Theatre of Wine
18 October 2012
1. Di Majo Norante Rami Falanghina 2011, Molise
90% Falanghina, 10% Fiano
Some floral notes and mineral aromas (slate?). High, crisp acidity.
Mineralic nature continues on the palate. This has had some skin maceration
- gives it quite a lot of intense flavour. This is well balanced. Very
good. £11.30
2. Gioia Al Negro Ombrosa Romantica Fiano 2010, Basilicata
Medium-intensity floral and melon nose. Really good - but a little hard to
describe the flavour. Less acidic, this has a more waxy mouthfeel. The
fruit is more cooked in character and there is a strongly herbal nature to
the wine. I liked this - it was very interesting. £9.40
3. Occhipinti SP68 Bianco 2011, Sicilia
(Named after the road which goes past the vineyard)
This wine was made by crazy biodynamic hippies so very little intervention
by the winemaker/growers and absolutely no sulphur. Even more bizarrely -
they don't use temperature control during fermentation - for a white wine
from Sicily. They obviously like to live dangerously!
Smells like a muscat (turns out to by zibibbo, which is part of the muscat
family). As a result, it initially smells as though it will be a sweet
wine, but is actually bone dry. A weird oxidized note on the nose.
Noticeably mineralic on the palate. This is definitely an interesting wine,
but it's not a particularly enjoyable wine. It hits all the technical
things you want in a wine - complexity, intensity etc - but something about
the whole just doesn't work for me. Fine for a tasting sample, but you'd
probably not want to crack open a bottle and drink lots of it. £16.40
4. Guccione Gibril Nerello Mascalese 2009, Sicilia
An extremely pale colour for a red wine - think Pinot Noir or Nebbiolo.
Medium-intensity red fruit. Slight deliberate oxidation? Tasted very good,
but fades a little quickly. Very interesting - tannins are more towards the
PN than the Nebbiolo end of the spectrum. However, it definitely had the
stuffing to stand up to the (amazing) salami. The herbal flavour of the
salami was totally brought to life by the combination with the wine. One of
those beautiful occasions where the combination is better than the sum of
the parts! £23.90
5. Occhipinti Il Frappato 2010, Sicilia
The aroma profile here is strongly towards the red fruit end of the
spectrum and this is still quite primary in nature. Light, delicate aromas.
Nice, but not worth £25. Very quaffable and enjoyable. I prefer the
previous wine though. This has a soft mouthfeel, but is actually quite
tannic. £24.80
6. Gioia Al Negro Nerulum Rosso 2007, Basilicata
This was the best of the reds - apart from the Taurasi (at 4 times the
price). It was the first of the reds which was dark and opaque. Darker
nose: complex, sweet, ripe dark fruit. Also, wood, liquorice and herbs.
Palate is much lighter and more refreshing. Almost juicy fruit. Very
elegant. Lots of complex flavours on the palate too though - more like
leather. An interesting contrast between the expectations from the nose,
and the showing on the palate. And a total bargain at £11.50.
7. Mocavero Rosso 2009, Salice Salentino (Puglia)
(Salice Salentino... Salice means "willow". Like Salicylic Acid)
Intense flavour. Almost coffee-like bite, but with a smooth mouthfeel
(tannins there nonetheless). Spice aftertaste. Nice, but not as good as
previous wine. £10.20
8. Fatalone Primitivo 2008, Gioia del Golle
Very good. I must be a little drunk by now as I'm struggling to accurately
describe the taste of this wine. A lifted, herbal aroma. Velvety mouthfeel.
Intense dark flavours. Relatively low acid. This would be great with a steak! £12.70
9. Pietracupa Taurasi 2006, Campania
Deep, dark colour. Dark fruit, spice, leather and balsamic notes(! but in a
good way) on the nose. Noticeable minerality on the palate. This is acidic
and refreshing, but powerful too. Tastes very young despite being 6 years old - would be great with beef. Soft and dusty tannin. This is excellent - a classy wine. Beautiful finish too. Shame it's £41.60
10. Ceratti Greco di Bianco 2006, Calabria
This smells like a Beaumes de Venise. This weird grape must also be part of
the Muscat family. I'm not a huge muscat fan, but this is not bad. Very
sweet but good acidity. Same colour as honey, which probably accounts for
all the arguments people were having about whether it tasted like honey or
not (not honey, more dried apricot and green grapes). A nice sweet wine,
but nothing more. Would not pay £29.70 for it though.
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