Sorry for writing a novel: I'm a wine making newbie but was drawn to the Italians from the start. I've only bottled 3 of the kits so far but I've tasted the ones bulk ageing so I'll give my run down:
1st kit - RJS International Cru Nebbiolo - first wine made 1 year ago, first to bottle, I foolishly thought I'd have it bottled in 8 weeks then discovered this WMT website and learned about bulk ageing, adding tannins, etc. This wine tastes good especially after it opens up, decanting helps, but it has always tasted just a bit too sweet to me despite what the hydrometer says (0.995), and it doesn't taste like 'tar and roses'. Also not at all clear where the Nebbiolo was grown, it says imported but the kit is from Canada so I fear it was just imported from America not Northern Italy.
2nd and 5th kit - RJS En Primeur Amarone - This time last year I soon learned that all the RJS kits were being downsized in early 2021, and that the RJS EPs would re-size from 18L to 14L, that seemed like a bad thing to me, so I bought 3 RJS EPs at the old 18L size before they were discontinued, seemed like a solid deal around $150 each shipped from Home Brew Ohio via Amazon marketplace. These two are both still bulk aging but tasting on rackings shows a nice wine with lots of tannins, flavor, and acid which seems like it will improve with more bulk and bottle ageing. Again not sure if any of these grapes came from Italy, if any were raisined at all (in the way the grapes for Amarone are slightly dried before fermenting and pressing), if there's even any/much Corvina in the blend (as it is rarely grown in America), but whatever the blend and provenance it seems at least like a kit wine with good flavor and stuffing to age a bit. Also read here that others have really enjoyed this one, especially with some age.
3rd kit - RJS En Primeur Super Tuscan
4th kit - Finer Win Kit Super Tuscan
Made these two back to back to try to see if the brand new FWK wine delivered something different / better right out of the gate, despite the super concentrated 6L it vs. an 18L RJS kit. Deliberately made these to the same, same BM4x4 yeast, same short EM (3.5 weeks), same no fining and no filtering, same small addition of dried cherries to primary along with the skins, same tannin addition, etc. But I did err in that I bulk aged the FWK a bit longer. These both are tasty, the RJS is the second wine I bottled, and it does not taste as sweet as the Nebbiolo which is great, however, the FWK is the first wine where I was like, OK, I made a wine which is nearly on par with the average wine I buy, it is even drier than the RJS, has great body, just really promising but only bottled this past month, hoping it gets even better with some bottle age. Wife still not impressed compared to the wines I buy.
6th kit - FWK Barbera - made it without skins, for the most part (I re-used the double skin pack from the Amarone kit but only after it had done a 6 week EM so not much left, added a small fpac too, but just to give a bit more structure and fruity hints, mainly I saw this as a quicker drinker and it will be the next one I bottle.
Since then I've made 5 more wines but all are French in origin. My first wine from grapes I picked - triple batch of Mouvedre - they do call it Mataro in Italy, Monastrell in Spain (10 g first run barely pressed, 5 g 2nd run after adding sugar water to the pomace and pressing that some more). Still bulk ageing and completing MLF, I hope. Taste really promising. And just did two FWK Syrahs, taste super promising but one is still doing a longer EM, the first I just moved to secondary after doing only the 2 week FWK protocol. A Marselan from WE is coming next, so basically 6 Italian wines followed by 6 carboys of French wines.
From my short year of winemaking I would recommend FWKs the most amongst kits, but they only have one "Italian" offering right now, Super Tuscan, but this year's Super Tuscan has no Sangiovese (could not source it), so it is all French origin grapes grown in Lodi, but still I suspect it will be good. Sadly they also could not source Barbera (or Sangiovese) as single varietals either this 2021 crop year, so those are not offered. Given that I'd either do the FWK Super Tuscan (even absent Sangiovese) or the RJS EP Amarone or EP Super Tuscan (caveat there is just that I haven't tried the new 14L more concentrated versions). I'd skip the RJS Nebbiolo. I would ditch the champagne yeast and use BM4x4 (Italian origin) or RC212 (French origin) or some other yeast you like.