Chianti Classico sprawls across central Tuscany, a rolling patchwork of vineyards and stone hamlets between Florence and Siena. This private full-day experience, Tour do Chianti Completo – um dia em meio as colinas e vinhos toscanos – privativo, leaves Florence and follows the old wine roads to the heart of Chianti Classico, where cypress-lined lanes, sun-washed terraces and medieval villas set the scene for hands-on tasting and local storytelling.
The day opens with a scenic drive through postcard vineyards toward Greve in Chianti and neighboring estates, pausing to introduce the region’s defining features: Sangiovese-dominated slopes, calcareous clay soils, and terraces shaped by generations of smallholders. Your private guide traces the difference between IGT, DOC and DOCG classifications while you learn how microclimate, altitude and stone type influence a vintage. The highlight is a visit to a family-run winery where the owner welcomes the group, explains harvest and cellar practices, and leads a structured tasting of estate Chianti Classicos and reserve bottles paired with rustic Tuscan fare.
Beyond bottles and labels, the tour gives a sense of place. You’ll walk short vineyard rows, smell crushed grape skins, and stand beneath sculpted cypress that historically marked field boundaries and routes between villages. Taste sessions focus on technique—look, swirl, smell and savor—while the host connects flavors to local olive oil, pecorino and house-cured salumi. Small-group, private format keeps the pace intimate; expect opportunities to ask questions and to buy bottles directly from producers.
The experience suits curious travelers who want more than a winery brochure: it’s tactile, informative, and rooted in local practice. Language can be Portuguese or other languages depending on guide availability; meeting point is communicated after booking. Practical details are straightforward: comfortable shoes, sun protection, and a light appetite for long tastings. Chianti’s Western rim reaches near Pisa and extends east toward Arezzo, but this tour centers on Chianti Classico between Florence and Siena, a region established in wine law and rich with agrarian history.
Midday stops often include a market square or a family-run olive mill where pressing techniques and varietal olive flavors are compared. Expect small but memorable food pairings—crisp bruschetta with fresh tomatoes, saffron-seasoned risotto in autumn, or a slice of roasted pork accompanied by a local chianti ragu—which anchor the tasting in regional gastronomy. Drivers planning to explore independently after the tour should allow time for narrow country roads and occasional farm animals crossing; the pace here is deliberate, and savoring it is part of the point. Bring a camera.