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2016 Elena Fucci Aglianico del Vulture Titolo

Not Currently In Auction

Latest Sale Price

July 2, 2023 - $37

Estimate

RATINGS

94The Wine Advocate

Stitched together with enormous precision, the wine offers balanced intensity and a beautiful level of fruit purity that speaks both to the Aglianico grape and the extreme territory that shapes it. This vintage finishes on a dry note with fine texture and elegantly integrated tannins.

93Vinous / IWC

Smoky black fruits, crushed stone, animal musk, mint leaf, dried flowers and a hint of clove create a thrilling display...silky textures flood the palate, motivated by stimulating acidity, giving way to polished black fruits, inner herbal tones and peppery spice...persistent and savory with lingering minerality and remnants of fine tannin.

92Wine Enthusiast

...delightful mix of crushed rock, red berries, pink peppercorn and violet drive the nose. There's polish to the palate, where coiled red-berry fruit is propelled along an immensely tangy river of crushed stones.

90Wine Spectator

Exuding a perfume of spice, dried tea rose and graphite notes on the nose, this mouthwatering red is tightly knit, with sleek, taut tannins layered with bright cherry and salmonberry fruit, as well as lavender and mandarin orange peel details. A subtle vein of smoky mineral intensifies on the finish.

REGION

Italy, Basilicata, Aglianico del Vulture

Basilicata is in southern Italy, bordered by the regions of Puglia, Campania and Calabria. With 26,800 acres of vineyards, Basilicata is Italy’s 17th largest appellation. The region has one DOCG, Aglianico del Vulture Superiore, and four DOCs, Aglianico del Vulture, Matera, Terre dell’Alta Val d’Agri, and Grottino di Roccanova. The DOCG was created in 2010. Before that there was only one DOC, and that was for Aglianico del Vulture. Though red and white wines are made in Basilicata, the undisputed star is Aglicanico del Vulture, a powerhouse tannic red with high acidity and floral notes. Historically Aglianico grapes were shipped off to northern Italy and sometimes Bordeaux to give structure to weak local vintages. Though the name Aglianico del Vulture sounds odd to English speakers, Vulture is the name of an extinct volcano in the center of the appellation, and the volcanic soils of the local vineyards owe much of their richness to the volcano. Aglianico is grown in several southern regions and is the foundation of the Taurasi wine of neighboring Campania. But many wine writers consider Aglianico del Vulture to be superior to Aglianico from other regions, and Aglianico del Vulture is now one of Italy’s new generation collectible wines. The white grapes grown in Basilicata are Malvasia and Moscato. There is also a Basilicata IGT, or Indicazione Geographica Tipica. Gambero Rosso has called Basilicata “one of Italy’s final frontiers…The commercial success of these wines, both in Italy and abroad, confirms the state of grace achieved for (Basilicata) labels.”