The Vinschgau (Val Venosta) is the western continuation of the Adige valley west of Merano, climbing toward the Reschen Pass and Switzerland. High-altitude Riesling vineyards at Falkenstein (around 900 m) and Unterortl (around 800 m below Reinhold Messner's Castel Juval) sit here, alongside high-altitude Mueller-Thurgau and Pinot Bianco. Merano itself adds the spa-town flourish and the Cantina Merano cooperative cellar door.
Pours: Vinschgau (Val Venosta) Riesling (Falkenstein, Unterortl-Castel Juval, Koeflerei), Merano Pinot Bianco from Cantina Merano, Castel Sallegg Lagrein from the Merano hills
Tip: The Vinschgau bike path from Mals to Merano is one of Europe's great vineyard-cycling routes. Unterortl-Castel Juval visits combine wine tasting with Messner's mountain museum in the castle above.
Southern Lake Garda is two hours from Bolzano along the A22 and the perfect lake-and-cellar day. Lugana DOC (Turbiana, the local form of Trebbiano di Soave) is grown on clay-loam below the lake's southern tip; Bardolino on the eastern shore produces classic Chiaretto rose. Sirmione's Roman ruins and the Scaligero Castle make a midday break between cellar stops.
Pours: Lugana DOC Turbiana (Ca dei Frati, Zenato, Ottella, Citari), Bardolino DOC Chiaretto rose (Cavalchina, Le Fraghe), Custoza DOC white blends
Tip: Ca dei Frati at Lugana is the canonical Lugana stop; book lunch at Esplanade in Desenzano del Garda for a Lugana flight by the glass. The Mincio bike path from Peschiera connects multiple Bardolino cellars.
Trentino sits immediately south of Alto Adige along the Adige Valley, with the Trento DOC traditional-method sparkling cellars (Ferrari above all) clustered around Trento city. North of Trento, the Campo Rotaliano gravel plain is Teroldego country, home to the Foradori estate in Mezzolombardo and a handful of biodynamic neighbours. A half-day adds Trento city's medieval centre and the Buonconsiglio Castle to the cellar circuit.
Pours: Trento DOC traditional-method sparkling (Ferrari, Cesarini Sforza, Rotari), Foradori Teroldego from the Campo Rotaliano, Vigneti delle Dolomiti IGT Pinot Nero
Tip: Cantine Ferrari tours run multiple times daily (book online). Foradori cellar visits are by appointment - the late Elisabetta Foradori's biodynamic Teroldego is the estate signature.
Verona and the Valpolicella hills are the main Alto Adige day-trip south, two hours down the A22 motorway. The classical Valpolicella villages (Negrar, Marano, Fumane, Sant'Ambrogio) cluster within 20 minutes of Verona, and Amarone-producing estates from Allegrini and Quintarelli to Bertani and Masi welcome cellar appointments. Soave's volcanic hills sit east of Verona for the white-wine half of the day.
Pours: Valpolicella Classico DOC and Amarone della Valpolicella DOCG (Allegrini, Quintarelli, Masi, Bertani), Soave DOC from the volcanic hills east of Verona, Recioto della Valpolicella DOCG dessert wine
Tip: Allegrini's Villa della Torre at Fumane and Bertani's Tenuta Novare are the easiest two-cellar Amarone day; Pieropan in Soave village is the recommended white-wine stop if you cross east instead.
Friuli's Collio and Colli Orientali appellations sit three hours east of Bolzano and are the white-wine counterpoint to Alto Adige's Pinot Bianco and Sylvaner. Friulano (the grape formerly called Tocai Friulano), Ribolla Gialla, Pinot Grigio and the dessert Picolit are the headliners; the Carso just east of Gorizia is the home of the Italian orange-wine movement at Radikon and Gravner. A long day-trip but the cellar density rewards it.
Pours: Collio DOC Friulano (Mario Schiopetto, Vie di Romans, Edi Keber, Ronco del Gnemiz), Colli Orientali del Friuli DOC Picolit and Ribolla Gialla, Carso DOC orange-wine producers (Radikon, Gravner, Princic)
Tip: Make it an overnight - book a B&B in Cormons or Cividale del Friuli. Edi Keber in Zegla and Marko Fon in Gorizia run easy walk-in tastings; Gravner and Radikon are by appointment.
Wachau is the kindred Alpine valley across the Brenner Pass, four and a half hours from Bolzano along the A22 and the Austrian Brenner Autobahn. The Wachau, Kremstal and Kamptal cellars from Krems to Spitz produce dry Riesling and Gruener Veltliner that anchor the Austrian quality pyramid. Smaragd-classified Riesling from FX Pichler, Knoll and Prager is the reason to make the drive.
Pours: Wachau DAC Riesling (FX Pichler, Knoll, Prager, Hirtzberger), Wachau Gruener Veltliner Smaragd, Kremstal and Kamptal DAC neighbours (Brundlmayer, Salomon-Undhof)
Tip: Make this an overnight (Hotel-Restaurant Florianihof in Spitz, or Loibnerhof in Loiben). The Wachau bike path along the Danube is the ideal way to traverse the cellars.