things done properly.
And because once the bottle is open, it tends to make a second glass feel entirely reasonable.
A very easy confession to make.


