Thursday, May 14, 2015

Borgogno No Name 2011, Piemonte, Italy

Wine blog, wine reviews, Piedmont, Italy, Barolo, Nebbiolo, red wines
Borgogno No Name 2011.


Wine review
4 of 5 stars
Very good wine

As typical of Nebbiolo, the colour of this wine has started to turn lighter already. Now the clear ruby colour has medium intensity with a transparent rim. Expressiveness of this wine is evident on the medium intensity nose - there is an abundance of roses, liquorice and red cherries. After a while layers of smokiness and leather appear. 

On the palate, the first strike is dominated by astringent tannin. However, plentiful fruit and acidity balance the tannins to a great extent. The aromas on the nose cand be tasted – especially the roses, cherries and liquorice reoccur in the mid palate. A long and pleasant after taste is full of cherries. The tannins leave dryness in the mouth. On the whole, this is an interesting, very high quality wine, that is quite well in balance still drifting slightly to the tannic side.

Being admittedly a great friend of Barolos and other pronouncedly tannic wines, I have to say that this Nebbiolo of 2011 is still very young at this stage. To be fully appreciated it would definitely benefit from some more years of bottle age. Possessing the fruitiness, complex aromas and acid structure required for successful aging – why not?

Info in a nutshell
Price examples:
EUR 23,90  per bottle at Weinseller.de webshop
DKK 125 (EUR 15) per glass at wine bar Falernum, Copenhagen, Denmark
CAD 36,50 per bottle at SAQ outlets in Canada
Country and region: Italia, Piemonte
Grape: Nebbiolo 100%
Alc vol: 15%
Producer: Borgogno

Background
Borgogno winery stands in the middle of Barolo in Piemonte. They have produced wine since 1761, and nowadays make appreciated Barolo DOCG classified wines. Borgogno harvests No Name’s Nebbiolo grapes from vineyards of Cannubi, Liste and Fossatti that lie in Barolo’s Barolo and La Morra. How come it is called ”No Name” and has no Barolo DOCG stamped on the label? The story I was told was originally heard from the Danish importer and goes along these lines. Borgogno’s owner had these small patches of vineyard growing Nebbiolo grapes that were only used to make wine for their family and the villagers. They realised, however, that these grapes made even better ”barolo” than those used to make DOCG Barolo. Yet, getting the classification proved to be a challenge (I was not informed of the details, so don’t ask). As a quiet protest, Borgogno decided to give up altogether and call this wine ”No Name”. It receives reviews of 90 points and beyond vintage after vintage. Not surprisingly, Borgogno also produces wines called ”Maybe”, ”Le Theorie” (vino da meditazione - wine for meditation) and ”Resistenza”.

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