1998 Brunello di Montalcino, Scopetone, Tuscany

1998 Brunello di Montalcino, Scopetone, Tuscany

Product: 22078
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1998 Brunello di Montalcino, Scopetone, Tuscany

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Description

Lapped up in September at Berrys’ Festicciola lunch, following the Italian Grand Tour tasting at Lindley Hall, this comes straight from the cantina’s cellar, courtesy of owner Angela Corioni.

It’s a lovely vintage, not big and brash like 1997 or 2000, but elegant with suave forest floor fruit and hints of tea, so typical of the Scopetone terroir just below the city walls.

It’s crunchy fresh too, thanks to the vintage and the storage. An understated Brunello but with bags of charm. No need to decant, ‘basta’ a big glass!
David Berry Green

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About this WINE

Scopetone, Tuscany

Scopetone, Tuscany

This is one of Montalcino’s hidden treasures. Unknown to many, Ferruccio Biondi – credited with “inventing” Brunello – planted his first Sangiovese on the best location he could find in the region. That was not the now-famous Tenuta Greppo estate, however, but rather the Scarnacuoia cru – where we find Podere Scopetone’s vines today.

This tiny, hallowed site, replanted in 1978, gives a taste of the region’s origins. Its soils are some of the area’s oldest due to the exfoliating exposure of this treacherously steep slope. Since local couple Loredana Tanganelli and Antonio Brandi acquired it in 2009, they have given new life and new meaning to Brunello’s original vineyard. They’re building a reputation for making some of the region’s purest, most desirable wines. Their total production is a tiny 2.5 hectares. They farm organically, though you won’t find certification on the label.

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Sangiovese

Sangiovese

A black grape widely grown in Central Italy and the main component of Chianti and Vino Nobile di Montepulciano as well as being the sole permitted grape for the famed Brunello di Montalcino.

It is a high yielding, late ripening grape that performs best on well-drained calcareous soils on south-facing hillsides. For years it was blighted by poor clonal selection and massive overcropping - however since the 1980s the quality of Sangiovese-based wines has rocketed upwards and they are now some of the most sought after in the world.

It produces wines with pronounced tannins and acidity, though not always with great depth of colour, and its character can vary from farmyard/leather nuances through to essence of red cherries and plums. In the 1960s the advent of Super Tuscans saw bottlings of 100% Sangiovese wines, as well as the introduction of Sangiovese/Cabernet Sauvignon blends, the most famous being Tignanello.

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