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2015 Cava d'Onice Brunello di Montalcino Riserva

Light label condition issue

2 available
Minimum Bid Per Bottle is $70
Ends Sunday, 7pm Pacific

ITEM 10420094 - Removed from a professional wine storage facility

Bidder Quantity Amount Total
2 $70
2015 Cava d'Onice Brunello di Montalcino Riserva

RATINGS

95James Suckling

Ripe blackberries and blue fruit on the nose with cedar and clove. Sweet chocolate and dried herbs, too. It's full-bodied with layers of ripe plums, blueberries and dark chocolate. Firm, smooth and caressing tannins.

90Vinous / IWC

Ripe black cherries, cinnamon, allspice and clove form a seductive bouquet with grounding hints of sage and leather...textures are silky, offset by tart red berries with inner herbal and floral tones forming over a layer of grippy tannins.

17.5Jancis Robinson

Slightly closed, nutty cherry nose that needs to take a deep breath. It would even be better to decant this. With aeration minerally cherry fruit with iron hints. Proper bite of tangy cherry fruit and bags of fine, chewy tannins. Gorgeous grip and length.

REGION

Italy, Tuscany, Brunello di Montalcino

Brunello di Montalcino is regarded as one of Italy’s best appellations. Located in south central Tuscany below Chianti, the wines of Brunello di Montalcino DOCG are made of a Sangiovese clone called “brunello,” which means “little dark one,” a reference to the brown tones in the skin of the grape. Unlike some Tuscan appellations that allow other grapes to be blended with Sangiovese, Brunello di Montalcino is entirely Sangiovese. Montalcino itself is a picturesque, hill-top town not especially well known for wine production until the mid-19th century, when a local vineyard owner isolated the brunello clone and planted it. Other growers followed suit. Nevertheless it wasn’t until 1970s that wine enthusiasts started paying attention to Brunello di Montalcino, which by then was becoming an outstanding wine. Today there are 120 estates in the DOCG, up from about 25 estates in 1975. Brunellos in general are bigger, darker, more tannic and more powerful wines than Chiantis or most other Sangioveses. By law they must be aged for four years, and two of those years must be in wooden barrels.