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2015 Tenuta Dell'Ornellaia Le Serre Nuove

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Latest Sale Price

January 7, 2024 - $61

Estimate

RATINGS

94Vinous / IWC

Silky, perfumed and also wonderfully light on its feet...attractive, mid-weight wine that will drink well right out of the gate...stunning Serre Nuove.

93The Wine Advocate

...stunning and exuberant wine that drinks with beautiful intensity and personality... This is a complete and richly concentrated expression that drinks with seamless intensity. It pits power against elegance with confidence and grace.

93Jeb Dunnuck

It offers a deeper, richer, more Cabernet-like character in its cassis, black cherry, graphite, licorice, and scorched earth aromas and flavors...medium to full-bodied richness, beautiful purity of fruit, fine, fine tannin and a great finish.

92Wine Spectator

Lush and modern, this evokes black cherry, blackberry, plum and light earth and iron flavors. A dusty swath of tannins girds the finish...

16.5Jancis Robinson

Nicely integrated and glossy with a light touch... Quite soft and refreshing. Vital acidity and ripe fruit without perhaps enormous undertow but very ‘pleasant’ drinking.

REGION

Italy, Tuscany

Tuscany, or Toscana in Italian, is Italy’s best-known wine region and its most diverse. Historically Sangiovese was the primary grape grown in Tuscany and Chianti was considered the purest expression of Sangiovese. Sangiovese and its many clones are still important, and they are the grapes used for the Tuscan appellations of Brunello di Montalcino, Vino Nobile di Montepulciano, Morellino di Scansano, Chianti, Chianti Classico and Carmignano. But in the last 50 years innovative producers, many of them in southwestern Tuscany in the area called Maremma, have also planted Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, and Cabernet Franc. The tradition defying producers have blended those varietals with Sangiovese to produce dazzling wines that do not conform to Italy’s appellation regulations. Such wines are called Super Tuscans and cannot be labeled with either of Italy’s highest level quality designations, which are in order of status Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantia, (DOCG), and Denominazione di Origine Controllata, (DOC). (This has not at all hindered the demand for Super Tuscans, some of which are consistently among the world’s most admired and well-reviewed wines.) Tuscany has six DOCG appellations and thirty-four DOCs. Though famous for its red wines, Tuscany also produces whites made primarily from Trebbiano and Vernaccia. There are also many Tuscan Indicazione Geographica Tipica (IGT) wines that are often an innovative blend of traditional and non-traditional grapes. This relatively new appellation status was started in 1992 as an attempt to give an official classification to Italy’s many newer blends that do fit the strict requirements of DOC and DOCG classifications. IGT wines may use the name of the region and varietal on their label or in their name.