Steven Spielmann
Steven Spielmann
Tonight we had a Poderi Le Boncie Chianti Classico "Le Trame" 1995. I was going to boast in passing during my perceptive tasting note about how I found this bottle for twenty bucks, but in truth that was about what it was worth. The fruit, though still present and very attractive, had faded, leaving acid as probably the dominant element. (Middling balance at this point, in other words.) There was something darker and deeper swimming around in there I rather liked - perhaps traces of the Fogliatonda she uses. So anyway, not at all a bad wine, rather good even, but not excellent.
So anyway. A lot of 'Chianti Classico Riserva' has merlot and barriques, I don't normally like that much. There are some regular CCs that seem built for aging - the 2006 Montesecondo seemed like a possible example, it was kind of tightly wound to my taste when I tried it a few weeks back but I thought 3-5 years in the cellar might do it good.
Are there any Chianti wines with the classic Sangiovese-driven character that do well for longer aging? Or should I just enjoy the ones I like young and age Brunello instead?
So anyway. A lot of 'Chianti Classico Riserva' has merlot and barriques, I don't normally like that much. There are some regular CCs that seem built for aging - the 2006 Montesecondo seemed like a possible example, it was kind of tightly wound to my taste when I tried it a few weeks back but I thought 3-5 years in the cellar might do it good.
Are there any Chianti wines with the classic Sangiovese-driven character that do well for longer aging? Or should I just enjoy the ones I like young and age Brunello instead?