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Mont-Redon :Chateauneuf

There is an instant impulse to grab the big rocks as we drive into Chateau Mont-Redon or better still be photographed with these big gibbers. I did.

We are travelling into the southern Rhone to visit the land of mouth-embracing warm area reds in Chateauneuf du Pape (CNDP).

And our host is a jovial fellow, Pierre Fabre who travels the world to discuss the family business at Chateau Mont-Redon.

Now these gibbers; well this is the soil these guys are dealt. Walk up closer and I am relieved to say there is sand between the rocks where these old vines (no trellis) grow as bushes. There is no water supply save a deep root system to survive the blistering summer.

Big gibbers-old bush vines

Big gibbers-old bush vines

Some vineyards have these big pebbles, others are chalky known as calcare here for limestone. The mother rock comes from ancient sea deposits going down up to 200 m in parts, it depended on the sea depth, adding more clay; the pebbles were the river bed; once wider and of European Alps origin; now only the big rocks are left.

Old sea bed vines- Rhone Alps backdrop

Old sea bed vines- Rhone Alps backdrop

There are three large appellations in France: Saint Emilion with 5000 hectares, Chablis with 4000 ha, then  Chateauneuf du Pape with 3200 ha. It tracks one side of the Rhone River for 200 km and at a maximum only 20 km wide. Thirteen grapes are grown.

Mont-Redon started life in 1923 with 2 ha, and now has grown to 150 ha, including a 1997 purchase in Lirac nearby. This is the home of grenache, a special yet thin skinned grape which needs hanging late to ripen, and any late summer rain is disastrous though rare.

Chateauneuf is known mainly for blended red production from grenache, syrah and mourvedre though white is 5% of the surface. Mont-Redon make 15% of their production white, from blends of grenache blanc (main variety), clairette, roussanne, picpoul and the latter bourboulenc for acidity.

Significant exporters like this company receives a greater demand for white wine styles as countries like Australia and USA are big white wine consumers. They are a fullsome drink.

I just loved the Chateau Mont-Redon Chateauneuf-du-Pape 2012 (AUD ); lots of lovely bits to enjoy, sniff the aroma, it smells of the earth of the region, little flowers, spicy-black pepper grenache notes, all yummy and not a sip taken! Has lots of depth, velvet tannins that slip around the mouth, a great spice warmth; 95% is the grenache-syrah-mourvedre mix with 5% of old school varieties left in the older vineyard which are inter-planted.

Mont-Redon 2012

Mont-Redon 2012

Pierre could not resist being a good host so he opened some older bottles of the famous wine; 2007 and 2005 CNDP, both nice and rounded harvests to really enjoy.

Chateau Mont-Redon  Chateauneuf-du-Pape 2007 looks classic; more reds than purples, wine in harmony with itself; this bottle has not left the property, nose sweetened from an improvement in the bottle; nice brioche, honey-raisin, then an expanding palate of puckering spice, jam notes and the pleasant experience. Served unlabelled but easily identified.

Mont-Redon 2007

Mont-Redon 2007

Uncorked’s travel guests visit Chateau Mont-Redon winery and vineyard in the Southern Rhone on the France Wine and Food Tour, and get to have their pic taken amongst the gibbers.

Benanti: now Etna drinks

Uncorked guests just love the Etna grape story. How the Benanti family with roots in Lombardy migrated to Sicily by royal decree, to Catania really, assisting the economic output of eastern Sicily.

By the 1800s native red vines were well established, named in Sicilian dialect but with no relatives in Piedmont to nebbiolo, barbera or dolcetto which inhabit the homeland slopes there. But the wines have similarities.

Travellers come in contact, in a warming manner, with the major variety, nerello mascalese,  Etna hero and gem of a variety. It is lithe, with some pinot noir textures, having pale and some browning colours as with the varieties in Piedmont, then a broadening mouth appeal.

Nerello mascalese

Nerello mascalese

I asked about the origins of nerello mascalese. Host Antonio Benanti says “it has origins in the old town of Mascali nearby, nerello means pale black in Sicilian dialect, and as it is trained by the albarello system introduced by the Greeks, it is an ancient Etna native. We really never know its exact origin”.

Albarello is a form of bush or free standing vine, where the vine supports itself. In old times the vines were randomly planted looking like unkept bushes while today the albarello vine is a tall, upright, row-planted and cleverly-grown shrub whose growing shoots are renewed annually.

Our guests stroll between Benanti’s 100 year-old bush nerello on the 470 m hillside Monte Serra vigneti or vineyards, venturing into the 30 year-old single staked modern section at Viagrande, the company’s now historic wine home.

Monte Serra- 100 yo bush vines

Monte Serra- 100 yo bush vines

And of course a smoking Mount Etna supervises the annual growing crop with a periodic black spray of lava ash. And the rain washes it off. The soil is very mineralised.

The original winery or palmento, is one of numerous ancient designer facilities scattered over Sicily. Lava stone wineries became as a cultural and business interest since the late 1700s.

The rejuvenation of the Mount Etna vineyard sites has seen a purchasing of these derelect palmentos for incorporation in the new wineries as historic parts, with use for wine making illegal (unsanitary) or uneconomic to re-build. But they make great aging cellars or show pieces.

I have visited similar wineries at Passopisciaro and Tenuta de Fessina.

The old vineyards were mixed in plantings and now on trend as a “field blend”. The locals say that their grandfathers must have known what is best for the final wine as nerello mascalese dominated though 20 per cent is nerello cappuccio, and 1-2 per cent the local white variety minnella. Minnella is no longer used.

Here is the lovely lithe general blend Benanti Nerello Mascalese 2012 Etna Rosso DOC, AUD 65, pale-medium colour, Etna terroir nose, volcanic origin, supple and enjoying, long flavour and oak well covered.

Benanti Nerello Mascalese 2012

Benanti Nerello Mascalese 2012

Second wine in the pair is Benanti Nerello Cappuccio 2012 Etna Rosso DOC, AUD 65, very pale, usually unoaked to keep the softness, and very much akin to the light or soft reds of other regions; or also allowed to be blended with nerello mascalese in the field blend.

Benanti Nerello Cappuccio 2012

Benanti Nerello Cappuccio 2012

Uncorked guests taste the magnificence of the volcanic nerellos under the puffs of Etna’s occasional smoke. And view the vista of Etna up closer below!

Barolo by Ceretto

We are driving on the flat out of Alba besides hazelnut plantations, the small Piedmontese town wedged between a series of two wine hills: Barolo and Barbaresco, viewing the Roero hills to the north as we speed west for just ten minutes.

The converted farmhouse is in sight at San Cassiano; the family Ceretto’s main property, Monsordo Bernardina cantina since 1989, originally built in the 1880s. The Cerettos own 160 hectares of vines.

We are here to understand what the Ceretto success is all about for there is a murmur about a dominant white wine and an international red Monsordo turning the minds of drinkers. Nothing better from this organic maker.

And indeed, an Australian assists in the making of wines here. Formerly McLaren Vale based David Fletcher is assistant winemaker to chief Alessandro Ceretto, keeping an eye on production at wineries in Castiglione Falletto (Barolo), here at Monsordo Bernardina (Langhe) and smaller needs at Bricco Asili in Barbaresco. This is estate production taken to completion! The fourth, the bubbly winery is further east in Santo Stefano Belbo.

Host Alessandro Ceretto

Host Alessandro Ceretto

I am totally amazed looking west towards Grinzane Cavour, the towering castles overlooking vines, and learn of non traditional Piedmontese grapes planted here. In the craze to plant French grapes through the 80’s, Ceretto found their newly minted wine to be vividly popular.

Tried was Monsordo 2013 Langhe DOC, packed in a thoroughly hip bottle, an admixture of cabernet (50%), merlot and syrah, quite bizarre to encounter, very much cedary from careful oak application and fruits of spice, spearmint and licorice. Bravo, a winner in USA.

But we were present to taste the local hero grape, nebbiolo. And that was a hoot as the Cerettos served the young then a mature vintage from the same place; a sort of fast track tasting to see the wines develop glass by glass. Fab.

The Ceretto family are traditionalists so the New World style wine Monsordo ages in 300 litre French forest-origin containers called hogsheads while the nebbiolo is found in some 300/500 litre oak but mainly larger vessels, 2500 litres upwards made of the more neutral white oak from Croatian trees. Of interest though is the renewed interest to move to Austrian-sourced oak for coming maturings.

Nebbiolo must not smell of its oak habitat at making to be right on style. Unlike Napa Valley cabernet, too much oak detected in high end nebbiolo is deemed a fault. Dave Fletcher adds that the sweet spot is only 10-15% new wood so it is easily covered by blending later. But 3 years is a long time in barrel. So no faults here.

First wine is single vineyard 2008 Barbaresco Bricco Asili (1.2 ha, 39 year-old-vines) , fresh in its nebbiolo purity, licorice, sweet, it feels good in the mouth, classic tannin which remains as a long sensation; just starting to age, 10-15 years will hold it.

Ceretto Barbaresco Bricco Asili 2008-from Treiso

Ceretto Barbaresco Bricco Asili 2008-from Barbaresco

Then single vineyard (1.2 ha in Castiglione Falletto) 2006 Barolo Bricco Roche (one of four, also Brunate-La Morra, Cannubi San Lorenzo-Barolo and Prapo-Serrulunga), has begun aging also, shows mushroom, bitumen, strength, then great sweetness impressions alongside its firming tannins. Great.

Ceretto Barolo Bricco Rocche 2006 from Castiglione Falletto

Ceretto Barolo Bricco Rocche 2006 from Castiglione Falletto

Finally the last, aged Barolo, 1993 Bricco Roche, all tertiary so the fruits have been consumed by the aging aromas, truffle, fungi, tar, sweet aldehyde, tasting very dry as a 12 year-old, right in the middle of its aging end-point, and now a mature wine with little more to give than what it has. All was revealed: very dry red wine, silky, mushroomy and cheese loving. Mature.

Ceretto Barolo Bricco Rocche 1993

Ceretto Barolo Bricco Rocche 1993

Alessandro Ceretto noted that 50 years ago the annual rainfall was 1200-1300 mm with often soaking rain, now it has reduced to 800 mm with a deal of it delivered by storms. Heavy rain downpours cause vineyard erosion on the steep slopes causing a move to grass more vineyards. Climate swing.

And about Ceretto’s famous white wine, first made in 1985. It is varietal arneis, wildly popular now in Italy, all organic, fashionable in taste and easy to drink, all 600,000 bottles of it from 80 hectares of vines.

Aussie David Fletcher-custodian of Arneis

Aussie David Fletcher-custodian of Arneis

 

Uncorked and Cultivated Wine and Food Tours visit Ceretto at Monsordo Bernardina in San Cassiano, Alba.

Brunello: that’s Biondi

The long line of approaching pines is quite amazing. Cypress trees, over a century-old have been so close planted that light is partially blocked. The sandy road, slim butts, a half-kilometre of single lane driveway just rubs into our mind how history stamps out Brunello country.

 

Here we arrive at the originator of Brunello, the famous, beguiling, long barrel-aged red from sangiovese, at the Biondi Santis. The family has records that it was planted in the region in 1827; before then wine from the white grape moscadello (muscat or moscato) was served to the courts in Florence and Turin.

Ancient Biondi Coat of Arms-moscadello growing!

Ancient Biondi Coat of Arms-moscadello growing!

The buildings are original,  just as Franco Biondi Santi chose to harvest his first crop of a special selection of sangiovese, sangiovese grosso, now propagated all over the DOCG Brunello di Montalcino; that’s all you can grow, and the wine must be 100% that grape.

Up above, about several hundred metres on the cliff face lies the hill town of Montalcino, once a fortified outpost towering over southern Tuscany’s patchwork of green vines and grey olives. We are touring during the harvest, the bus groans up the hill, beside us locals are spreading canvas to collect deep green olives for the year’s oil extractions (frantolio variety mainly for extra virgin).

If Ferruccio Biondi Santi crushed his first grosso berry in 1883 then this makes his vines over 132 years-old. Well not quite as phylloxera struck and by the early 1900s vines were cured by grafting and replanting. So the oldest of the 25 hectares are 80 years, planted circa 1935.

Even more astounding is the aging barrels; the oldest was built in 1900 during phylloxera recovery time, there are no new barrels, no wines with wood perfumes, no wood influence, just 1.7-3 kilolitre neutral  botti constructed of Croatian forest oak. They look old too, so preservation both inside and outside is the job of the repair staff (coopers).

Tour host Yana explains with passion and carefully-chosen phrases which separates the historical Biondi Santi aging systems from neighbours now selling wines from the same grape. Since the 80s there has been an explosion of new brands and vineyards, but we chose to visit the seat of all this Brunello history.

The wine company makes four red wines but may not classify four wines every year. That is best interpreted by the Riserva only being offered in the best years determined by the cantina’s tasting panel. So back to three wines a year!

The rarest wine though is the Rosso di Montalcino (grey label, red stripe) made from vines over 10years when a Annata (vintage Brunello) is not made, as in the wet years, 2014 and 2002. So in a usual, modest season two wines are made, Annata and normal Rosso.

Rosso di Montalcino-stripe bottling

Rosso di Montalcino-stripe bottling

To keep the story of selection going, only wines made from vines over 25 years are considered for Riserva standard; and the wine still spends three years in barrel like normal Annata, but is released close to a 6 year-old wine. Current is 2010, and before then 2008, 2007, 2006, 2005, 2004, 2001.

If you really love Biondi Santi Brunelli di Montalcino or have  a momentous occasion to drink one, there are Riservas from great past years available for sale on the property: 1990, 1982, 1964, 1955 and on request I guess, 1945, 1925, 1891, 1888 are listed on the private, direct sales sheet.

So as my great host Yana says “our quality outcome relies on what the weather gives us”. On my 2014 vintage visit the persistent rain spoilt the harvest while the 2015 drive down the cypress drive heralded a hot season, great wines and an early start to harvest in late September.

Traditional neck labelling

Traditional neck labelling

Brunello di Montalcino Annata 2008

Brunello di Montalcino Annata 2008

How did the 2008 taste (AUD 275)? Well there is a maker’s style here; as it is not decorated with oak aromas or tastes or characters there is a preservation of grape character be it of a seasoning contribution from the barrel environment. Look for nose strength, unleashed power of wild herbs, thyme-scent, mushroom, then controlled palate power, savoury first, recognise the earthiness, white pepper, powdery tannins, all building to a medium bodied power-pack of wine with backbone, spine, longevity. Drink 2020 onwards. The property suggest a shelf life of 35-45 years, so wine for another generation yet fun to drink now.

The every year wine, Rosso di Montalcino (AUD 90), is less complex but of the same ilk, released younger, drinking 2011 today, less savoury, more fruity, all oak aged, fruit sweet, red berries, drying, no deep wine colour, in fact semi-pale, always a little browning so as to be natural sangiovese.

Rosso di Montalcino Annata 2011

Rosso di Montalcino Annata 2011

Rosso 2011

Rosso 2011

Expect the baby Brunello-Rosso-to span 15 years though its point of enjoyment is youth, while Riserva is the opposite, 55-80 years a normal cellar span, and 1888 is a great memory wine as an example of this grape on this property aged this way.

Current & Past Generation: Jacopo e Franco

Current & Past Generation: Jacopo e Franco

Since establishment successive owners Ferruccio, Tancredi, Franco, the latter deceased in 2013, ran the property, now with Jacopo assuming this great responsibility to preserve the history.

Uncorked and Cultivated Wine and Food Tours visit Tenuta Greppo in Montalcino.

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