REVIEW · SIENA
Exclusive Wine Tasting in the Historic Center of Siena
Book on Viator →Operated by Perlage Wine Experience - Siena · Bookable on Viator
Sparkling wine fans, this one is for you. This exclusive tasting focuses on Tuscan sparkling wines in Siena’s historic center, with a guided format that explains how the bubbles get made, why styles taste different, and how territory and grapes shape the glass. I like that hosts such as Simona and Besart keep things practical and question-friendly in English, not stuck in a lecture mode.
I also like the small, calm setup at Perlage Enoteca—easy to fit into a day of walking, and built for conversation in a group of up to 10. One watch-out: it’s about an hour and it includes tasting and drinks only, so you’ll still need to plan food separately if you’re staying out through lunch or dinner.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Prioritize
- Tuscan Sparkling Wines in Siena: Why This Tasting Feels Different
- Via delle Terme Start: Getting to Perlage Enoteca Without Stress
- The One-Hour Tasting Flow: What You’ll Actually Do
- How Methods Change the Taste: Charmat and the Italy Angle
- Small Group Comfort: Why Max 10 Matters for Learning
- Value for $42.05: Is It Worth It for a Short Siena Stop?
- Taking It Home: Buying Bottles and Shipping a Case
- Best Time to Fit It Into Your Siena Day
- Who Should Book This Sparkling Wine Tasting?
- Should You Book This Exclusive Siena Sparkling Wine Tasting?
- FAQ
- How long is the wine tasting in Siena?
- What’s included in the price?
- Is lunch or dinner included?
- Where do we meet for the tasting?
- How many people are in the group?
- What language is the tasting offered in?
- Do I get a mobile ticket?
- Is the experience refundable if I cancel?
- Are service animals allowed, and can most travelers participate?
Key Things I’d Prioritize

- Exclusive Tuscan sparkling focus in a region best known for still red wines
- English-led guidance with hosts who answer questions clearly (Simona and Besart show up in the experience)
- Small group size (max 10) for a smoother pace and more back-and-forth
- Production-method talk you can taste (how process links to flavor and dryness)
- A short, high-impact break in Siena’s historic center, ideal when you don’t have hours for a full wine excursion
Tuscan Sparkling Wines in Siena: Why This Tasting Feels Different

Siena is famous for its medieval heart and its red-wine identity, so it’s fun when the spotlight shifts. This experience puts sparkling wine front and center, using Tuscan examples that show there’s more going on here than just classic reds. You’ll spend your time learning what makes these wines distinct—grape choice, production methods, and the idea of territory showing up in the glass.
The value is that you’re not tasting blind. The educators walk you through why each style tastes the way it does, so your palate gets a framework instead of just a list of bottles. One theme you’ll hear is that sparkling wine quality can be both approachable and serious, with a balance of flavor, dryness, and technique.
And because the tasting is designed for a short window, it’s built for real travel schedules. You get education without committing to a half-day tour where you’re rushing from stop to stop.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Siena.
Via delle Terme Start: Getting to Perlage Enoteca Without Stress

You’ll meet at Via delle Terme, 27, 53100 Siena. The good news is that it’s near public transportation, which matters in Siena where routes and parking can be annoying. You’re also starting right in the historic-center area, so you can treat this like a timed stop during your walking day rather than a separate chore.
You’ll use a mobile ticket, and you receive confirmation at booking. That means you can keep your planning simple: show up, check in, and enjoy the tasting.
The shop itself is described as attractive, with a calm interior and a nice storefront. That combination matters more than you’d think. A wine tasting works best when you’re not fighting crowds or noise, and the setup here is meant to feel comfortable while you learn.
The One-Hour Tasting Flow: What You’ll Actually Do

The experience runs for about 1 hour and ends back at the same meeting point. That makes it easy to plug into your day: you don’t need to “re-navigate” Siena afterward.
Inside, the pace is straightforward. Expect a guided walkthrough of sparkling wine production methods, then tasting a selection of new quality sparkling wines. The educators explain how different processes affect the final result, including flavor and dryness profiles. This is the part that makes the tasting more than a casual sip-and-smile.
You’ll also get time to ask questions. The tone in the experience is consistently described as friendly and comfortable, with hosts answering in a way that lets you keep up even if you’re not a wine expert.
What you shouldn’t expect: a long sit-down meal. It’s a tasting with drinks included, but it doesn’t include lunch or dinner. So if you tend to get hungry during activities, I’d plan a snack stop nearby before or after.
How Methods Change the Taste: Charmat and the Italy Angle
One of the standout educational points from the experience is the talk about Charmat (also called Martinotti) and how it relates to Italy. The idea isn’t just trivia. It’s meant to help you connect method to what you taste—freshness, aroma character, and overall style.
Here’s the practical takeaway for you: when someone explains how the bubbles are made, it helps you recognize why two sparkling wines can both be “sparkling” but taste completely different. You can start noticing differences in intensity, dryness, and the general style you prefer.
The educators also cover multiple production methodologies, not just one. That matters because Tuscan sparkling styles can be very different even when they come from the same general region. By the end, you should feel more capable of choosing a bottle based on taste preferences rather than brand name alone.
And yes, it’s okay if you don’t memorize the technical details. The experience is structured so your palate does the remembering.
Small Group Comfort: Why Max 10 Matters for Learning

A big part of why this works is the group size. With a maximum of 10 travelers, the dynamic stays human. You’re not shouting questions across a room, and you’re not watching a slideshow from the back row.
That also means the tasting can stay paced to the group. In a format like this, speed is the enemy; you want time to smell, sip, and compare. A small group makes that comparison feel easier.
English guidance is explicitly offered, and many hosts in this experience are comfortable conversing in a way that keeps things accessible. One review-style detail you can take seriously: some sessions include additional languages (English plus French has come up), which is a nice bonus if you’re bilingual or just appreciate extra clarity.
Service animals are allowed, and the experience notes that most travelers can participate. So if you’re looking for a calm, guided activity that doesn’t demand advanced skills, this is built for that.
Value for $42.05: Is It Worth It for a Short Siena Stop?

Let’s talk about the price, because this is a fair question when you’re traveling. At $42.05 per person for roughly an hour, you’re paying for three things: instruction, curated tasting, and drinks included.
If you’re the type who likes to learn while you taste, this format often beats the “buy a glass and hope” approach. You’re getting a guided selection instead of a random pour, and the educational thread ties each wine style back to production methods and flavor style. That turns the experience into something you can actually use later when shopping.
The potential drawback on value is also simple: it doesn’t include food. So if you go straight through lunch or dinner time, you might end up spending more than you expected on top of the tasting. Still, as a short reset during a sightseeing day, it can be a strong use of time.
Also, this tasting is often booked about 18 days in advance on average. That’s a sign it’s not just a random slow slot—it’s popular enough that booking early makes sense if you have specific travel dates.
Taking It Home: Buying Bottles and Shipping a Case

This experience has a retail side in the sense that people leave with bottles. Some guests mention taking bottles home, and one even described ordering a case to ship back home. That doesn’t mean it’s guaranteed for every booking, but it does suggest the shop is set up for purchases if you fall for a style.
If you want to plan for that possibility, I’d keep in mind two practical things. First, make space in your luggage logic for at least a bottle if your carry-on strategy allows it. Second, if shipping is something you want, ask during the tasting so you’re not stuck making decisions at the last second.
Either way, the best part of a tasting like this is getting a personal map of what you like—then buying from taste, not guesswork.
Best Time to Fit It Into Your Siena Day

You’ll get the most out of this when you treat it like a breather. It’s designed as a short, focused stop during a day that might otherwise be heavy on walking, churches, and museum time.
A good strategy is to schedule it when you want a reset to your senses. After a few hours outdoors, wine tasting gives you a controlled indoor pace where you can slow down, ask questions, and compare styles calmly.
Also, it ends where you started, so you can smoothly go back to your sightseeing route. That matters in Siena because getting lost is easy, even when you think you’re being careful.
If you’re on a tight schedule, this is also a great pick when you don’t want a longer countryside excursion. One-hour wine education in the historic center is exactly the kind of “small commitment, big payoff” travel move that keeps a trip fun.
Who Should Book This Sparkling Wine Tasting?
Book it if you want:
- A sparkling wine specialty experience instead of the usual general tasting
- A short activity with drinks included and a guide who can explain production in plain language
- A small-group environment where questions feel normal, not rushed
- A chance to learn how method and style connect—especially if you enjoy comparing dryness and flavor profiles
Skip it (or adjust expectations) if you want:
- A long, full-day winery trip with lunch and countryside time
- A large group event where you just pick a glass and move on fast
If you’re a sparkling wine lover, this is tailor-made. If you’re new to it, it still makes sense because the teaching approach is built around helping you understand what you’re tasting.
Should You Book This Exclusive Siena Sparkling Wine Tasting?
I think it’s a smart booking if your goal is quality time with guidance, not a rushed grab-bag of stops. The combination of exclusive Tuscan sparkling focus, a small group, and hosts like Simona and Besart explaining methods in English makes it feel genuinely useful.
If you can spare one hour, plan something to eat before or after since lunch and dinner aren’t included, and you want a central break during your Siena day, then yes—this is the kind of experience that turns wine from background noise into something you’ll remember.
FAQ
How long is the wine tasting in Siena?
It lasts about 1 hour.
What’s included in the price?
The experience includes the wine tasting and drinks.
Is lunch or dinner included?
No. Lunch and dinner are not included.
Where do we meet for the tasting?
The meeting point is Via delle Terme, 27, 53100 Siena SI, Italy. The activity ends back at the same meeting point.
How many people are in the group?
The experience has a maximum of 10 travelers.
What language is the tasting offered in?
It is offered in English.
Do I get a mobile ticket?
Yes. The experience includes a mobile ticket.
Is the experience refundable if I cancel?
Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours before the experience’s start time for a full refund.
Are service animals allowed, and can most travelers participate?
Service animals are allowed, and most travelers can participate. The experience is also near public transportation.
























