Inzolia: Sicily's aromatic white grape from independent growers

Inzolia wine is one of Sicily's oldest white grapes, producing dry, aromatic whites that carry the warmth of the island without heaviness. The producers below grow it close to its origins, from coastal plains to hillside vineyards.

Crisp, almond-scented and deeply rooted in Sicilian sun and sea winds.

Color

Dropdown arrow

Type

Dropdown arrow

Country

Dropdown arrow

Region

Dropdown arrow

Grape

Dropdown arrow

Pairing

Dropdown arrow

Sort by

Sort arrow
Inzolia

Inzolia wines

Inzolia has been grown in Sicily for centuries and was long used as a blending grape in Marsala production before winemakers began bottling it as a single variety. It suits the island's heat because it holds acidity well into the growing season, producing whites that are dry and fragrant rather than flat and heavy. The wines below come directly from the producers who grow it, shipped from their own cellars with no importer or warehouse in between.

Previous1 of 1Next

Inzolia wine cases

A producer's own selection of six bottles offers a direct line into how they think about their wines. With a grape as site-sensitive as Inzolia, that often means tasting across different vineyard parcels or vintages to see how altitude, proximity to the coast, or a shift in harvest timing changes the wine. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop — every wine case here is put together by the producer as their own recommendation.

View all mixboxes

Wineries

The growers listed here all work with Inzolia in Sicily, but their approaches differ — some press it early to keep freshness, others allow longer skin contact for texture and body. Reading each producer's own notes is often the most direct way to understand what their version of the grape tastes like. The wine-advice service is there if you would rather talk it through before choosing.

View all wineries

Wine experts

Inzolia does not attract the same volume of critical attention as Nero d'Avola or Etna's volcanic wines, which makes an independent view useful. Wine experts on Free Grape Society review wines they have personally tasted, and their notes appear on each wine page and on the expert's own profile. Several of the experts below have reviewed Inzolia wines from Sicilian producers featured on this page.

View all wine experts

Frequently asked questions

How do I order Inzolia wine from Free Grape Society?

Browse the Inzolia wines listed on this page and add bottles to your cart. Each bottle ships directly from the producer's own cellar. Your order arrives at your door with free shipping, and you pay securely by card or Klarna at checkout.

What happens if a bottle arrives broken or doesn't taste right?

Send a photo to Free Grape Society customer support within 7 days of delivery. We will arrange a replacement or a refund. Because producers ship directly, quality issues are handled with the producer's direct involvement. Shared responsibility is built into how FGS works.

Can I order Inzolia from more than one producer in the same delivery?

Yes. You can add wines from different producers to the same order. Each producer ships their bottles separately from their own cellar, so you may receive more than one delivery. Shipping is free for each.

How long does delivery take?

Average delivery is 8 to 9 days from order to door. The full range is 4 to 14 days depending on the producer's location and your delivery address. Wines ship directly from the producer's cellar, not from a central warehouse.

How do I choose between different Inzolia wines on the page?

Inzolia varies quite a bit depending on where in Sicily it is grown and how it is made — coastal sites tend to produce lighter, more citrus-driven wines, while inland or hillside parcels often give more body and texture. Reading each producer's description will help you match the style to what you are looking for.

How does the selection of Inzolia producers work on Free Grape Society?

Free Grape Society works with independent producers across Sicily who grow and bottle Inzolia themselves. Wines are tasted before listing. The selection grows as more Sicilian producers join the platform, so it is worth checking back if you are looking for a specific style or appellation.

Which Inzolia wine expert can recommend something for me?

Several independent wine experts on Free Grape Society have reviewed Sicilian whites, including Inzolia. Visit an expert's profile to read their reviews and track record, then use the wine-advice form to ask a specific question — the right expert will respond directly.

Why don't you sell supermarket-brand Inzolia wines?

Free Grape Society lists wines from independent producers who grow their own grapes and bottle under their own name. Supermarket-brand wines are typically blended and sourced through large trading houses rather than made at a single estate. The producers here are the people who grew the Inzolia you are drinking.

Can I find Inzolia in regular wine shops or supermarkets?

Inzolia appears occasionally in specialist wine retail across Europe, but it is rarely the focus. Most commercial Sicilian white wine production prioritises other grapes or blends. Buying directly from Sicilian producers through Free Grape Society is one of the more reliable ways to find estate-bottled single-variety Inzolia outside of Italy.

Where Inzolia comes from and what makes it Sicilian

Inzolia is a white grape native to Sicily, where it has been grown for centuries across the island's sun-baked interior and along its western coastline. It is sometimes called Ansonica on the Tuscan mainland, where it appears in small plantings, but its heart is firmly in Sicily. The grape ripens early in the intense Sicilian heat, which historically made it useful for building body and alcohol in blended wines, including the island's famous Marsala. As winemakers shifted toward fresher styles and earlier harvesting in cooler sites, Inzolia found a new identity as a standalone variety: dry, still whites with a low-to-medium acidity, a soft texture, and aromas of white blossom, almond, and ripe stone fruit. It shares vineyards and blending traditions with Catarratto, Grillo, and Nero d'Avola, all of which are closely associated with Sicilian identity. The island's DOC and IGT appellations — including Sicilia DOC — have helped define where and how Inzolia can be labelled, giving producers a framework for distinguishing estate-grown, single-variety expressions from the blended styles of an earlier era.

How Inzolia tastes and what to drink it with

Wines made from Inzolia are typically pale gold in the glass, with a soft, round palate and restrained acidity compared to many northern Italian whites. The aromatics lean toward almond, fennel blossom, citrus pith, and ripe pear, with a slightly bitter, nutty finish that is characteristic of the variety and makes it distinctive in a blind tasting. The texture is one of its defining traits: fuller than a Vermentino, less angular than a Catarratto, which makes it a natural match for the food Sicily is known for. It pairs well with grilled swordfish and tuna, seafood pasta, fried calamari, and dishes built on olive oil and capers. The almond note in the wine echoes naturally in dishes made with almonds or breadcrumbs, a combination that appears often in Sicilian cooking. Inzolia also works alongside mild sheep's milk cheeses and simply prepared vegetable dishes. For a broader picture of the white wines coming out of southern Italy, the Apulia wines page and Campania wines page show what other warm-climate Italian whites look like alongside it.

Buying Inzolia direct from independent Sicilian producers

Most Inzolia on the international market has historically arrived through importers and distributors, which means the wines reaching shop shelves tend to be the larger commercial labels rather than estate-bottled expressions from smaller growers. On Free Grape Society, producers ship directly from their own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between, so the wines available here reflect what individual estates are actually making rather than what a distributor has chosen to carry. The producers on this page grow Inzolia in the conditions that suit it: western Sicily, where the grape has its deepest roots, and in some cases blending it with other native varieties from the same vineyards. Wines tasted before listing means the range reflects considered choices rather than a catalogue of everything available. If you want to explore more of what Sicily's independent growers produce, the Sicily mixboxes page is a good place to see a producer's own selection across their range. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop — the Inzolia producers here are part of that, alongside growers working with Grillo, Nero d'Avola, and other Sicilian varieties.