Sign In

2017 Suavia Soave Classico Monte Carbonare

Light label condition issue

Minimum Bid is $31
Ends Sunday, 7pm Pacific

ITEM 10612281 - Removed from a subterranean, temperature and humidity controlled residential cellar; Purchased at retail

Bidder Amount Total
matho4 $30 $30
jtmor $30 $0
brnoa $25 $0
$20
2017 Suavia Soave Classico Monte Carbonare

RATINGS

95James Suckling

Crystal-clear purity to this Soave, which shows flint, sliced lemons, chamomile and petrichor. Edgy and vertical on the palate, but flavorful and citrusy. Very mineral and precise. Long on the finish.

92Vinous / IWC

Lively aromas and flavors of fresh nectarine, white peach, jasmine, and minerals. Then lemony and juicy, but with very good size to the fresh citrus and orchard fruit flavors. Finishes long and saline with harmonious acidity nicely extending the flavors and providing clarity and cut.

90.9CellarTracker

17.5Jancis Robinson

Tastes like the sound of a golden bell and a deep bronze chau gong. Sultanas and satsumas, with the sweet-sharp tang of nectarine, and yet it’s dry, dry, dry. So much power and depth for 12.5% and yet there’s a delicacy as the flavours unpeel, a lightness, a purity of fruit through the flint and rocks. So long.

REGION

Italy, Veneto, Soave

Veneto in northeastern Italy is one of the country’s most important wine regions and has 220,000 acres of vineyards. It is the third largest wine producing region in Italy after Sicily and Puglia. Though Veneto produces more red than white wine, it is most famous for its Soave and Prosecco, both white wines. Venice is the best-known city in the region, but the area’s wine-making capital is Verona. Close to Verona are the appellations for Bardolino, Valpolicella and Soave. The Veneto is also home to Amarone, the densely concentrated, seriously alcoholic, big red wines made by using grapes that are partially or fully dried. The results are lush, sometimes nearly syrupy red wines that approach 20% alcohol, even though most are not sweet. The most famous conventional red wine is Valpolicella, which means “valley of many cellars.” The name is perhaps a reference to the fact that Veneto is home to a number of indigenous grapes not found elsewhere, including the deep red grapes Corvina, Rondinella and Molinara, all used to make Valpolicella. Garganega is the indigenous white grape used for Soave.