Impressions October 2020, Part II

VLM

VLM
Lots of regulars and a checking in on a few young wines from the cellar.

2016 Azienda Agricola Caparsa Chianti Classico Caparsa - Italy, Tuscany, Chianti, Chianti Classico DOCG (10/8/2020)
Maybe the best bottle I've had of this yet. There is an overall balance that makes the parts seem more of a whole than past bottles. The silky fruit of the vintage integrate more fully with the spicy, savory, leathery, licorice-earth tones. So glad that the Cianferonis decided to make a straight Chianti Classico. It pushed our old mainstay, the Riserva Caparsino, a bit higher in price (fair) but this is also more approachable and less expensive and doesn't sacrifice any of the soulfulness. This really is my jam. (92 points)

2019 Le Pianelle Al Posto dei Fiori Rosato - Italy, Piedmont, Northern Piedmont, Coste della Sesia (10/8/2020)
This is a dense, structured rosé with a real savory, onion skin edge to the fresh berry fruit and flowers. A strong mineral underpinning shapes the flavors and frames the wine very well. Held up perfectly over about 5 days in the fridge. We didn't drink as much rosé as we have in the past but this one will be consistently in our rotation. (92 points)

2013 Azienda Agricola Elvio Cogno Barbera d'Alba Pre-Phylloxera - Italy, Piedmont, Alba, Barbera d'Alba (10/9/2020)
This is a really frustrating wine. It showed some of the mustiness of my first bottle and it was savory but not particularly expressive. Opened a bit but we ended up putting the cork back in and sticking it in the fridge. I finished it a couple of days later and it was a bit better but still not what I had hoped. I'm a fan of the producer and this wine can be great but I haven't had consistently good bottles and the wine is expensive and hard to find. I think I may give up searching. (89 points)

2015 Giacomo Conterno Barbera d'Alba Vigna Francia - Italy, Piedmont, Alba, Barbera d'Alba (10/9/2020)
What is immediately obvious is that this is meant to be "Impressive Wine". Dark and chewy with deep berry fruit and some savory notes. It just lacks a bit of nuance and soul. I think that my palate has become a bit jaded where I really want to see some personality in most wines. I think an earlier me or other folks would rate this wine higher but it leaves me a bit cold. (91 points)

2010 Flavio Roddolo Barbera d'Alba Superiore Bricco Appiani - Italy, Piedmont, Alba, Barbera d'Alba Superiore (10/9/2020)
In glaring contrast to the Conterno Francia this wine is all nuance and soul. There are leathery, spicy, savory almost umami layers of nuance to the tart red cherry and berry fruit. It's more like a fruit paste with the vegetal savory edge that has versus fresh fruit. Comes even more alive with the food. These Roddolo wines are scratching something in my consciousness. (93 points)

2018 Hofgut Falkenstein Niedermenniger Herrenberg Riesling Spätlese feinherb #11 - Germany, Mosel Saar Ruwer (10/10/2020)
This is a juicy, fruity version with lots of pear pulp and apple skin. There's a minty herbal and floral note and some citrus zest minerals. Lacks the drive of my favorite vintages of this at present but it is a glass full of joy. (91 points)

2018 Thibaud Boudignon Anjou - France, Loire Valley, Anjou-Saumur, Anjou (10/11/2020)
Shows classic notes of (Anjou?) pear and honeycomb but not in a ripe sticky way. There is a underlying river stone and almost faint smoky nuance. Good structure but not imposing. I like the way this held together and I think there is positive evolution ahead. I drank most of this without food and it seems like that is a mistake as this feels like a gastronomic wine. This is much more restrained than my memory of these wines and makes me excited to try the other wines I bought to try. (91 points)

2017 Hofgut Falkenstein Niedermenniger Herrenberg Riesling Spätlese feinherb #23 - Germany, Mosel Saar Ruwer (10/12/2020)
This was a fascinating counterpoint to the last glass of the 2018 AP #23. Where the former was juicy and fruity, this was lean, muscular and mineral. Almost seemed dry. Really salty and driving with mouthwatering citrus zest. This bottle is sharply cut and all about definition. The last glass a couple of days later was a bit more open and generous but not better. Will Falkenstein ruin my palate for different expressions of Riesling? (92 points)

2012 Domaine Bernard Baudry Chinon Les Grézeaux - France, Loire Valley, Touraine, Chinon (10/13/2020)
Whoa, crazy showing here. The first night, I opened this to go with a "picnic dinner" of charcuterie, cheeses, baguette and salad. It did not work and was really backwards with just tannin, earth and rocks. Re-corked and put in the fridge. Fast forward to couple days later and I let it warm up without much expectation and much to my delight I was greeted with deep dark mulberry fruit mixed with the dark, rocky, mineral earth notes that are so Grézeaux to me. There is still a decent bit of structure to work through so my recommendation would be to give it some air and pair with appropriate foods. (91 points)

2015 Le Rocher des Violettes Montlouis-sur-Loire Les Borderies - France, Loire Valley, Touraine, Montlouis-sur-Loire (10/13/2020)
Not the best bottle I've had of this. Seemed a bit on the mature side with some burnt sugar notes, honey and pear type fruit. A bit of mineral on the finish but showing more of its RS than the great balance it has shown in the past. I don't know if this is the natural course of this vintage or bottle variation. (89 points)

2018 Thibaud Boudignon Anjou à Françoise... - France, Loire Valley, Anjou-Saumur, Anjou (10/13/2020)
Interestingly, this is much leaner and more mineral than the straight Anjou blanc. Bright flavors and long mineral finish. Some white flowers on the nose, but quite reticent. Barely budged over 4-5 days in the fridge. I'd really like to try this with some age so may grab a few bottles to see what happens and/or look for a bottle with a few years from a reliable source. (91 points)

2015 Domaine Marquis d'Angerville Volnay 1er Cru Champans - France, Burgundy, Côte de Beaune, Volnay 1er Cru (10/14/2020)
Young Burgundy, why not? It was nice to get a read on this wine as I'll have to make a decision about 2018s. Deeply fruited on the darker and of the red spectrum. It comes in waves breaking upon fine but substantial tannin. Really well balanced and doesn't feel overdone at all, everything in the right place. Long finish and coats the palate. The only thing that could prevent this from being an excellent Volnay down the line would be if the fruit wasn't enough for the structure but that seems highly unlikely. While it is certainly fun and delicious now with the right pairing I would wait a while before opening a bottle (unless you're too curious like I was). I think this will be one of those wines where that first stage, once the structure melds in a bit but the fruit is still juicy, will be thrilling. (92 points)
 
originally posted by VLM:

2016 Azienda Agricola Caparsa Chianti Classico Caparsa - Italy, Tuscany, Chianti, Chianti Classico DOCG (10/8/2020)
Maybe the best bottle I've had of this yet. There is an overall balance that makes the parts seem more of a whole than past bottles. The silky fruit of the vintage integrate more fully with the spicy, savory, leathery, licorice-earth tones. So glad that the Cianferonis decided to make a straight Chianti Classico. It pushed our old mainstay, the Riserva Caparsino, a bit higher in price (fair) but this is also more approachable and less expensive and doesn't sacrifice any of the soulfulness. This really is my jam. (92 points)

Thanks for this note. I'm actually on my way to pick up some of this wine (along with the 2015 and 2016 Riservas). I had planned to open the 2016 CC this weekend and am now looking forward to it even more! Seems like exactly what I would want for drinking with pleasure alongside my Saturday evening pizza.
 
Good notes, Monkey. A couple thoughts:

Re the Conterno... Heh. Their success (meaning, all the big names in Barolo, not just G Conterno) has mostly sunk in by now. The wines are going to be made as 'empire builders' for years to come. And this at the same time that global warming is changing which vineyards are best and how to handle them. Soulfulness is going to be appear and disappear randomly from the bottlings. I have mostly switched my new Piedmont buys from Barolo to Barbaresco.

Re the Roddolo... Right. A few years older and a few steps out of the limelight and the wine is better.

Re the Caparsa... Hm. I gotta say, I love what 2016 did for Barbaresco but I have yet to find a CC or CCR that does the same for me.

Re the Baudry... That sounds like a "Do Not Disturb" note to me. Hush, Little Baudry, don't say "mork", Papa's gonna pull some other cork.
 
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Good notes, Monkey. A couple thoughts:

Re the Conterno... Heh. Their success (meaning, all the big names in Barolo, not just G Conterno) has mostly sunk in by now. The wines are going to be made as 'empire builders' for years to come. And this at the same time that global warming is changing which vineyards are best and how to handle them. Soulfulness is going to be appear and disappear randomly from the bottlings. I have mostly switched my new Piedmont buys from Barolo to Barbaresco.

I think with the right mindset and food it would be a good Barbera at the table but given the expense (even at wholesale) it just doesn't have a ton of utility. I just starting buying these again a couple years ago when we got an allocation so we'll see what the cellar does. Frankly, if I want this style of Barbera, the Vjara Superiore works better for half the price.

I've shifted a lot of my buying to the Alto Piedmont from the Langhe. I'll probably still but Roagna, Colla and a bit of Gea from Barbaresco and Cappellano, Brovia, Vajra, Roagna, Roddolo and a bit of Canonica from Barolo. My cellar is about 13% Langhe and 6% Alto Piedmont and I expect those two to come into balance in the coming years.

originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Re the Roddolo... Right. A few years older and a few steps out of the limelight and the wine is better.

There is just something about these wines (except the Bricco Appiani, which I've never warmed to) that tickles my lizard brain. I'm not exactly sure what. It's also a lovely gesture that they don't really need any more aging when they're released (although you can if you want). A lot of the wines I'm drinking from Roddolo - 2015 Dolcetto, 2010 Barbera, 2011 Barolo and Nebbiolo d'Alba - are all the current releases.

originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Re the Caparsa... Hm. I gotta say, I love what 2016 did for Barbaresco but I have yet to find a CC or CCR that does the same for me.

Not me. 2016 has been the best year in recent memory. We enjoyed Monteraponi and Caparsa for a while with some Istine thrown in. I've got the Villa S. Anna Vino Nobile on deck and it is texturally awesome if not really expressive yet. Sangiovese serves us well at our table and we go through a decent amount so I've been stocking up.

Also, there are older vintages of Caparsa floating around that are worth trying. The wines were a bit more rustic in the past, but really soulful and laced with tradition.

originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
Re the Baudry... That sounds like a "Do Not Disturb" note to me. Hush, Little Baudry, don't say "mork", Papa's gonna pull some other cork.

Actually, I might go ahead and dig in despite the structure. This may be a vintage where the structure wins over the fruit over the long haul. Just be prepared for that when you open it and pair it with something appropriate.
 
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by VLM:

2016 Azienda Agricola Caparsa Chianti Classico Caparsa - Italy, Tuscany, Chianti, Chianti Classico DOCG (10/8/2020)
Maybe the best bottle I've had of this yet. There is an overall balance that makes the parts seem more of a whole than past bottles. The silky fruit of the vintage integrate more fully with the spicy, savory, leathery, licorice-earth tones. So glad that the Cianferonis decided to make a straight Chianti Classico. It pushed our old mainstay, the Riserva Caparsino, a bit higher in price (fair) but this is also more approachable and less expensive and doesn't sacrifice any of the soulfulness. This really is my jam. (92 points)

Thanks for this note. I'm actually on my way to pick up some of this wine (along with the 2015 and 2016 Riservas). I had planned to open the 2016 CC this weekend and am now looking forward to it even more! Seems like exactly what I would want for drinking with pleasure alongside my Saturday evening pizza.

Great! I look forward to getting your impressions on them. Obviously, I've really enjoyed them.
 
originally posted by VLM:
Impressions October 2020, Part IILots of regulars and a checking in on a few young wines from the cellar.

2015 Le Rocher des Violettes Montlouis-sur-Loire Les Borderies - France, Loire Valley, Touraine, Montlouis-sur-Loire (10/13/2020)
Not the best bottle I've had of this. Seemed a bit on the mature side with some burnt sugar notes, honey and pear type fruit. A bit of mineral on the finish but showing more of its RS than the great balance it has shown in the past. I don't know if this is the natural course of this vintage or bottle variation. (89 points)
Have you had any of their 2014s recently, by chance? There's some sitting in my cellar.
 
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
originally posted by VLM:
Impressions October 2020, Part IILots of regulars and a checking in on a few young wines from the cellar.

2015 Le Rocher des Violettes Montlouis-sur-Loire Les Borderies - France, Loire Valley, Touraine, Montlouis-sur-Loire (10/13/2020)
Not the best bottle I've had of this. Seemed a bit on the mature side with some burnt sugar notes, honey and pear type fruit. A bit of mineral on the finish but showing more of its RS than the great balance it has shown in the past. I don't know if this is the natural course of this vintage or bottle variation. (89 points)
Have you had any of their 2014s recently, by chance? There's some sitting in my cellar.

No, these wines just came back into my life with the 2015s. I bet the 2014s are great and would love to see a note, or better yet, drink one.
 
originally posted by VLM:

2013 Azienda Agricola Elvio Cogno Barbera d'Alba Pre-Phylloxera - Italy, Piedmont, Alba, Barbera d'Alba (10/9/2020)
This is a really frustrating wine. It showed some of the mustiness of my first bottle and it was savory but not particularly expressive. Opened a bit but we ended up putting the cork back in and sticking it in the fridge. I finished it a couple of days later and it was a bit better but still not what I had hoped. I'm a fan of the producer and this wine can be great but I haven't had consistently good bottles and the wine is expensive and hard to find. I think I may give up searching. (89 points)

2015 Giacomo Conterno Barbera d'Alba Vigna Francia - Italy, Piedmont, Alba, Barbera d'Alba (10/9/2020)
What is immediately obvious is that this is meant to be "Impressive Wine". Dark and chewy with deep berry fruit and some savory notes. It just lacks a bit of nuance and soul. I think that my palate has become a bit jaded where I really want to see some personality in most wines. I think an earlier me or other folks would rate this wine higher but it leaves me a bit cold. (91 points)

2015 Domaine Marquis d'Angerville Volnay 1er Cru Champans - France, Burgundy, Côte de Beaune, Volnay 1er Cru (10/14/2020)
Young Burgundy, why not? It was nice to get a read on this wine as I'll have to make a decision about 2018s. Deeply fruited on the darker and of the red spectrum. It comes in waves breaking upon fine but substantial tannin. Really well balanced and doesn't feel overdone at all, everything in the right place. Long finish and coats the palate. The only thing that could prevent this from being an excellent Volnay down the line would be if the fruit wasn't enough for the structure but that seems highly unlikely. While it is certainly fun and delicious now with the right pairing I would wait a while before opening a bottle (unless you're too curious like I was). I think this will be one of those wines where that first stage, once the structure melds in a bit but the fruit is still juicy, will be thrilling. (92 points)

Thanks for the notes. Interesting wines.

I buy the Pre-Phylloxera occasionally because I think it is one of the few Barbaras that displays the parenthood with Nebbiolo quite significantly. The other would be Conternos Vigna Francia. I used to buy this frequently in the 90'ies even though then already it was price-wise one the same level as many Barolos. I was going to check in on the '16 but the alcohol level (15.5 or even 16%) put me off.
I think also the 2015 is 15% or more?

I have been following the wines Valter Fissore ist crafting at Elvio Cogno since the beginning and his Ravera one of the few Barolos I still buy regularly.

RE Volnay and 2018: Don't miss out Jean-Marc/Thomas Bouley's Volnays. I think Thomas took over a couple of years ago and also in 2018 they did quite a decent job.
 
originally posted by VLM:

2015 Giacomo Conterno Barbera d'Alba Vigna Francia - Italy, Piedmont, Alba, Barbera d'Alba (10/9/2020)
What is immediately obvious is that this is meant to be "Impressive Wine". Dark and chewy with deep berry fruit and some savory notes. It just lacks a bit of nuance and soul. I think that my palate has become a bit jaded where I really want to see some personality in most wines. I think an earlier me or other folks would rate this wine higher but it leaves me a bit cold. (91 points)

I'm guessing that lack of nuance might be a result of harvesting overripe grapes. The '17 and '18 versions of this wine were 15.5% ABV. I don't know about 2015, but they have been quite big of late.
 
originally posted by Anders Gautschi:
originally posted by VLM:

2013 Azienda Agricola Elvio Cogno Barbera d'Alba Pre-Phylloxera - Italy, Piedmont, Alba, Barbera d'Alba (10/9/2020)
This is a really frustrating wine. It showed some of the mustiness of my first bottle and it was savory but not particularly expressive. Opened a bit but we ended up putting the cork back in and sticking it in the fridge. I finished it a couple of days later and it was a bit better but still not what I had hoped. I'm a fan of the producer and this wine can be great but I haven't had consistently good bottles and the wine is expensive and hard to find. I think I may give up searching. (89 points)

2015 Giacomo Conterno Barbera d'Alba Vigna Francia - Italy, Piedmont, Alba, Barbera d'Alba (10/9/2020)
What is immediately obvious is that this is meant to be "Impressive Wine". Dark and chewy with deep berry fruit and some savory notes. It just lacks a bit of nuance and soul. I think that my palate has become a bit jaded where I really want to see some personality in most wines. I think an earlier me or other folks would rate this wine higher but it leaves me a bit cold. (91 points)

2015 Domaine Marquis d'Angerville Volnay 1er Cru Champans - France, Burgundy, Côte de Beaune, Volnay 1er Cru (10/14/2020)
Young Burgundy, why not? It was nice to get a read on this wine as I'll have to make a decision about 2018s. Deeply fruited on the darker and of the red spectrum. It comes in waves breaking upon fine but substantial tannin. Really well balanced and doesn't feel overdone at all, everything in the right place. Long finish and coats the palate. The only thing that could prevent this from being an excellent Volnay down the line would be if the fruit wasn't enough for the structure but that seems highly unlikely. While it is certainly fun and delicious now with the right pairing I would wait a while before opening a bottle (unless you're too curious like I was). I think this will be one of those wines where that first stage, once the structure melds in a bit but the fruit is still juicy, will be thrilling. (92 points)

Thanks for the notes. Interesting wines.

I buy the Pre-Phylloxera occasionally because I think it is one of the few Barbaras that displays the parenthood with Nebbiolo quite significantly. The other would be Conternos Vigna Francia. I used to buy this frequently in the 90'ies even though then already it was price-wise one the same level as many Barolos. I was going to check in on the '16 but the alcohol level (15.5 or even 16%) put me off.
I think also the 2015 is 15% or more?

I have been following the wines Valter Fissore ist crafting at Elvio Cogno since the beginning and his Ravera one of the few Barolos I still buy regularly.

The Pre-Phylloxera Barbera can be really, really interesting it has just been a really inconsistent wine for me. I'm not sure why. I'd like to try and see if I can get it through local channels so I can have a better read on the provenance.

I have less experience with the Cogno Barolos, but own a few. If you have a vintage you think is showing well now and will give me a good read on any of the wines, let me know and I'll try to hunt a bottle or two down to educate myself further.

I could live with the Francia Barbera at 15% if it were lush, but it isn't. It's just big and blocky at this stage and I can only guess that it will unwind into something delicious.

I just got my 2016 Barolo and 2018 Barbera allocation and I was going to pass on the Barbera but it's only a couple bottles of the Cerretta so I think I'll go ahead and take them.

originally posted by Anders Gautschi:
RE Volnay and 2018: Don't miss out Jean-Marc/Thomas Bouley's Volnays. I think Thomas took over a couple of years ago and also in 2018 they did quite a decent job.

I'll keep an eye out and try them if they cross my path. If I start buying another Volnay producer it is likely to be Voillot who I've bought sporadically and has a very particular style that I like. I really only buy Burgundy from a few producers and it's based upon my allocations locally. When I travel, especially in Europe, is when I generally try stuff that I don't cellar myself.
 
The 2013 Cogno Ravera and Nuova were both fabulous on release. It’s a vintage where I think you’d like the balance between fruit and structure. I don’t have experience to know if they shut down and are shut down. But I wouldn’t be afraid to buy and try the 2016s.
 
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
The 2013 Cogno Ravera and Nuova were both fabulous on release. It’s a vintage where I think you’d like the balance between fruit and structure. I don’t have experience to know if they shut down and are shut down. But I wouldn’t be afraid to buy and try the 2016s.

So from a bit of reading it sounds like all the wines are in Ravera (Novello) with the Cascina Nuova being young vines (< 15 years old), the Ravera is the standard bearer, the Bricco Pernice is more limestone influenced (and the estates oldest vines?) and the Vigna Elena is all the Nebbiolo Rosé clone (planted in 1991).

I own 2013 Bricco Pernice that I bought to fill out an order and the price was good (Wine Connection's annual sale before Max cut me off) but I've never had it. From what I can find, it sounds like it would be a terrible idea to open one now.
 
I’ve never found Pernice and Elena at a price I was willing to pay. Now most Barolo is headed that same way for me except basic bottlings, and I Iargely scratch my Nebbiolo itch further North. For my taste Le Piane can do no wrong.
 
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
I’ve never found Pernice and Elena at a price I was willing to pay. Now most Barolo is headed that same way for me except basic bottlings, and I Iargely scratch my Nebbiolo itch further North. For my taste Le Piane can do no wrong.

I got the Pernice for low $80s before tax and shipping. $93 delivered, as they say.

Yeah, I'm at about 65% Langhe, 35% Alto for my Nebbiolo with Alto growing every year. Piane is great and there are other really exciting producers oiut there. Some new-ish some renewed.
 
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
I’ve never found Pernice and Elena at a price I was willing to pay. Now most Barolo is headed that same way for me except basic bottlings, and I Iargely scratch my Nebbiolo itch further North. For my taste Le Piane can do no wrong.

I got the Pernice for low $80s before tax and shipping. $93 delivered, as they say.

Yeah, I'm at about 65% Langhe, 35% Alto for my Nebbiolo with Alto growing every year. Piane is great and there are other really exciting producers out there. Some new-ish some renewed.

I think that's what I own percentage-wise, too, but I'd say we are drinking 75-80% Alto + Valtellina nebbioli. This thanks to your notes and Levi D.'s podcasts on Alto Piemonte.
 
originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
I’ve never found Pernice and Elena at a price I was willing to pay. Now most Barolo is headed that same way for me except basic bottlings, and I Iargely scratch my Nebbiolo itch further North. For my taste Le Piane can do no wrong.

I got the Pernice for low $80s before tax and shipping. $93 delivered, as they say.

Yeah, I'm at about 65% Langhe, 35% Alto for my Nebbiolo with Alto growing every year. Piane is great and there are other really exciting producers out there. Some new-ish some renewed.

I think that's what I own percentage-wise, too, but I'd say we are drinking 75-80% Alto + Valtellina nebbioli. This thanks to your notes and Levi D.'s podcasts on Alto Piemonte.

Wow! That's quite the compliment coming from you.

We're probably 50-50 for Nebbiolo but that's sure to tilt towards Alto as my purchases there increase and fewer and fewer Langhe make sense stylistically or price-wise. I wish more folks would grow Barbera in the Alto.
 
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by VLM:
originally posted by Jayson Cohen:
I’ve never found Pernice and Elena at a price I was willing to pay. Now most Barolo is headed that same way for me except basic bottlings, and I Iargely scratch my Nebbiolo itch further North. For my taste Le Piane can do no wrong.

I got the Pernice for low $80s before tax and shipping. $93 delivered, as they say.

Yeah, I'm at about 65% Langhe, 35% Alto for my Nebbiolo with Alto growing every year. Piane is great and there are other really exciting producers out there. Some new-ish some renewed.

I think that's what I own percentage-wise, too, but I'd say we are drinking 75-80% Alto + Valtellina nebbioli. This thanks to your notes and Levi D.'s podcasts on Alto Piemonte.

Wow! That's quite the compliment coming from you.
But it is well deserved.
We're probably 50-50 for Nebbiolo but that's sure to tilt towards Alto as my purchases there increase and fewer and fewer Langhe make sense stylistically or price-wise. I wish more folks would grow Barbera in the Alto.
[/quote]
It may not be permitted to plant Barbera there. When I had applied for an EU subsidy to replant my then family's Barbera vineyard in Costigliole d'Asti (this eons ago) it was clear that only specific grapes were permitted: Barbera, Grignolino or Moscato. They may only be allowed to plant Spanna, Vespolina, Croatina and Uva Rara.
 
originally posted by mark e:
It may not be permitted to plant Barbera there. When I had applied for an EU subsidy to replant my then family's Barbera vineyard in Costigliole d'Asti (this eons ago) it was clear that only specific grapes were permitted: Barbera, Grignolino or Moscato. They may only be allowed to plant Spanna, Vespolina, Croatina and Uva Rara.

A quick search shows that Barbera cannot be part of Ghemme (Vespolin and Uva Rara (Bonarda Novarese) are allowed) but the only varietal Barbera from the Alto that I have is from Platinetti Guido in Ghemme. I think it's really good which is why I'd like to see more.

from the website: https://www.platinettivini.com/en/wineyards-ghemme-piedmont-italy/
To the south-east of the town of Ghemme, the Barragiola locality defines the plateau that emerged as a natural consequence of the thrust propelled by the Monte Rosa glacier during the formation of Ronco Maso. Here, on a total area of one and a half hectares the Azienda Agricola Platinetti Guido has 4 distinct vineyards including the Barbera vineyard planted in April 1999

According to this: https://www.wine-searcher.com/regions-colline+novaresi

Barbera is part of the Colline Novaresi.


And Coste della Sesia.

I have no idea what the accuracy of the wine-searcher articles might be.
 
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