Nerello Cappuccio: Sicily's soft-spoken blending grape from the slopes of Etna

Nerello Cappuccio wine is grown almost exclusively in Sicily, where it plays a supporting role in the blends that have made the volcanic vineyards of Etna famous. The independent producers below grow it on the mountain's terraced lava soils.

Lighter in colour and tannin than its sibling Nerello Mascalese, it adds texture, perfume and early-drinking appeal.

Color

Dropdown arrow

Type

Dropdown arrow

Country

Dropdown arrow

Region

Dropdown arrow

Grape

Dropdown arrow

Pairing

Dropdown arrow

Sort by

Sort arrow
Nerello Cappuccio

Nerello Cappuccio wines

Nerello Cappuccio is rarely the star on the label — in the Etna DOC it can make up to 40 percent of a blend alongside Nerello Mascalese — but it shapes what the wine feels like to drink. Where Mascalese brings structure and longevity, Cappuccio brings softer tannins, a floral note and a rounder midpalate. The two grapes are grown on the same volcanic terraces, often in the same old vineyards, and on Free Grape Society each bottle ships directly from the producer's own cellar, with no importer or warehouse in between.

Previous1 of 1Next

Nerello Cappuccio mixboxes

A mixbox here is six bottles chosen by the producer themselves — the selection they would put together if you came to visit. For a grape like Nerello Cappuccio, that usually means tasting it in blends across different plots or elevations on the mountain, where altitude and aspect shift the wine noticeably from one site to the next. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers, not a shop.

View all mixboxes

Wineries

The growers below work with Nerello Cappuccio in its home territory — mostly on Etna, where the combination of volcanic basalt soils, old vines and significant day-to-night temperature swings gives the grape its character. Some are small family estates that have tended the same terraced vineyards for generations. The wine-advice service is there if you want a recommendation before choosing.

View all wineries

Wine experts

Independent wine experts review wines they have personally tasted, and their notes are visible on each wine page and on the expert's own profile. Several of the experts below have reviewed wines made with Nerello Cappuccio, so you can read their assessments before deciding which bottle to try first.

View all wine experts

Frequently asked questions

How do I order Nerello Cappuccio wines on Free Grape Society?

Browse the wines above, add bottles to your cart and check out. Each order ships directly from the producer's own cellar. Free shipping is included, and you can pay by card or Klarna. Delivery takes between 4 and 14 days, with an average of around 8 to 9 days.

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 Nerello Cappuccio wines from more than one producer in the same order?

Yes. You can add wines from different producers to a single cart. Each producer ships their own bottles separately, so you may receive more than one delivery. There are no additional shipping charges for ordering across producers.

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 Nerello Cappuccio wines from different producers?

Start with where the wine comes from on the mountain — altitude and aspect on Etna make a real difference. Wines from higher elevations tend to be lighter and more floral; lower sites produce something richer. Producer notes and expert reviews on each wine page are the most useful guide once you have narrowed down the style you want.

Is Nerello Cappuccio always blended, or can I find it as a single-variety wine?

It is almost always blended, most commonly with Nerello Mascalese in Etna Rosso DOC wines. Bottlings where Cappuccio dominates or appears alone are rare and tend to be a producer's deliberate choice to highlight its softer, more perfumed character. The wines listed here will show in the producer's own description whether they are blends or single-variety.

Which Nerello Cappuccio wine expert can recommend something for me?

The independent wine experts on Free Grape Society cover Sicilian varieties including Nerello Cappuccio. You can browse expert profiles above to find someone whose focus matches what you are looking for, then submit a question through the form on their page. There is no charge for advice.

Why don't you sell supermarket-brand Nerello Cappuccio wines?

Free Grape Society lists wines from independent producers who grow, make and bottle their own wine. Supermarket-brand wines are typically produced at industrial scale by large négociants, often without a direct connection to the vineyards on the label. The wines here come from the growers themselves, with wines tasted before listing.

Can I find Nerello Cappuccio wines in a normal wine shop?

Occasionally, but the variety is obscure enough that most wine shops outside Sicily do not stock it as a named grape. Distribution tends to run through importers who prioritise better-known Sicilian names. Buying directly through Free Grape Society gives you access to producers who might never reach a shelf in your country.

Where Nerello Cappuccio comes from and what it does in the vineyard

Nerello Cappuccio is a red grape native to Sicily, grown almost exclusively on the island and most concentrated on the slopes of Mount Etna in the northeast. It is nearly always found alongside Nerello Mascalese, the more prominent of the two Nerellos, which typically forms the backbone of an Etna Rosso blend. Nerello Cappuccio plays a supporting role: it contributes colour and softer tannin where Nerello Mascalese brings structure and acidity. The two grapes ripen at similar times and are often harvested together, which is why they appear side by side in the vineyard and in the bottle. Outside of Etna, Nerello Cappuccio appears in small amounts across other parts of Sicily and occasionally in Calabria, though the Etna DOC is where it is best documented and most carefully worked.

How Nerello Cappuccio tastes and what to drink it with

Wines that include Nerello Cappuccio tend to be rounder and more approachable than those built on Nerello Mascalese alone. The grape brings red fruit, a note of dried flowers, and relatively soft tannin — qualities that smooth out the leaner, more mineral character of its blending partner. In a well-balanced Etna Rosso, Nerello Cappuccio is often what makes the wine drinkable young while still rewarding a few years in the bottle. It pairs well with the food it grew up near: pasta with meat ragù, grilled pork, lamb with herbs, and aged Sicilian cheeses. The combination of brightness and softness also makes it a natural match for dishes with some acidity of their own, such as tomato-based sauces or caponata. For more context on the varieties that share its home, the Italian red wines and Nero d'Avola pages are useful starting points.

Buying Nerello Cappuccio direct from independent Sicilian producers

Nerello Cappuccio is not a grape you find in supermarkets or large wine retailers, partly because almost all of the serious production is concentrated in a small number of estates on Etna, and partly because most of those estates are family-run and sell in relatively small quantities. On Free Grape Society, wines made with Nerello Cappuccio are listed directly by the producers who grow it, and each order ships from the producer's own cellar with no importer or warehouse in between. Wines are tasted before listing, so what you read reflects what is actually in the bottle. If you want guidance before choosing, independent wine experts on the platform review wines they have personally tasted, and their notes are visible on each wine page. The Sicily mixboxes page is a good place to explore a producer's own selection across their range, and the broader Italian wines and Sicilian wines pages give more context on what else is grown nearby. Free Grape Society is a society of producers, independent experts and wine lovers — not a shop.