Saina Nieminen
Saina Nieminen
Antonio Vallana Barbera del Piemonte
Front label and back. Since the cork has no other info except the words "A. Vallana & F. Maggiora 18.NO" is there any way to estimate how old this bottle might be?
The labels look pristine as does the cork, but the bottle size is 720ml. Probably a recentish release from the winery, perhaps topped up with something newer since it has no ullage? (I guess we can discount fakes when it comes to such bottles?)
Anyway, this was a fantastic wine. I've never had anything but young Barbera, and this certainly was not a young wine. The colour is a light but healthy red (no brown on the rim). It starts out smelling of just generic old wine - pleasant enough if, like me, you enjoy vinous antiques that haven't quite become irredeemably oxidized. And just like so many Piemontese that start out smelling like this, this fills out and becomes wonderfully fragrant with air.
The palate is amazingly vital and sweetly fruity (this is why I thought it might have been topped up with something younger) and is frankly a bit of a surprise after the fragrant but old scent. It finishes with a lovely bitter twist - just the edginess needed for a bit of entrecote.
Whatever this is - topped up old wine, genuine old Barbera, a fake (but why would anyone fake such a thing?) - it is at a wonderful period of maturity and is delicious and it made me happy. One can't ask more from wine so I guess this means it's perfection or a 100 points or, as what is today's 100p., it is interesting in the non-euphemistic way.
Front label and back. Since the cork has no other info except the words "A. Vallana & F. Maggiora 18.NO" is there any way to estimate how old this bottle might be?
The labels look pristine as does the cork, but the bottle size is 720ml. Probably a recentish release from the winery, perhaps topped up with something newer since it has no ullage? (I guess we can discount fakes when it comes to such bottles?)
Anyway, this was a fantastic wine. I've never had anything but young Barbera, and this certainly was not a young wine. The colour is a light but healthy red (no brown on the rim). It starts out smelling of just generic old wine - pleasant enough if, like me, you enjoy vinous antiques that haven't quite become irredeemably oxidized. And just like so many Piemontese that start out smelling like this, this fills out and becomes wonderfully fragrant with air.
The palate is amazingly vital and sweetly fruity (this is why I thought it might have been topped up with something younger) and is frankly a bit of a surprise after the fragrant but old scent. It finishes with a lovely bitter twist - just the edginess needed for a bit of entrecote.
Whatever this is - topped up old wine, genuine old Barbera, a fake (but why would anyone fake such a thing?) - it is at a wonderful period of maturity and is delicious and it made me happy. One can't ask more from wine so I guess this means it's perfection or a 100 points or, as what is today's 100p., it is interesting in the non-euphemistic way.