Archives for the ‘General’ Category

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.

Ferrari: flash fizz

Visitors to Italy often find themselves trapped in the well-worn sangiovese-strewn hills of Eastern Tuscany. But the Chianti wines are a product of a warm growing climate. What about cool?

I recently ventured to discover the real heart that makes the classy end of Italian sparkling wine throb. The precondition of making metodo classico – Italian speak for bollicini made the same way as their cousins do in Champagne, is a cool or cold growing environment. There is much to be excited around visiting the bubbles-making region of Trento, Italy’s northern-most.

First it has to pass the cool test. No problem there.

Now this vintage, 2015, those people in Champagne finished their harvest before the Trentians. Although Champagne is the most northerly-orientated of France’s cool regions, and reaches to 270 metres, the Trento harvest at 500m starts later. Some feat. Must be good for the bubbles base wines.

Ferrari’s most commonly encountered wine is Ferrari Brut. It has no year designation, a normal feature of gulpable bubbles. This is decidedly fresh when made for the market containing 2 year-old chardonnays.

Ferrari Trento DOC Brut

Ferrari Trento DOC Brut

Within a few minutes of meeting Ferrari’s soft-spoken chief winemaker Marcello Lunelli I was hearing graciously how this region supplies long cellar-aged, hence long-lived sparklers.

You see it’s all in the taste-that shrill acidity which sits in your mouth, ensures your first and last sensation is the tartness we call minerality. Or the acid gives a linear expression down the length of your tongue.

Ferrari Perle 2008, all chardonnay, is the goto wine to seek this minerality; zippy, citrussy, and the name sounds so charming-diamonds, glitter-in-the glass, low on sugar (4 grams) so the acid pirouettes in one swallow. It’s good. And it smells of honey sweet and white flowers: the good folks at Ferrari call it the honey aroma of the tiglio tree.

Ferrari Perle Trento DOC 2008

Ferrari Perle Trento DOC 2008

Trento is an ancient Roman town wedged between the two imposing side of the Dolomites Mountains; rugged and ugly monsters, clinging to the flood-sluiced banks of the Adige River. The vines clamber on the rocky slopes and terraces, barely planted on the narrow alluvial plains reserved for vegetables and apple crops.

Giulio Ferrari established the company in 1902 by planting chardonnay in the valley. He sold it to Trento wine merchant Bruno Lunelli in 1952 when without an heir. Subsequently Bruno bought an iconic chardonnay vineyard in 1964, releasing a hallmark wine only in seasons when the conditions smile, the first being 1972.

The current Giulio is 2004 is good, will age well until 2018; delicious, single vineyard fizz, lightly honied, high on minerality, nice gas and even nicer crisp tones of acidity. The wine the founder would drink.

For me the 1987 Giulio Ferrari, Reserve of the founder, Extra Brut (2.5 grams) smiled as I unpacked a bottle for my cellar; it was disgorged in 2011, living on its moribund yeast for 27 years.

Giulio Ferrari Trento DOC 1987

Giulio Ferrari Trento DOC 1987

WHERE TO STAY IN TRENTO: Grand Hotel Trento, Piazza Dante, 20; +39 0461 27100; grandhoteltrento.com; a lovely old world style hotel, great breakfasts.

EAT IN TRENTO: Osteria Le Due Spade, via Don Arcangelo Rizzi, 11,; +39 0461 234343; leduespade.com ; established 1545, well-known and respected, has a top sommelier, inventive plates by Massimiliano Peterlana.

Peter Scudamore-Smith MW visited Ferrari Trento privately as Uncorked and Cultivated tours and travels.

 

 

 

 

The art of buying and selling fine wine

Interested in selling your fine wine collection? For some, this is a thought tantamount to sacrilege.

But what if your cellar was overstocked and you needed to make room for some new releases? Or you could be thinking “What if that bottle of Romanee-Conti Uncle Art gave us for our wedding adds up to an overseas airline ticket?”

It might be time to cash in on some of your prized bottles because your taste for reds has changed. Give yourself a gold star for resisting temptation!  This is where a fine wine auction house can help you realise your return on investment.

Wickman’s Fine Wine Auctions is always looking to buy and sell fine wine. Uncorked and Cultivated has a great relationship with this fine wine auction house, and has done since 2011. Master of Wine Peter Scudamore-Smith is often called upon to value wine collections, and to help Uncorked’s clientele realise decent prices for their stock through the auction system.

“Auctioneer Mark Wickman has been auctioning and valuing wine in Australia since 2003, and has been instrumental in helping Uncorked’s clients maximise their returns from wine investment,” said Peter Scudamore-Smith, founder and director of Uncorked and Cultivated.

“This is a fine wine auction house which has a bidder membership spanning Australia and Asia’s wealthiest private wine collectors, Masters of Wine, top restaurants, casinos, sommeliers, and commercial wine buyers. Wickman’s can guarantee you one of the most popular marketplaces in Australia to sell your wine, with clearance rates in excess of 70%!”

We asked Auctioneer Mark Wickman just how did your wine auction house come about? “In 2003 my 8 year old son wanted to raise money for Multiple Sclerosis. One of the solutions was a charity wine auction. We raised $5000 that year and eventually created a commercial venture from those seeds”, said Mark.

PetrusAnd the most expensive bottle of wine you’ve auctioned? “That would be a 1962 Chateau Petrus from Pomerol in Bordeaux  for $10,000. A buyer wanted it for a 50th birthday celebration. Funny enough, shortly after a case of the 1962 came up for sale in the US and sold for around $12,000 USD per bottle. After 2012 the price dropped dramatically, no doubt there was not so much demand for 51st birthdays!”, said Mark.

Wickman’s is one of Australia’s leading wine auction houses. If you have excess wine, or your taste has matured towards Brunello and would like to consider selling them in an upcoming wine auction,  you will find information on how to sell wine with Wickman’s here.

Upcoming Wickmans Wine Auction Events

  • November Fine Wine Auction 9th November to the 16th November
  • December Fine & Rare Wine Auction 30th November to the 7th December

Italian Alpine bubbles: bellissimo

There is a sparkle in the chill fresh waters of Lago Iseo, and now there some most sustainable growth in Italy’s premier wine region alongside these ripples in Franciacorta.

While nowhere in quantity to France’s finest (304 million bottles), news this week by the Gambero Rosso organisation said 15 million bottles of the sparkling style Franciacorta (Lombardy province) from te cool, hilly southern lake sites are made.

The set is metodo classico, that age-surviving manual and individual method of preserving Franciacortian chardonnay and pinot nero base wines on their dead yeast. The earliest drunk wines generally age that way for 18 months though older makers can hold bottles longer.

There are three thousand hectares designated Franciacorta DOCG with 110 members in the local producing organisation (consorzio) though about 170 brands exist (renegade non believers). Ten years ago there were 50 makers .

A third of the region is in conversion to bio dynamique vine growing.

I found my way from the lakeside to the small village of Montecelli Brusati (a series of small rolling hills behind the living spaces typifys) to greeted by the folk from the Gussalli Beretta-owned Lo Sparviere, a very old stone property and set of 16th century buildings.

The original family have lived there for five generations, and which Beretta is preserving.

The external winemaker is a composed Francesco Pollastri, a 40 odd vintage grounded veteran keeping the ways in the cellar quite simple.

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Vineyards are generally planted and harvested as separate varieties, mainly chardonnay, the bulk of the 20 hectare spaces. A little pinot nero from several sites breaks the rule and is blended to make a single rose bubbles . The current La Sparviere Rose, no vintage on the label but it is from 2010, keeps it more simple.

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Lo Sparviere Pinot Nero Rose

The stellar wine is the single chardonnay wine with vintage age; I was first attracted to the brand by drinking the 2008 (AUD 75), current is Lo Sparviere Brut Millesimato 2009. It gleams, pale, expressive, intense chardonnay tangerine, bitter peach or nectarine fruit flavours, and coiled acidity. A cool place, and a warm year wine.

Lo Sparviere Brut Millesimato 2009

Lo Sparviere Brut Millesimato 2009

Then the next step: Lo Sparviere Dossagio Zero 2008, just named with three glasses (very prestigious) in Gambero Rosso’s 2016 listings of top wines; worth celebrating though small amounts are kept this long. No sugar, just measuring a gram which the yeast does not eat, this is very composed and a long time keeping “blanc de blancs” with lovely linear lime grass acidity. Other wines are dosed at 8 grams to compare the subtle sweetness.

WHERE TO STAY IN FRANCIACORTA: Try staying on Lake Iseo (beautiful views) at the romantic 4 star Rivalago in Sulzano; close by to all vineyards, grand hotel and excellent service.

EAT IN FRANCIACORTA:  try Ristorante Gaudenzi, very focussed on local foods, particularly lake-caught fish, plenty of Franciacorta bubbles; via Cantarana 1, Rodengo Saiano; +39 030 6810422

The author visited the Gussalli Beretta-owned Lo Sparviere sparkling wine property in Monticelli Brusati on September 16, 2015.

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