The Sparkling Wine collection at Primal Wine features bottles made using a range of winemaking methods. Pét-Nat (pétillant naturel) and ancestral method wines complete their single fermentation in the bottle, capturing natural carbonation without disgorgement. Traditional method sparkling wines, including Champagne, Crémant, and Cava, undergo a secondary fermentation in bottle followed by riddling and disgorgement for refined bubbles and toasty complexity. Charmat method wines, such as Prosecco and Lambrusco, ferment in pressurized tanks, preserving bright fruit character and fresh aromatics.
The collection spans white, rosé, red, and orange sparkling wines. Styles range from rustic, cloudy Pét-Nats to polished traditional method bottles. Most wines are light-bodied, with some medium-bodied options available. Prices range from under $25 to $180.
Which Countries and Regions Are Represented?
Italy leads the selection with wines from Emilia-Romagna (the home of Lambrusco), Veneto (Prosecco), Lombardy (Franciacorta and frizzante styles), Trentino-Alto Adige, Lazio, Campania, Piedmont, Liguria, and Sicily. Emilia-Romagna contributes the largest regional selection, featuring producers like Folicello, Il Farneto, Ca' de Noci, and Podere Pradarolo.
The United States is represented by wines from California and New York, including the Finger Lakes region. France contributes bottles from the Loire Valley, Champagne, Burgundy, Beaujolais, Alsace, Jura, Savoie, and Languedoc-Roussillon. Spain offers Cava from Catalonia and Penedès. Austria provides sparkling wines from Burgenland, including bottles from Meinklang. Additional countries include Germany, Australia, Portugal, South Africa, Switzerland, and Mexico.
What Is Pét-Nat and How Is It Different from Champagne?
Pét-Nat, short for pétillant naturel, is made using the ancestral method. The wine is bottled before the initial fermentation is complete, and the remaining sugars ferment inside the sealed bottle, naturally creating bubbles. Pét-Nat wines are typically unfiltered and undisgorged, often appearing cloudy with visible sediment. They tend to be lower in pressure than traditional method wines, with a softer, frothier mousse.
Champagne and other traditional method sparkling wines undergo a different process. After the base wine is made, a mixture of yeast and sugar is added before bottling. The wine ferments again inside the bottle, producing carbon dioxide. The bottles then age on their lees (dead yeast cells), contributing toasty, brioche-like complexity. Following aging, the bottles undergo riddling to collect sediment in the neck, which is then removed through disgorgement.
What Grape Varieties Are Used in Natural Sparkling Wine?
The collection features a wide range of grape varieties. Italian sparkling wines use Lambrusco varieties (Grasparossa, Salamino, Sorbara), Glera (for Prosecco), Trebbiano, Malvasia, and indigenous grapes from regions like Campania and Trentino. French sparkling wines feature Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, Pinot Meunier, Chenin Blanc, Gamay, and Savagnin. Spanish Cava uses Macabeo, Xarel-lo, and Parellada.
Austrian sparkling wines from Meinklang use Welschriesling and other regional varieties. American producers work with Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, and various other grapes depending on the region. The diversity of grape varieties contributes to a broad spectrum of flavors and styles within the sparkling wine category.
How Should I Store and Serve Natural Sparkling Wine?
Natural sparkling wine should be served cold, between 40 and 50°F. Chilling preserves freshness, tempers alcohol, and improves drinkability. Store sparkling wine at consistent cool temperatures between 50 and 59°F, away from direct light and vibration. Most natural sparkling wines are made to be consumed young, within a few years of release.
Pét-Nat wines may contain sediment, which is harmless but can affect mouthfeel. Some drinkers pour slowly to leave sediment behind, while others consider it part of what makes natural wine distinctive. After opening, sparkling wine is best consumed within one to three days. A sparkling wine stopper can help preserve carbonation.
What Food Pairings Work Well with Natural Sparkling Wine?
Pét-Nat's versatility makes it an adaptable match for a wide range of foods. Its bright acidity and natural effervescence complement light seafood, salads, charcuterie, and fried foods. Sparkling wine's acidity can cut through richness and refresh the palate.
Lambrusco pairs particularly well with the cuisine of Emilia-Romagna, including cured meats like prosciutto, aged Parmigiano-Reggiano, and rich pasta dishes. Sparkling rosé works with appetizers, grilled vegetables, and lighter meat dishes. Brut Nature and Blanc de Blancs styles complement oysters, raw fish, and delicate preparations. Spicy Asian cuisine also pairs well with natural sparkling wine, as the effervescence and acidity handle heat and complex flavors.
What Makes Natural Sparkling Wine Different from Conventional Sparkling Wine?
Natural sparkling wine follows the same principles as natural wine generally: grapes farmed organically or biodynamically without synthetic pesticides, herbicides, or fertilizers, and winemaking with minimal intervention. Fermentation occurs with native yeasts present on grape skins and in the cellar environment rather than commercial laboratory strains.
For sparkling wines specifically, natural producers often avoid or limit practices common in conventional production, such as dosage (adding sugar after disgorgement), aggressive fining and filtration, and extended cold stabilization. Many natural sparkling wines are bottled without added sulfur dioxide. The result is sparkling wine with lively, often unpredictable flavors and effervescence that reflects the grape variety and terroir.