Under the Christmas tree: the world’s smallest winery produces 29 bottles of wine each year, priced at €5000 each.

Entrepreneur, art collector, and former investment banker Tullio Masoni has created the world’s tiniest vineyard, covering just about 200 square feet. It’s perched atop a 16th-century palace in the heart of Reggio Emilia, a city in northeastern Italy known as the birthplace of the Italian national flag and Parmesan cheese.

Masoni grows his grapes at Via Mari 10, which is also the name of his wine. Legend has it that the iconic general Giuseppe Garibaldi visited this house back in 1859.

How a Tiny Wine Operation Came to Be

Once upon a time, Tullio Masoni inherited a real vineyard from his winemaker father, located in the countryside near Reggio Emilia. However, he wasn’t interested in continuing the family business and sold it, as reported by CNN.

Twenty years later, he deeply regretted that decision and set out to create a “pocket-sized” vineyard. Each year, Masoni produces 29 bottles of red wine from the Via Mari 10 vineyard—just enough from a single harvest. Each bottle is priced at €5,000.

This wine, synonymous with rarity and value, isn’t sold in stores but rather at the Bonioni Arte art gallery, just a few blocks away from the palace.

This makes perfect sense, as the producer of this high-end wine describes it as “a form of artistic self-expression, a philosophical provocation, something to keep in your living room.” Why? So you can discuss it with friends and tell them about the madman who set up a vineyard on his rooftop, Masoni explained.

The Art of the Vine

Tullio Masoni fertilizes his vines with bananas, eggs, seaweed, and nightingale droppings. The “diet” of the vines also includes sounds from the surrounding city, enriching the grapes and giving them an edge over rural grapes that are nourished only by silence.

The wine is aged in oak barrels, which are essentially sculptures by local artist Lorenzo Menozzi. Notably, the labels for the bottles were designed by comic artist Giuseppe Camuncoli.

With his new wine collection, Tullio Masoni encourages buyers never to open the bottles but to treat them as works of art.

He calls himself “the only winemaker in the world who says you shouldn’t drink his wine.”

This is how Masoni describes what the wine is really like in the glass: “With the first sip, you feel a great surprise, but within seconds, something awakens in your mouth and opens your mind to new sensations.” Of course, most wine lovers will have to take the winemaker’s word for it.

Related posts

Botanical gardens are the city’s best “refrigerators”: climate change.

The Great Adventures of Grandma Joy

Loneliness due to robots?