ECOCERTNaturalChianti Classico
Giovanna Morganti's three-hectare Castelnuovo Berardenga estate. Le Trame, the estate's only wine, is unoaked Sangiovese-led IGT Toscana (left the DOCG in 2012 in protest at wood-fashion rules), made from meticulously farmed organic fruit.
Tip: Allocations move via Rosenthal Wine Merchant; cellar visits by referral only.
Biodynamic PracticingICEANaturalMaremma
Pioneer natural-wine estate above Massa Marittima. Founded by Fabrizio Niccolaini in the 1980s, biodynamic since 2004, run today by Francesca Sfondrini. Native yeasts, extended maceration, no filtration, minimal or no sulfur across reds, rose and white Vermentino.
Tip: The rose and the Vermentino offer the natural lineage at its most approachable; reds need decanting and tend toward funkier registers.
Chianti Classico
Querciabella practices a strict vegan vinification, eliminating all animal-derived fining agents alongside its plant-only biodynamics. The estate is recognised as the largest extension of vegan organic vineyards in Italy.
Tip: Ask the Greve cellar team to walk through the green-manure cover-crop and plant-based-preparation regime.
Vino Nobile di Montepulciano
Avignonesi is registered with The Vegan Society and certified ISO 45001 by SGS; the estate's biodynamic-and-organic Vino Nobile carries vegan declarations on the technical sheets. The homepage lists Vegan among its certifications.
Tip: Verify on the bottle vintage by vintage; some single-vineyard cuvees outside the main Vino Nobile may not carry the same vegan declaration year to year.
Vino Nobile di Montepulciano
Salcheto runs a no-added-sulfite vinification across its certified-organic-and-biodynamic Vino Nobile lineage; water waste is 100 percent recycled and the off-grid cellar runs on solar, geothermal and biomass energy.
Tip: The Salcheto Salco Vino Nobile bottling is the showcase no-added-sulfite Sangiovese; ask for the carbon-footprint passport at the cellar door.
Maremma
Massa Vecchia bottles its reds, rose and white Vermentino with native-yeast fermentation, extended maceration, no filtration and minimal sulfites, often with no added SO2 at all. A founding producer in the Italian low-sulfite movement.
Tip: Look for the Rosso da Tavola NV and the Rosato; both are entry points to the low-sulfite Tuscan rangelist.