Product information

Marchesi di Grésy Barbaresco ‘Martinenga’ MAGNUM 2017

Nebbiolo from Piedmont, Italy, Barbaresco

$500

$485ea in any 3+
$470ea in any 6+
Closure: Cork

Description

This is a wine that has had me conflicted over the 3 times I’ve tried it. I’ve held off listing it watching and waiting to see what happens. The fruit quality and grape tannins in Marchese di Gresy’s Nebbiolos are irrefutable. The Martinenga Cru, a di Gresy monopole sits between Asili and Rabaja, that kind of pedigree explains much. The very high quality oak layer in the wine put me on pause. Was it too much? Time gave me the answer and the wine, the balance I sought.

The secret to this wine. Air time. The oak disappears after a decant and after a day or two of air the fruit is shining, each bottle meeting the very high expectations I’ve had of it.

Bright, fresh, fine, red fruits. Taught and mineral, with a slatey chalky texture. Generosity building with air time. Dark macerative characters with a little liquorice / aniseed at play. A core of quite layered powerful yet elegant fruit or significant depth and length. A cool refreshing feel. A delicacy nestled within structure. Plenty to come here. This is quite the drink with excellent flow.

I’ve seen exactly the same structural shift in other wines from Piedmont, time and oxygen bringing them to life. That said I’d still advise waiting 3 years before cracking one.

Some are happy to take a snapshot with a quick taste. I prefer to apply the same rule tasting wines as I did courting, wine them, dine them, and wake up them the next morning. The rule has revealed a treasure in Marchesi di Grésy.

Available on back-order

Check out all of the wines by Marchesi di Gresy

Why is this Wine so Yummy?

About Marchesi di Grésy

The Martinenga Cru of Barbaresco, a monopole. is not only Marchesi di Grésy’s most famed vineyards it is one of Barbarescos too.

This is an unusual Monopole (single vineyard with just one owner) due to its size, quality and position.

The size, it’s large 12 Ha including a little space for the winery, house and now some pretty flash accommodation. It’s large enough that Marchesi di Grésy has identified two Lieux Dits, Gaiun and Camp Gros, bottling these separately from the Cru Martinenga Barbaresco.

The quality, proof is in the glass, the fruit quality and grape tannins in Marchese di Gresy’s Matinenga Nebbiolos are irrefutable.

The position, explains the quality, it’s right between Asili and Rabajà!

Where Rabajà and Asili are made by many different makers, with just one making Martinenga only those in the know are aware of just how impressive these wines are.

Consider yourself informed!


The wines of the Marchesi di Gresy are some of the most beautiful you will experience. The Nebbiolo of their famed Monopole Martinenga, produces wines of incredible colour, perfumes, intensity and elegance. I have been tasting there for over 25 years and have deeply, and even a little jealously, admired these wines. You can only imagine my response when, after more than two decades of tasting visits, Alessandro di Gresy asked me if I would represent their interests in Australia (and yes, I did say “Il Papa e Catolicco?” or vernacular to that effect).

The di Gresy family have been in Barbaresco for centuries. They record taking ownership of the Monte Aribaldo property in Treiso comune in 1650 and in 1797 they were gifted Martinenga itself, site of the first Roman settlement in the area, known then as Villa Martis.

Over the years I’ve often ordered a Marchesi di Gresy Barbaresco at restaurants in the general area (including Barolo), even if I am with people who came from, or I wanted them to be impressed by, my allied producers – the guys we essentially came to see. For while a Martinenga is the equal of any Barbaresco, even of the fellow Grands Cru I so adore, Rabaja and Asili, it is quite different, quite particular in a number of a ways and I just love this particular expression of perfumes, layering and finesse in Nebb.

In their seminal book ‘Italy’s Noble Red Wines’ (1985) – a must-have text – Sheldon and Pauline Wasserman rated Martinenga as the greatest of Barbaresco vineyards, one step higher even than Rabaja and Asili, or the Santo Stefano of Albesani. This was based mainly on their summary or survey at the time, of the opinions of local experts and producers, rather than anything official or codified. In fact this repute would have partly been based on wines made by others, as it wasn’t until 1973 that Alberto di Gresy started to vinify Martinenga for themselves. In 1971 eg, he sold his grapes to the Ceretto brothers and in 1967 Produttori del Barbaresco made the quite celebrated Barbaresco Riserva Speciale Martinenga. Before long and rightly, Martinenga was joined by Asili and Rabaja in the top division.

From the outskirts of Barbaresco township you can look down onto the magical natural amphitheater of 12 ha of Martinenga. The soil here is the classic Tortonian blue-grey limestone marl that constitutes most of the Barbaresco zone. A beautiful companion garden adds a lovely touch, which is aesthetic, but really intended for encouraging bio-diversity and the activity of insects, especially of pollinating bees. While there is bit of Barbera, Cabernet, Chardonnay and Sauvignon planted, the main game is Nebbiolo, which provides all the material for the beautiful Langhe Nebbiolo and for the three separate Barbaresco bottlings. It is the two famous sub-plots at opposite ends of the Martinenga property, each of which adjoin one of the other of the two acknowledged Grands Cru, that make this the heartland of Barbaresco. You’ll see from the little map above, that the Martinenga sub-plot of Gaiun adjoins the great Asili and sub-plot Camp Gros rolls into Rabaja. While I would add the Santo Stefano sub-plot (lieux dit in French) of Albesani (Neive) and others would propose nearby Paje and Rio Sordo, the three recognised (albeit unofficial) Grands Cru each produce wines that underline the equal status of Barbaresco with Barolo. Any day. The fascinating and clearly different, yet of course related natures and personalities of Martinega Gauin and Martinenga Camp Gros (always released as Riserva), are explored more in notes and attached reviews, but suffice to say they each echo their respective neighbours, Asili and Rabaja in both aromatics and feel.

David Ridge

In the Vineyard

Martinenga is home to the only experimental vineyard for the clonal selection of Nebbiolo in the Barbaresco area. Eleven different clones on an area of 2.600 square meters are constantly monitored by our team, in cooperation with agronomists and enologists of the National Research Council (CNR), to understand the many secrets these grapes still have to reveal, and how different clones respond to climate change.

On the terrace above the cellar, and around the winery, we chose to plant a big aromatic garden, a natural oasis with ethic as well as aesthetic purposes.

Other than providing a beautiful place to taste our wines surrounded by the Martinenga amphitheatre, the garden helps preserve the microclimate and biodiversity through the proliferation of precious insects, like honeybees, that help pollination and keep harmful parasites away from the vines.

In the Winery

Winemaking at Marchesi di Gresy has remained essentially unchanged, apart from new oak being dialled right back, since vinification started here from 1973. While Langhe Nebbiolo now contains a little fruit from Rio Sordo and Marcarini Crus, it is still a shorter ferment/maceration job of 5-7 days, and cement until bottling and has the typical fragrant and zingy Martinenga personality. The 3 Martinenga Barbaresco wines use around 25% new oak, and of various types along with varying splits of time between barrique and botti. Ferments for the Barbaresco are around 10 days under floating cap and another 30 days maceration with submerged cap. All in all, the maxim here has been to let the location talk through the medium of Nebbiolo. It works for me!

To minimize the environmental impact on the surrounding hills, our cellar has been built entirely underground.

This way we were able to reduce soil consumption, while taking advantage of the natural insulation and hygroscopicity of the ground, in order to have the ideal conditions for wine aging with no need for energy.

Where in the World is Marchesi di Grésy?

Marchesi di Grésy is based in Barbaresco with their home site the monopole of the ‘Martinenga’ Cru. Sandwiched between Rabajà and Asili it is part of Barbaresco’s royalty.

Click to enlarge🔎
92 Points

The 2017 Barbaresco Martinenga is a very pretty wine. Crushed flowers, cedar, mint, tobacco and dried flowers are all beautifully lifted. In 2017, the Barbaresco has a bit more mid- palate stuffing than is the norm, but that works well in rounding out a Barbaresco that is often on the lighter side.

Antonio Galloni, Vinous

94+ Points

This wine pours from the bottle with a light ruby or garnet color. The Tenute Cisa Asinari dei Marchesi di Gresy 2017 Barbaresco Martinenga puts on a fascinating aromatic performance that starts off with candied fruit (like cherry Sucrets) followed by a touch of medicinal or balsamic herb that adds some Nebbiolo context to the larger picture. The wine shifts quickly, moving away from those initial aromas to embrace grounded earthy tones of chalk, limestone, cola and zesty ginger. The wine's pretty evolution in the glass and those subtle transitions are very attractive. The mouthfeel is fine and delicate, and the tannin is well tucked in and silky. This production is 14,412 bottles strong, to be released in September 2020.

Monica Larner, The Wine Advocate

Where in the world does the magic happen?

Tenute Cisa Asinary dei Marchesi di Grésy, Strada Stazione, Barbaresco, Piedmont, Province of Cuneo, Italy

Barbaresco
Piedmont
Italy