Jermann
On the border where Veneto meets Friuli, Jermann has carried a family thread since 1881, when Anton Jermann settled in Villanova di Farra. What was once mixed farming turned, under Silvio Jermann in the 1970s, into a winery that helped redefine Northern Italy’s modern white wines. Collio hills and the Isonzo plain offer a palette of marl, sandstone and gravel, ideal for site-driven precision.
Vineyard work stays central: controlled yields, careful picking and a cellar approach that values clarity over effects. Lots are handled separately, fermentations are chosen to suit the fruit, and élevage moves between stainless steel and smaller oak vessels, often with extended lees contact to build line and texture.
From local grapes like Friulano and Ribolla Gialla to international varieties, Jermann speaks in craftsmanship and place—a confident voice between Veneto and Friuli that remains contemporary without ever losing its roots.Jermann
On the border where Veneto meets Friuli, Jermann has carried a family thread since 1881, when Anton Jermann settled in Villanova di Farra. What was once mixed farming turned, under Silvio Jermann in the 1970s, into a winery that helped redefine Northern Italy’s modern white wines. Collio hills and the Isonzo plain offer a palette of marl, sandstone and gravel, ideal for site-driven precision.
Vineyard work stays central: controlled yields, careful picking and a cellar approach that values clarity over effects. Lots are handled separately, fermentations are chosen to suit the fruit, and élevage moves between stainless steel and smaller oak vessels, often with extended lees contact to build line and texture.
From local grapes like Friulano and Ribolla Gialla to international varieties, Jermann speaks in craftsmanship and place—a confident voice between Veneto and Friuli that remains contemporary without ever losing its roots.