Respect the Land, Honour the Roots
Discover Abbi Cura
A wine. A whisper. A return.
Born from the rare and ancient Lecinaro grape, Abbi Cura is the first creation of 27 Winery — a project rooted in memory, silence, & passion.
Grown in the heart of Italy’s Comino Valley, this wine is a tribute to a land that speaks softly, where vines have survived centuries, forgotten and reborn.
Vinified with care & aged in terracotta, Abbi Cura carries the soul of time — porous, living, imperfectly perfect. It doesn’t shout. It reflects. It remembers.
Crafted by hand and guided by instinct, Abbi Cura is more than a bottle — it's a gesture. A message to take care: of the earth, of tradition, of ourselves.
Whether shared quietly, gifted meaningfully, or collected with intention, Abbi Cura invites you to slow down and reconnect — to roots, to stories, to something real.
27 Winery: wine as it was, wine as it could be.
We make wine with roots, not rules.
If you're looking for the conventional, the usual, or the overworked jammy wines — don’t waste your time. We’re not for you. We are light. We are unique in color, in taste, in soul. We exist outside of any conventional frame.
Each bottle is meant to express, to accompany, and to help your spirit welcome the warmth of the moment you’re living. ABBI CURA – Take Care is the cornerstone of this dream.
Abbi Cura of the moment you open the bottle.
Abbi Cura of the people you’re with in that instant.
Abbi Cura of the story behind the label,
of the land where the roots have worked in silence,
Abbi Cura of the countless souls who walked that soil over centuries.
Abbi Cura of the music around you,
and of that fleeting moment that becomes eternal.
Abbiatene cura.
Because we believe wine should respect the moment — not steal the spotlight.
Marco
Our Wine
What our customers say:
"I first tried Abbi Cura at Tempo Perso, and it was love at first sip. Marco’s passion for this wine shines through every glass - it’s rich, elegant, and utterly unique. If you’re a wine lover, you simply must experience it."
— Amelia P., Edinburgh