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NEBBIOLO and the Allure of Barolo
from Tastes of Italia (Holiday 2007)
No grape in Italy excites as much passion as nebbiolo. Its siren song
has lured enophiles to the mountain ridges of Piedmont ever since Roman
times. After conquering France, Julius Caesar himself made a detour to
nebbiolo's birthplace specifically to taste this complex red wine,
coveted even then.
Today, the grape's fame rests on the towering
shoulders of Barolo, a wine made entirely from nebbiolo but named after
its town of origin. Credit for the invention of Barolo goes to a woman:
Guilietta Colbert, a Parisian aristocrat who frequented the salons of
Napoleon. There she fell in love with Carlo Tancredi Falletti, an
Italian marquis. The two moved to Turin, but summered in his family
castle in Barolo. When Tancredi died of cholera at age 53, Guilia
assumed management of the estate and its vast vineyards, and quickly
set about changing the wine. Being French, her taste ran towards
robust, aged reds. What she got locally were young, semi-sweet,
sometimes frizzante nebbiolos then in vogue.
She turned to her friend
Count Camillo Benso for help. This well-traveled politician and
Francophile was trying to reproduce Burgundy wine at home in Piedmont,
bringing back from France not only pinot noir cuttings, but also a
French winemaker, Louis Oudart. Giulia borrowed the enologist, but set
him to work on her native nebbiolo. The result, dubbed Barolo, was a
smashing success.
Barolo's first devotee was the King of Piedmont,
Carlo Alberto. He was so enamored of this new wine that he not only
served it at diplomatic dinners in place of the customary French
imports, but bought the Castle of Verduno and its vineyards to make his
own supply. Barolo soon gained the epithet "the king of wines and wine
of kings."
Barolo's allure continues today, and its fans are no less
devoted. Any visitor can see that nebbiolo is Piedmont's pampered
thoroughbred. Amidst the rolling Langhe hills, which rise and fall like
giant ocean swells, nebbiolo vines blanket the choicest pieces of land.
It's a finicky grape, slow to ripen, so winemakers offer up their
sunniest southern slopes and warmest, bowl-like amphitheaters to coax
the grape to maturity by October, when the autumn mists, or nebbia,
roll in.
Nebbiolo gives what it gets. Soil, sun, exposition, elevation,
and weather are reflected in each bottle. These subtle, endless
variations are what fascinate nebbiolo fans. "We don't make Coca-Cola
wines," declares Giacomo Conterno, fifth-generation winemaker at Aldo
Conterno, a revered classicist among Barolo producers. "A bottle is
like a picture of that vintage," he explains. "Every bottle has to give
this identify, versus killing it with sameness, with vanilla from
French oak barrels. It's like a picture that talks to you."
Nebbiolo is
expressive like few other grapes. Only pinot noir and perhaps
sangiovese show the same sensitivity to site. That's why terroir is
such a buzzword among nebbiolo disciples, and why the names of Barolo's
11 communes, or counties, are loaded with meaning. Barolo from La Morra
suggests one thing (perfumed, elegant, feminine), while that from
Monforte implies another (tannic, long-lived, masculine). After
mastering the communes, diligent students of nebbiolo next plunge into
individual cru, or historic vineyards. Place-names like Cannubi,
Brunate, and Vigna Rionda contain important clues: a vein of magnesium
here, sandy soil there, a sunny hilltop where snow first melts in the
spring. The differences are felt in the glass.
The mark of a good
nebbiolo is not its weight on the palette--this is not a heavy wine--but
its evanescent perfumes. A bouquet of roses or violets is typical, with
notes of dried red fruit, anise, and spice. As its ages, earthy scents
of tobacco, tar, or leather emerge. Find a good bottle and its perfumes
tantalize, constantly changing in the glass. This is nebbiolo's magic,
its siren song, luring you back for yet another sip to chase the
will-o'-the-wisp flavors. Meanwhile, its austere power comes from
strong tannins, which grip when young but mature into a supple texture
that lets the wine evolve for decades.
Although Barolo and Barbaresco
reign supreme, they aren't the only options for nebbiolo. Other
possibilities fall outside the DOCG regulations: these might age in
stainless steel instead of wood, grow outside designated zones, or come
from young vines. Happily, most sport a significantly lower price tag.
Langhe Nebbiolo, for instance, is a lovely young version, while Roero,
Gattinara, and Ghemme are excellent variations bottled under those
geographic names. Ask your wine merchant for suggestions, then enjoy
the bliss of Piedmont's noblest grape. And welcome to the club.
A NEBBIOLO SAMPLER
Classic Barolo: Aldo Conterno, Barolo Bussia Soprana ($69)
Modern Barolo: Marchesi di Barolo, Barolo Estate Vineyard ($45)
Barbaresco: Marchesi di Gresy, Barbaresco Martinenga ($43)
Langhe Nebbiolo: Produttori del Barbersco, Langhe Nebbiolo ($17)
Roero: Matteo Correggia, Roero Nebbiolo ($16)
Patricia Thomson is a wine journalist and president of La Dolce Vita
Wine Tours..
© 2007 Patricia Thomson
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