Decanter

Bolgheri: 25-year retrospect­ive

- Richard Baudains

As this tiny but powerful DOC toasts its first quarter-century, the region’s winemakers are fully embracing the adventurou­s legacy of the SuperTusca­n and continuing to build upon it. Richard Baudains reflects on this Tuscan crown jewel and what lies ahead for its producers

Bolgheri, in Tuscan terms, is not big. From north to south by road, the DOC zone stretches a mere 13km, and it is easy to miss the rather insignific­ant-looking turning between Livorno and Grosseto that takes you through the avenue of cypress trees to the village of Bolgheri, or into the country lane that flanks its most famous estates. The soils are basically deep sand-clay, but extremely diverse. Recent studies identify nine macro-areas and no fewer than 27 different soil profiles. The climate is slightly cooler than in neighbouri­ng Maremma and is significan­tly drier than in the central hills: a great asset in wet vintages.

Bolgheri means fundamenta­lly Bordeaux blends, although the production norms also allow for monovariet­als. Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot account for 60% of the 1,370ha of vineyard, followed by Cabernet Franc, Syrah and the complement­ary variety Petit Verdot.

Bolgheri Superiore is at the pointy end of the production pyramid, representi­ng a rigidly selected 15% of the total annual bottling, alongside which there are also a limited number of IGTs of the ‘SuperTusca­n’ ilk. The younger, early-drinking Bolgheri Rosso represents the second wine for most estates.

Making a name

In August 2019, Bolgheri celebrated the 25th anniversar­y of the founding of its wine producers’ consorzio. It was an occasion for ‘who are we, where are we coming from, where are we going’ type reflection­s.

Federico Zileri, owner of the Castello di Bolgheri estate and former president of the consorzio, divides the modern history of wine in Bolgheri into three phases. In the beginning was Sassicaia, the wine that Marchese Mario Incisa della Rocchetta originally made for his own family’s consumptio­n, which was to

become one of Italy’s truly iconic wines, with an inimitable style and consistenc­y that sets it apart from any general discussion of the wines of Bolgheri. It was the Marchese’s nephew, Piero Antinori, who persuaded him to begin commercial bottling. Antinori lent the Marchese his oenologist, Giacomo Tachis, to oversee the operation. The first official vintages caught the attention of the influentia­l Italian critic Gino Veronelli, but mainly went unheeded on the internatio­nal scene until 1978, when Sassicaia trounced the competitio­n and came out on top in a tasting of internatio­nal Cabernets in London (conducted by Decanter, as it happens).

In the same period that Sassicaia was gaining recognitio­n, the Antinori family divided the extensive Belvedere property, part remaining with Piero, who created the Guado al Tasso estate, and part going to his brother Lodovico, who founded Ornellaia. Piermario Meletti Cavallari started production at Podere Grattamacc­o; Eugenio Campolmi founded Le Macchiole; and Michele Satta, after consulting on the planting of the first vineyards at Ornellaia, set up his own estate and winery. This was the era of the SuperTusca­n. Since the anachronis­tic DOC of the time allowed only for white and rosé production, the trendsetti­ng, super-premium reds were obliged to be categorise­d simply as vino da tavola – table wine.

The anomaly was rectified with the creation of the DOC for red wines in 1994, which heralded the second phase of the region’s developmen­t by opening the floodgates to investment in Bolgheri on the part of foreign buyers and major Italian producers from Tuscany and other regions. The German mining company Knauf came to Bolgheri to look for gypsum and stayed on to make wine very successful­ly at Campo alla Sughera; the Allegrini family founded Poggio al Tesoro; Guido Berlucchi, Caccia al Piano; Folonari, Campo al Mare; and Gaja, Ca’ Marcanda. In the 10 years following 1994, the area under vine shot up from 190ha to more than 1,000ha.

Coming of age

If the first phase gave the impulse and the second laid the foundation­s of the current wine industry, the third phase poses the

‘In 2015, Bolgheri really began to take off, and there was another a big leap forward in 2019’

Federico Zileri, Castello di Bolgheri

challenge of taking Bolgheri up to the next level in terms of quality and recognitio­n. Zileri identifies the 2015 vintage as a landmark in this developmen­t: ‘In 2015, Bolgheri really began to take off. The vintages that followed were also very good, and there was another a big leap forward in 2019.’ With the exception of some doubts about the drought-stressed 2017, it is hard to disagree. Perhaps even more than 2015, the currently available 2016 (see recommenda­tions below) lends weight to Zileri’s case. It is a thrilling vintage to taste: great definition of fruit, fine natural tannins, breadth but also elegance.

Bolgheri is on a roll. A number of factors are contributi­ng to this, but perhaps the most important has been the progressiv­e ageing of the vines. Half of Bolgheri’s vineyards were planted betweeen 2000 and 2009, which means that they are now approachin­g maturity. The benefit this brings to the quality of the fruit supply is reflected in the significan­t increase in the production of Bolgheri Superiore, which has almost doubled since 2015, going from a little more than 600,000 bottles to nearly 1.2 million in 2018.

Recent vintages have also seen a perceptibl­e evolution in the style of Bolgheri Superiore. The wines of the 1990s and early 2000s were typically big on mouthfeel, muscular, concentrat­ed, rather unsubtle interpreta­tions of the Bordeaux varieties. Tasting through the vintages prior to 2010, you also have the uncomforta­ble impression that many have not aged particular­ly gracefully. The benchmark wines of Bolgheri today reflect what producers themselves are saying about their stylistic aims. Bolgheri Superiore remains a powerful wine, but from 2015 onwards you find more agility, brighter fruit definition and more freshness than you did in the wines of the past.

‘More elegance’ is the way Friedrich Knauf from Campo alla Sughera puts it. Niccolò Marzichi Lenzi, from boutique winery Le Crocine, describes his style as ‘big but supple drinking wines with crisp acidity, low on oak’. Cinzia Merli from Le Macchiole ( left) says that, since 2015, the winery has looked for ‘a lighter style with more fruit and aroma, and with less toast in the oak’. This refocusing of style is also driving changes in the vineyard. Axel Heinz, estate director at Ornellaia, cites the ‘fad’ of the 1990s for hyper-dense planting aimed at maximising concentrat­ion, a practice that producers are now backing away from.

The approach to pruning is also coming under scrutiny. At Ornellaia, Heinz says his team is ‘returning to some of the ideas of the past’, which, decoded, means pruning canes a little longer, with less emphasis on the concentrat­ion of the grapes and more on the balance of the vine.

Next chapter

I ask Albiera Antinori, newly elected president of the producers’ consortium, if Bolgheri is a brand or a terroir. ‘It is both,’ she replies. Herein lies the challenge for the future of Bolgheri: on the one hand, to establish a collective identity; on the other, to give expression to a range of diverse terroirs. The common denominato­r is, without a doubt, Cabernet Sauvignon, which produces results unrivalled in the rest of Italy. By contrast, Merlot is extremely terroir-specific, as the famous clay plot at Masseto demonstrat­es. So is Cabernet Franc, which, in the right soils, makes world-class monovariet­al wines and brings refined elegance to Bordeaux blends.

Satta says with great conviction that Bolgheri is terroir. He underlines the view by pointing to the vineyard where he produces a great Viognier, and another, a stone’s throw away, from which he sources a unique Sangiovese. As one of Bolgheri’s earliest independen­t producers and a founding

‘2016 Bolgheri is a thrilling vintage to taste: great definition of fruit, fine natural tannins, breadth but also elegance’

member of the consorzio, Satta has followed the developmen­t of winemaking on this stretch of the coast from the days of the SuperTusca­n vino da tavola, through the period of exponentia­l expansion, when external consultant­s made wines for absentee owners according to theoretica­l models, to the present day. For Satta, the future lies in the Bolgheri of the vigneron, driven by the secondgene­ration producers who have grown up among its vines and have assimilate­d the messages of its terroir.

Merli, whose estate was another founding member of the consorzio, says: ‘Where we have been determines where we are now.’

As an area with no history of winemaking, Bolgheri has had to invent itself, but it has had the freedom to experiment and to find its own direction. And on that count, Merli says: ‘We are just at the beginning.’

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 ??  ?? Rows of Cabernet Sauvignon vines in one of OrnellaiaÕ­s vineyards
Rows of Cabernet Sauvignon vines in one of OrnellaiaÕ­s vineyards
 ??  ?? Richard Baudains has been a regular contributo­r to
Decanter on Italian wines since 1989, and is the DWWA Regional Chair for Veneto
Richard Baudains has been a regular contributo­r to Decanter on Italian wines since 1989, and is the DWWA Regional Chair for Veneto
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 ??  ?? Above: Federico Zileri, Castello di Bolgheri
Above: Federico Zileri, Castello di Bolgheri
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 ??  ?? Above: Cinzia Merli, Le Macchiole
Above: Cinzia Merli, Le Macchiole

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