I beg to disagree with VLM. What the fuck does he know about this anyway? Sure, maybe you could argue the point that Joe P's question was poorly written.
Does Valentini Trebbiano need time?
Time for what? To get its hair done? Is it a drummer?
VLM did indeed answer the question. Technically you could drink Valentini Trebbiano during fermentation or you could drink it promptly after bottling or you could give it ten years in a moldy old cellar in Latvia. Each would be an educational experience but I gather that this was not the intent of the query. J
oe's question might better have been stated as:
At what stage of its development might the ---- (insert vintage) Valentini Trebbiano be most likely to show optimally?
Whatever. I'm all for tossing this one in the cellar (back with rest of your weird blanc collection: Chateau Simone, Domaine du Brana, Chave Hermitage, Gravner, et al) and forgetting about it for awhile.
About five years ago I was helping a friend move a bunch of boxes into his wine locker and I ran into a former client who said that there was some guy in the other section of the building selling a bunch of wine. I ambled over to the walk-in locker and the seller turned out to be the manager of the place. One of his clients ran into some financial problems (ie: he was in the slammer for freelance pharmaceutical sales) and hadn't paid his bill for a year or two. Wine storage facility managers aren't exactly known for their benevolent tendencies so after a time, the manager contacted a local wine shop who bought all the "good" wines (which paid off the bill) but they left behind a bunch of bottles that they felt were unsalable.
Being the adventurous sort, I bought up some 1985 Chablis ("oh, this is probably awful") and some mid-80s Hanzell and Stony Hill Chardonnays ("yuck, look at how golden brown these are!"), all for about $2 per bottle. I was also able to assist the manager in the removal of two cases of 1986 Valentini Trebbiano.
"This stuff' probably really sucks! Italian white wines aren't meant to be aged anyway, and I'll probably just toss it down the drain, but it's got an old-fashioned label that I can soak off and use for wallpaper or notepads...but $2 a bottle for crap that's probably bad and that nobody else in their right mind would buy? How about I give you $15 cash for both boxes?"
He was pleased with his sales ability (it was all cash), and the Valentini went to a good home. Just a few bottles of the 86 remain but the wine has been fantastic every time I've opened one. It changes over a couple of hours in the glass and food definitely brings out its fine points. It's got a lot of body but also shows a delicacy that young Valentini (or Pepe) Trebbiano hints at. It's not a flashy wine, but the sort of thing you want to spend time with, drinking and enjoying rather than analyzing it and compare the wine to the 17 other bottles on the table. I think of it as Italy's answer to Montrachet (assuming someone asked the question), only harder to find. If you like Pepe's Trebbiano, you'll like Valentini's, only a little more. It goes to 11.
-Eden (I like the CWD designation too, although I get it confused with the certificate initials conferred upon people by the Society of Wine Educators)