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2005 Cantina di Santadi Carignano del Sulcis Superiore Terre Brune

Not Currently In Auction

Latest Sale Price

October 31, 2021 - $42

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RATINGS

94The Wine Advocate

...rich melange of red cherries, tobacco, earthiness, cedar, licorice and spices emerges from this layered, texturally beautiful wine. Feminine yet masculine, delicate yet powerful, it’s all there... ...magnificent wine...

93Vinous / IWC

Inky ruby. Brooding, closed, slightly sauvage aromas of black and red cherries, smoked game and raw meat, with a touch of cedary oak. Dense and pliant but lively, with penetrating flavors of dark berries, tobacco, minerals...

REGION

Italy, Sardinia, Carignano del Sulcis

Sardinia is Italy’s other big island. Though not as large as its southern neighbor Sicily, Sardinia has 107,000 acres of vineyards, making it Italy’s eighth largest wine producing region in vineyard acres, and the twelfth largest in quantity of wine produced. Nearly 13% of the wine produced carries a DOC label. Sardinia’s history as a rugged, remote, sparsely populated island meant that until recently most wine was made by farmers who drank it themselves or sold it to friends and local businesses. Owners of larger vineyards exported grape juice to be turned into bulk wines in Italy and France. But, as in Sicily, entrepreneurial vineyards owners in recent decades have improved their winemaking and marketed their own estate wines. Italy’s Gambero Rosso wine review notes that the “Sardinian wine horizon continues to expand (and) average quality is now high…” Because the Spanish Aragon dynasty controlled Sardinia for nearly 400 years, Spanish winemaking and Spanish grapes have been influential in Sardinia. Vermentino, thought to be a native Spanish grape, is the most widely planted white grape. Also planted are Malvasia and Vernaccia. The most commonly planted red grape is Cannonau, also called Grenache. Other red grapes of the island are Monica, Carignano (Carignan), and French varietals.