SUOLO E SALUTEBarolo (Vergne)
Pioneers of organic farming since 1971, the Vajra family has had all its Barolo-zone vineyards certified organic since 2019, plus SQNPI and Equalitas accreditations.
Tip: The certified-organic Barolo Albe is the house benchmark; the estate sits at Vergne, the highest hamlet of Barolo.
ECOCERTBarbaresco (Neive)
Marina Marcarino converted Punset to organic farming in the early 1980s, making it the first certified-organic Barbaresco estate in Italy, with a vegan-friendly, no-animal-products cycle.
Tip: A forerunner of certified-organic Barbaresco; the Basarin cru is the estate's reference bottling.
CCPBBarolo (La Morra)
The Oberto family farms its Berri and Rocche dell'Annunziata vineyards organically, with traditional extended-maceration, large-cask ageing. The wines are certified organic.
Tip: An organic La Morra estate that keeps prices fair; the Barolo del Comune di La Morra is the value entry.
NaturalBarbaresco
Atop the Tre Stelle cru, the Sobrino brothers farm organically (uncertified), ferment with native yeasts and add sulfites sparingly for a low-intervention, natural Barbaresco.
Tip: Native-yeast Barbaresco made with the lightest hand; ask the family to compare Tre Stelle and Rio Sordo at the cellar.
NaturalMonferrato (Asti)
Nadia Verrua makes nothing-added natural wine from old-vine Grignolino, Barbera and the rare Ruche, fermenting with wild yeasts in a low-intervention style.
Tip: Among Piedmont's purest natural-wine addresses; the old-vine Grignolino is the cult bottle to seek out.
ECOCERTBarbaresco (Neive)
Punset uses no animal-derived products anywhere in its growing or cellar cycle, so its certified-organic Barbaresco, Barbera and Arneis are vegan-friendly throughout the range.
Tip: The whole Punset range is vegan-friendly; the Neh! Langhe Rosso is the easy everyday introduction.