originally posted by Jeff Grossman:
originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by VLM:
I have a general question about all these old Nebbiolo that keep washing up on our shores the last decade or so. I have no reason to doubt Jamie or his deep connections to the Piedmont but given the frequency and scale of known counterfeit operations in Italy how confident are we in all these old wines floating around? Where are they all coming from? Are there that many deep cellars of Nebbiolo? Like most of you, I've had a lot of good to great bottles and normal disappointments but also very strange bottles.
Anyway, just curious.
Yeah, I question that too. Though why Alto Piemonte from the '50s? Nonetheless, I would skip them based on my experience tasting wines from the '50s in the '70s, which in other threads I have described as somewhat oxidized and brutally tannic. Like you, I'd put my money into 21st-century Alto wines after the renovation of the vineyards, replanting and good winemaking practices. Just think that by the '80s there were probably only about 10 ha. of producing vineyards in Boca, as so many people had abandoned their land to work in mills and factories.
IANJW. As I understand it, there are people on the ground buying up old restaurant cellars. Hence the short amounts and few marquee names (those were sellable!).
Quality is, of course, variable. Some of it was meh in the first place, some of it is simply old corks. I have had all of great, so-so, bleh from these offerings.
If Langhe, and if there is time, I drag out Masnaghetti's maps and try to find the old vineyards. Exposure of the vineyard, and its neighbors, may hint at quality. Otherwise, it's a Google search. Or something more Runyonesque.