2020 Fontodi Chianti Classico
In the heart of Chianti Classico, the Fontodi winery has a commanding view down into the Conca d'Oro, the 'Golden Shell'. This amphitheatre of a vineyard has everything a winemaker could want: elevation, aspect, complex soils, and a local climate that encourages sharp variation between hot days and cool nights. The result is one of Chianti's most favoured properties.
2021 Rocca di Montegrossi Chianti Classico
Rocca di Montegrossi is located near Monti in Chianti, in one of the finest sections of Chianti Classico. Proprietor Marco Ricasoli-Firidolfi has Chianti in his blood; his great-great-great grandfather Baron Bettino Ricasoli found time in between being Prime Minister of Italy (twice) to draw up the rules governing Chianti. It's no wonder that Marco has a keen sense of history, and is determined to make a Chianti among the very best.
2022 Le Potazzine Rosso di Montalcino
The most striking thing about visiting the home vineyard of Le Potazzine is the sense of altitude, with the vineyards exposed and open to the winds in every direction. That sense of freshness and energy carries over into the wine. Rosso di Montalcino suggests the power and intensity of Brunello, but is given shorter aging for a fresher, lighter-bodied style. Think of a raspberry sorbet.
2019 Il Poggione Brunello di Montalcino
In the early 1900s, Il Poggione was among the very first estates to bottle and sell Brunello, and in the 1960s, it was a founder of the Consorzio (the regional wine governing board). It still operates at the cutting edge, with an ongoing research programme that has supplied two of Brunello's most widely-used Sangiovese clones. 2019 was a fabulous vintage here, and the wine is complex and expressive.
2019 Pietroso Brunello di Montalcino
A small family-owned estate, Pietroso has been on the Brunello scene since the 1970s. While in the 1990s and early 2000s many estates fell for the fashion for small format, toasty new oak barrels, Pietroso never veered from the traditional model of large, old barrels that don't impart flavours that mark the wine. It makes for a refined and elegant style of highly-expressive Sangiovese.
2021 Argiano Solengo
Argiano make a wonderful Brunello, but they have also worked out that some of their vineyards are just a little on the warm side for Sangiovese. That's where Solengo comes in. It's a blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Petit Verdot and Sangiovese, and yet another proof of how well French grapes can do in Tuscan vineyards. The name means 'solitary wild boar', and it comes about because boar sometimes terrorise vineyard workers here.