A Prosecco brand just bet €1.5 million that Italy can make world-class whisky. Whether you think that's brilliant or delusional, it's a move you need to understand — because it's heading for your shelf.
Bottega Italian whisky debuted at Vinitaly 2026 alongside a new premium Cartizze Prosecco, and together these launches represent one of the most deliberate cross-category brand extensions the liquor industry has seen in years. This isn't a celebrity slapping their name on a bottle. It's an established wine house with global distribution infrastructure making a calculated leap into spirits — while simultaneously doubling down on the high end of its core category.
For independent liquor retailers, that combination raises real questions. Does brand trust in Prosecco translate to whisky credibility? Is Italian whisky a category with legs, or a novelty that fizzles? And when a brand launches across two categories at once, does that signal strength or overreach? Let's break it down.
Alexander Whisky: What's Actually in the Bottle
If you know Bottega, you know the gold bottle. The brand has been a Prosecco shelf staple for years — recognizable, giftable, and consistently moving units. So when Bottega unveiled a full single malt whisky line at Vinitaly 2026 (April 12–15, Verona) , it turned heads across the trade floor.
Three Expressions, One Serious Commitment
The line is called Alexander Whisky. Three expressions, each aged five years, all bottled at 40% ABV. And here's the number that matters: Bottega reportedly invested €1.5 million into development . That's not a celebrity vanity label or a limited-edition PR stunt. That's real capital behind a calculated category entry.
What's worth paying attention to is the branding: Spiritoautoctono. In plain language, that translates roughly to "indigenous spirit." Bottega is making a deliberate argument — that Italy can produce world-class whisky with the same terroir-driven philosophy that built its wine reputation. Think of it as the same logic behind Japanese whisky's rise: a country with deep fermentation and aging expertise applying those skills to a new category.
For retailers evaluating cross-category launches, this is the kind of story that sells bottles. Consumers already trust Bottega's quality through their Prosecco portfolio. That trust transfers — or at least, that's the bet.
The Travel Retail Angle Retailers Should Note
Here's where it gets strategic for your store. Bottega already has established duty-free distribution for its wines and liqueurs across international airports . The plan is to push Alexander Whisky through that same infrastructure — meaning global visibility and marketing spend that you don't have to fund.
Why does that matter domestically? Because travelers who discover the brand at 35,000 feet come home looking for it on local shelves. That awareness pipeline works in your favor.
Italian whisky is still an emerging niche. The category isn't crowded yet. Early-adopter retailers who stock it now get the novelty-driven sales window — the same window that rewarded shops who jumped on Japanese whisky before everyone else caught on. That window doesn't stay open forever.
The whisky grabbed the headlines — but the other half of Bottega's dual launch may actually be the more immediately actionable product for most stores.
The New Cartizze Prosecco: Premiumization in Bottega's Core Category
What Makes Cartizze Different from Standard Prosecco
Here's the number that tells the story: 108 hectares . That's the entire Cartizze vineyard zone — a tiny hilltop area within the already-prestigious Conegliano Valdobbiadene Prosecco Superiore DOCG. For context, the broader Prosecco DOC region covers roughly 24,000 hectares . Cartizze represents less than half a percent of that.
This isn't another $12 bottle competing on price. Bottega Cartizze Prosecco comes from what's essentially the grand cru of the Prosecco world — steep slopes, specific microclimates, and yields that can't scale. Limited supply plus genuine prestige equals real pricing power.
Bottega's Pattern of Trading Up
This move follows a clear playbook. Before jumping into spirits, Bottega spent years systematically moving upmarket within sparkling wine. Their Prosecco Premium Vintage Collection — featuring four distinct vintages — was an early signal. Vintage-dated Prosecco was practically unheard of from a brand at Bottega's scale.
The pattern: establish credibility at higher price points in your core category, then extend outward. It's textbook brand building.
For your store, the practical takeaway is straightforward. Premium Prosecco is a proven margin driver, and a Bottega's Cartizze fills a real gap between everyday bubbles and Champagne. That's the product with the clearest path to your register. Just point to those 108 hectares and let scarcity do the selling.
