Barbaresco's getting hot fast and we are now in what may be a fairly short window when good buying opportunities abound. Tighter allocations and higher prices seem to be just around the corner.How did we get here? Sottimano's story explains a lot.It started in the late 1960s, when Sottimano, based in Neive with vines there and in Treiso, was among the first to follow in Gaja's steps and set up shop selling domaine bottlings. You can still, very occasionally, find old bottles of Sottimano from the 1970s and they are amazing. Then, in the 1990s, Sottimano went through a modern phase. Like so many other producers, they made wine with too much new oak. But the domaine started change things up in 2004. Not everything at once, of course, but between 2004 and around 2010, Sottimano cut down drastically on new wood, eliminated all chemicals in the vineyard, and switched to wild yeast fermentation. The results have been stunning. As Kerin O’Keefe puts it in her great book, Barolo & Barbaresco, Sottimano “has undergone a radical and very welcome change in all aspects of its wine-making philosophy [and] is now turning out terroir-driven Barbaresco that are both exquisite and complex.”
Professional Reviews
Antonio Galloni
Wine Enthusiast
What importer Skurnik Wines has to say about this wine...
Nebbiolo from 45-year-old vines planted in Neive to soils composed of sand and clayFermentation and maceration on the skins for about 40 days with indigenous yeastsMalolactic fermentation in French barrels coopered expressly for Sottimano by Francois Frères in BurgundyThe wine remains on the lees for approximately 24 months10% of the barrels used for aging this wine are new; the remaining 90% have previously been used up to 4 timesNo fining or filtration
Details
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Grape Variety
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Vintage
2021
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Size
750ml
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Farming Practice
Organic
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Sweetness
Dry
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Body
Full Bodied