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Albino Rocca 'Cottà' Barbaresco 2021

Product information

Albino Rocca ‘Cottà’ Barbaresco 2021

Nebbiolo from Piedmont, Italy, Barbaresco

$150

$143ea in any 3+
$136ea in any 6+
Alc: 15%
Closure: Cork

Description

With fruit from a half-hectare south-facing parcel in Neive, the 2021 Barbaresco Cottà is not as immediately floral or fragrant as the village Barbaresco presented this year by Albino Rocca. This wine opens at a slower pace to reveal dark cherry fruit, candied orange peel and smoky licorice. It’s a slow-moving Barbaresco that continues to show more depth and interesting angles the longer it stays in the glass. This bottle registers the highest alcohol content (at 15%) of the three single-vineyard expressions presented this year. Only 2,300 bottles were made.

Monica Larner, The Wine Advocate 94+ Points


The 2021 Barbaresco Cottá is another stellar wine from the Rocca family. Deep and beautifully layered in the glass, the 2021 packs a serious punch. Black cherry, plum, lavender, licorice, cloves and menthol are all amplified in a deep, statuesque Barbaresco that delivers the goods. This is one of the most beautiful, vivid and complex wines I have ever tasted here. What a knockout! Tasted Sept 2024.

Antonio Galloni, Vinous 98 Points

In stock

Check out all of the wines by Albino Rocca

Why is this Wine so Yummy?

I was deeply impressed with the 2021 Barbarescos at Albino Rocca. The wines are aromatic, vibrant and bristling with site character. Carlo Castellengo gave the 2021s three to four weeks on the skins. A few of the wines see submerged cap maceration, including the new Riserva Ronchi and the Angelo (which has no new release this year)—the wines age for just under two years in cask prior to bottling. More than anything else, these wines are defined by superb purity.

Anotnio Galloni, Vinous

From the Winery

Cottà comes from one of the best-known Barbaresco subzones and is a historic cru.

Halfway up the south-west slope, this small corner of our estate is adjacent to our historic Gepin and directly facing our Ronchi vineyards. It’s a tiny area, producing no more than 15 hl from vines that for the most part are more than 50 years old.

The clay marl soil produces rich, solid and robust wines which marry well with the elegant Nebbiolo. As with all of our other three crus ( Ronchi, Ovello and Montersino), Cottà is aged in German and Austrian (Stockinger) oak for two year.

About Albino Rocca

It’s easy to forget that Nebbiolo, produced from great sites and mature vines can be a wickedly seductive wine to drink young. The late Angelo Rocca was a master at reminding us of this fact. His wines – and now those of this daughters – are plump, textural, seductive Barbaresco’s that are surprisingly forward yet clearly have the stuffing and powdery tannins to age. All of the Rocca wines are from Estate vineyards and all are grown 100 percent within the boundaries of the Barbaresco region (even the Dolcetto, Barbera, Nebbiolo d’Alba and Moscato!).

When Angelo Rocca tragically passed away in 2012 in a light plane accident, Barbaresco lost one of its most distinguished growers. It also lost a wonderful person and a deeply respected member of the Piemontese community. Rocca was a grower operating at the peak of his powers and producing the most exciting, terroir-intense wines of his career. His three daughters (Daniela, Monica and Paola) along with Angelo’s cellarmaster (and son-in-law) Carlo are determined to continue this legacy and so far they have not missed a beat.

The Rocca’s efforts to continually improve the quality of all of their Estate’s wines, has resulted in some superb offerings over the last few vintages. All of the wines are aged in large, neutral botti and remain contemporary in the sense that they are ripe, pure and meticulously made, but instead of any distracting new oak character you have solely the wonderful dark cherry, floral and savoury structured personality of Nebbiolo in all its Piemontese glory. Albino Rocca’s wines are not only outstanding examples of Barbaresco writ large, they are also very fairly priced.


“Paola, Monica and Daniela Rocca have unhesitatingly taken up the winemaking and moral legacy of their father Angelo following since his untimely death in 2012. They now continue with the story that won many fans thanks to above all to the happy combination of courteous affability permeating the Ronchi farm and the appealing, well-measured pace of the Estate’s Barbarescos.” Gambero Rosso 2015

“Albino Rocca is one of the most intriguing estates in Barbaresco right now.” Antonio Galloni, vinous.com


In the Vineyard

We didn’t discuss much about what’s happening in the vineyards. The pic’s of their vines look pretty. Anyways, what’s in the glass tastes delicious!

In the Winery

They keep it really simple. There’s been a shift toward oak Tine (open fermenters) from stainless. They’ve always used large oak botti for maturation from Stockinger. Occasionally when a new one is introduced and little oak lift may be evident, as if the case with the Cottà from 2016. Macertions show thought and good touch making wines with excellent mouthfeel.

Where in the World is Albino Rocca

Albino Rocca’s Barbaresco Vineyards are in the Crus of Montersino in the far South, Ovello on the north resting on the banks of the Tanaro, in Ronchi facing the cooler South East adjacent to Rabaja Bas, and, Cotta facing South West opposite Ronchi and Rabaja. They also have holdings in the Roero for their Langhe Nebbiolo and Alba right next to Barbaresco for their Nebbiolo d’Alba.

Click to enlarge 🔎
98 Points

The 2021 Barbaresco Cottá is another stellar wine from the Rocca family. Deep and beautifully layered in the glass, the 2021 packs a serious punch. Black cherry, plum, lavender, licorice, cloves and menthol are all amplified in a deep, statuesque Barbaresco that delivers the goods. This is one of the most beautiful, vivid and complex wines I have ever tasted here. What a knockout! Tasted Sept 2024.

Antonio Galloni

94+ Points

With fruit from a half-hectare south-facing parcel in Neive, the 2021 Barbaresco Cottà is not as immediately floral or fragrant as the village Barbaresco presented this year by Albino Rocca. This wine opens at a slower pace to reveal dark cherry fruit, candied orange peel and smoky licorice. It's a slow-moving Barbaresco that continues to show more depth and interesting angles the longer it stays in the glass. This bottle registers the highest alcohol content (at 15%) of the three single-vineyard expressions presented this year. Only 2,300 bottles were made.

Monica Larner, The Wine Advocate

Where in the world does the magic happen?

Str. Ronchi, 18, 12050 Barbaresco CN, Italy

Barbaresco
Piedmont
Italy