Giacomo Conterno - Barolo Francia 2018 (750ml)

 
WS
95
WA
94-97
TWI
96-98
V
95+

Price: $306.00

Producer Giacomo Conterno
Country Italy
Region Piedmont
Varietal Nebbiolo
Vintage 2018
Sku 5386
Size 750ml

The Wine Independent: 96-98 Points

The 2018 Giacomo Conterno Barolo Francia is very densely concentrated with fine tannins but it is not revealing much yet as it is so young. When tasted in May 2022 it was due to be bottled the following month. It is deep ruby in color with perfumed violet and freesia aromas on the nose with oak spice notes. The tannins are firm but beautifully refined as you would expect from this producer. At the moment the wine is like a beautiful statue immaculately carved and pristine but not revealing very much. Roberto Conterno felt this wine needed 18 months before approaching and that it will last for 40 years.

v

Vinous: 95+ Points

The 2018 Barolo Francia is powerful deep and also a touch austere. It shows the edginess of all the 2018s but also has a feeling of textural creaminess that adds tons of character. Spice menthol leather and a whole range of balsamic overtones build into the deep imposing finish. Roberto Conterno decided to forego his Barolo Monfortino in 2018 opting instead to blend all the casks into his Francia bottling. When that happens Francia often surprises down the road. That could very well turn out to be the case here. - By Antonio Galloni on September 2022

Wine Spectator: 95 Points

Delivers depth and power with menthol and wild herbs shading cherry and plum flavors. The balance tips toward the tannins in the end yet this doesn't feel overly astringent just more structured than many '18s. Picks up a mineral element as this lingers on the finish. Be patient. Best from 2025 through 2043. ?B.S.

Wine Advocate: 94-97 Points

Of the three Barolo samples I tasted from barrel (including Arione and Cerretta which are also from Serralunga d'Alba) the Giacomo Conterno 2018 Barolo Francia was the furthest behind and the hardest to pin down at this stage in its infancy. I have opened my range of scores accordingly to compensate for the magical unknowns that are likely to occur as the wine moves toward greater harmony and integration before its commercial release. The wine is linear and pointedly focused lacking the width and volume it will gain when given more time to flesh out and relax. The aromas are also quite primary and simple at this point with dark cherry and even a hint of ripe strawberry ceding gradually to grilled herb blue flower and baked brick. This vintage of Barolo Francia will require patience. We know Roberto Conterno of the Giacomo Conterno estate as one of Italy?s most talented Barolisti a taciturn genius in the vineyard and cellar who is capable of casting out the inner soul from the Nebbiolo grape and trapping it for near-eternal safekeeping in a glass bottle. But the Roberto Conterno I met this summer had reinvented himself during the doldrums of lockdown moving toward increasingly varied pursuits. Thanks to this total transformation his many new identities today also make him an architect a restaurateur a stemware designer and the inventor of a futuristic army of robots on tank treads that will be dispatched at random throughout the Italian countryside and beyond. (Sorry folks on this last point I have been sworn to absolute secrecy but I promise to say more when I can). As I discovered this past July there is indeed a lot of news to report from Piedmont. I visited both of Roberto?s estates his new winery in Gattinara (Alto Piemonte) and his historic cellars in Monforte d?Alba (Barolo) to taste the 23 wines reviewed in this report. What I thought would be a quick tour became instead an epic foray into Mondo Conterno. I left Nice France in early morning and drove past the flooded rice patties of Arborio to the beautiful town of Gattinara which sits south of the Italian Alps and the Lake District west of the Sesia River. Roberto came to greet me and told me that just 24 hours earlier the area had suffered from a terrible summer hailstorm. He was still assessing damage to his Nebbiolo vines planted a short distance north of the winery on the nearby hillsides. Roberto purchased the historic Nervi winery in 2018. (For more info on this acquisition you can read my May 2018 article called "Italy Piedmont: The Nebbiolo Whisperer ? Roberto Conterno Buys Gattinara?s Nervi.") By buying the estate with its 27 hectares of vines and a winery in the city center of Gattinara (with roots spanning back to the early 1900s) Roberto sent the ultimate vote of confidence in Nebbiolo-based wines made in the often-overlooked appellation of Gattinara. The man credited with making some of Barolo?s greatest wines and arguably its most collectable icon wine Monfortino had unexpectedly set up shop in Gattinara. It was a move driven purely by instinct and passion. His first step was to design and construct a new state-of-the-art winery. No expense was spared and Roberto reproduced the breakthrough technology we can admire today at his home-base winery in Monforte d?Alba in Barolo. In addition to the modern fermentation area and aging cellars some of the older cement tanks and facilities left over from the original Nervi winery were refurbished and kept in place. Understanding that wine might not be enough to draw visitors to this undiscovered corner of Piedmont Roberto converted the front offices of the old Nervi winery into a restaurant called Cucine Nervi. It serves regional dishes with a contemporary twist. A smooth wooden counter made with imported kauri wood from New Zealand surrounds an open kitchen where you can watch the talented chef Alberto Quadrio and his team at work. The restaurant wine list of course offers an enviable collection of Conterno Neri and Giacomo Conterno recent releases and back vintages. Roberto had prepared a beautiful tasting for me in the glass-enclosed visitors? room with views of the barrel fermentation area below. From the Conterno Nervi portfolio I tasted the 2018 2017 and 2016 vintages of his Gattinara plus the 2018 and 2016 vintages of his two single-vineyard wines Molsino and Valferana. These wines were not made in 2017 and fruit from these sites went into the classic Gattinara instead. I also tasted the Nebbiolo-based rosé as well as the rosé metodo classico sparkling wine. ?Gattinara beats Barolo three to one in the 2018 vintage? he tells me. ?Nebbiolo is crazy sensitive to place and the 2018 vintage gave beautiful tannic structure here making for complete wines.? Following his presentation from Conterno Nervi Roberto poured wines from his Barolo brand Giacomo Conterno. I had previewed many of these wines over the past years during my annual barrel tastings but this was my first opportunity to taste the finished products. The lineup included the 2019 Barbera Vigna Cerretta and the 2019 and 2018 vintages of Barbera d?Alba Vigna Francia. In terms of Barolo we sampled the 2017 and 2016 vintages of Barolo Cerretta Barolo Arione and Barolo Francia. To conclude he poured the 2014 and the 2015 Barolo Riserva Monfortino. Monfortino was not made in 2016 or 2017 and he hadn?t yet decided if he will make the wine in 2018. ?Barolo beats Gattinara in 2019; and in 2020 the two regions are about the same? he says. ?I love 2019 in Barolo. The season saw two full months of beautiful weather before harvest. The 2019 vintage made long-term wines with extra concentration and structure. The 2020 vintage has more obvious fruit and less structure compared to 2019.? Roberto Conterno often takes conventional wisdom regarding a vintage and turns it on its head. He showed extreme confidence in the 2014 vintage calling it ?the vintage of the century?; meanwhile it was largely panned by his peers because of summer rains and below average temperatures. That counterintuitive approach which is part mischievous and part moxie had him cheering for 2015 over the widely applauded 2016 vintage. Indeed he had originally made one barrel of a possible 2016 Monfortino but that wine ultimately went to his Barolo Francia instead. The message delivered loud and clear this summer is that Roberto Conterno is especially excited about his 2019 Barolo wines now in barrel. As a side gig Roberto Conterno designs stemware. In 2017 he introduced his Sensory glass (which I use daily for all my professional tastings of reds and whites) with its extra wide balloon soft tulip curve and short stem for better stability. This summer I tasted sparkling wine from his newest glass Symphony introduced in 2021.

Customers Viewing This Page Might Also Like These Items