Product information

Giuseppe Cortese Barbaresco MAGNUM 2017

Nebbiolo from Barbaresco, Piedmont, Italy

$184

$177ea in any 3+
$170ea in any 6+
Closure: Cork

Description

Load of energy. Stepping up to the Barbaresco from the 18 Langhe there’s a lot more going on. Brooding with an edge of darkness it somehow combines this with transparency. The Cortese wines have wonderful clarity and purity to them and this is no exception. A lovely set of flavours and weight here. Juicy acid matching slatey / silky tannins nicely. An excellent introduction to the Cortese Barbaresco level wines.

“A new wine from this producer comprising young vines from Rabaja and older ones from Trifolera (sits under Rabaja and Martinenga, and above Tre Stelle).

Lovely energy and freshness for a 2017 here. Ripe strawberry, spice, floral with a little camphor/mint. Medium-bodied, crisp, fine grip of light but sure tannin, perhaps some blood orange and rhubarb in with spice, and a pretty red fruited finish of good length. It’s a light but lovely wine. More to come.” GW 93 Points

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Why is this Wine so Yummy?

 

“It’s impossible not to admire these genuine, sincere wines and their equally unpretentious prices”. Antonio Galloni

About Guiseppe Cortese

Giuseppe went solo in 1971, making his first wine under his own name.

About the 2017 Barbaresco Vintage

The message for 2017 is clear: Taste, Taste, Taste! The frost and hail that hit parts of the regions has impacted the quality of the wines from those parts. Where vineyards escaped these events delicious wines have resulted, take Olek Bondonio’s Roncagliette as just one example. They’ll be plenty of strong Barbaresco. We’ll just need to be careful to weed out the wines that didn’t make the cut.

From Galloni:

“Whereas 2016 was an extraordinarily benign year, pretty much anything that could happen did happen in 2017. A warm, dry winter led to early bud break. That, alone, would not have been a problem, but it left vines unusually vulnerable to a brutal hailstorm on April 15. The damages were especially severe in Neive, where a number of vineyards were practically wiped out. “Yields are down 60% for Barbera and 75-80% for Nebbiolo,” Claudia Cigliuti explained. As if that was not enough, Barbaresco was affected by the same late April frost that was an issue for other regions in Europe. Neive in particular was especially hard hit in the hillside that encompasses Basarin, Fausoni and Currà. “Hail wiped out 60% of the crop on the Basarin hillside, and frost took out the rest pretty much in the same spots,” Andrea Sottimano told me. “At that point, my dad and I decided the best thing to do was just prune the vines for the next year.” Whereas Dolcetto and Barbera can give some fruit from second generation buds, Nebbiolo is trickier because there is a risk the fruit won’t fully ripen, and the lower quality of that fruit is not worth the risk of compromising the next vintage. As readers will see in the producer commentaries, some growers did not bottle their Neive Barbarescos from the hardest hit sectors. Warm, dry weather resumed and carried through to harvest. Conditions in Piedmont often change around mid-August, when evening temperatures start to retreat, but that was not the case in 2017. Diurnal shifts during the last month of ripening are considered essential for the development of color, aromatics and full maturity of tannins, and that did not happen in 2017.”

Where in the World is Giuseppe Cortese?

Cortese’s best vineyard is undoubtedly his Rabajà

Contrary to how it may appear when seen from a distance, the Rabajà hill is anything but homogeneous and can be broadly divided into at least two areas. The first bordering on Asili coincides with the picturesque amphitheatre overlooking the Martinenga cru, and mostly enjoys a south-westerly aspect. The second, on the other hand, is more linear and faces due south, though within it there are some evident variations due to marked undulations around the hillside. In both cases, the style of the wine is, however, richer and bolder than the Asili and Martinenga (although a more uncompromising, mineral character tends to emerge in the second area).

Cortese’s Rabajà is mainly facing south-west in the hollow above Martinenga, south for the remainder

Click to enlarge 🔎
93 Points

A new wine from this producer comprising young vines from Rabaja and older ones from Trifolera (sits under Rabaja and Martinenga, and above Tre Stelle).

Lovely energy and freshness for a 2017 here. Ripe strawberry, spice, floral with a little camphor/mint. Medium-bodied, crisp, fine grip of light but sure tannin, perhaps some blood orange and rhubarb in with spice, and a pretty red fruited finish of good length. It’s a light but lovely wine. More to come.

Gary Walsh

93 Points

A red with beautiful crushed-berry, earth and floral aromas and flavors. It’s medium-to full-bodied with round tannins and a fruity yet fresh finish. Shows form and tension for this ripe vintage. Drink in 2022 and onwards.

James Suckling

Where in the world does the magic happen?

Giuseppe Cortese, Strada Rabaja, Barbaresco, Piedmont, Province of Cuneo, Italy

Barbaresco
Piedmont
Italy