Richmond Wine Stock

Richmond Wine Stock

This month Richmond Wine Stock looks at Italian wines.

Richmond Wine Stock

Check out Richmond Wine Stock regularly on the third Thursday of the month.

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Genevelyn Steele
Richmond.com
Thursday, August 21, 2008

There are three reasons to love Italy: wines from the north, wines from the south and the fact that it's inhabited by men with eyes that look like melted chocolate chips.

 

Most of us are familiar with Chiantis from Toscana and Barolos from Piemonte and have favorite producers from these regions. I am fond of Fontodi Chianti Classico and Viette Barolos and fortunately can find these two producers in Richmond easily. But, they aren't cheap. Not like wines from the south, the infamous "boot wines" from Puglia, or Campania, where primitivo (relative to zinfandel) and aglianico (Eye-ahn-nico) are grown.

 

Nebbiolo, sangiovese: In a country shaped like a Manolo Blahnik puddle jumper, the varietals grown above the thigh get the most play. Order a Barolo in an Italian restaurant and receive instant "atta-boys," especially if the wine was bottled during Berlusconi's first jab at Prime Minister, but expect a triple digit check. Or scan the shelves for Chianti -- impossible to mismatch with marinara. One is rarely disappointed with the northerly stalwarts, but sometimes you crave a little strange. On a recent visit to the local wine shop's IT section, Cantine Grotta Del Sol, Aglianico di Campania, 2005, was the southern stranger.


Perhaps the aglianico grape was introduced to the Campania region of southern Italy by the Greeks. Lore has it that the legendary Greek warrior Diomedes settled in Benevento, the sub-region this particular aglianico is from, after the Trojan War. Today, aglianico is emerging as an inexpensive choice for cellaring, challenging the more well-known wines from Piemonte. Aglianico producers would like their wines from Campania to come to the wine lover's mind as an alternative to the Langhe, a DOCG for Barolo.

 

Here's why: These two regions, Benevento and Barolo, share similar soil profiles; volcanic tufa, polka-dotted with moisture from underground springs.

 

What they don't share is kindred pricing. Aglianicos range from $15 to $80.00 a bottle, with the higher priced bottles aged at least 10 years. Older aglianicos are a rarity in local wine shops, but the inexpensive, youthful ones are available. Pricier aglianicos could be left unopened until reaching their seventh birthday, making them the perfect bottles for the pinched, patient, and curious.


2005 Cantine Grotta Del Sol, Aglianico di Campania


Hairy, muscular, type-A Italian. Over-pulled espresso, without the nuance of crema. Just poured black-top style tannins, which bury the blackberry and cherries I know are lurking in the bottle. A rough-hewn, yet defined, squid-ink colored wine that needs to relax a bit to contend with nebbiolo.
At about $15.00, this is a bottle to experiment with aging a few years.

 

And, an aglianico by the glass:

Served at Azzurro in the River Road Shopping Center, the 2003 Vigne Irpine Aglianico Giubilo is chockablock with cherry, cassis, spicebox and black tea aromas; supple and ready-to-drink with rustic, house-made mozzarella with proscuitto and peppers.

 

Upcoming Wine Events:

All events are free unless otherwise noted.
 
Thursday, August 21, J Emerson, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
5716 Grove Ave., (804) 285-8011
Wines From the South of France             
2007 Domaine de la Mordoree, Lirac, White Rhone Wine
2006 Ermitage du Pic Saint Loup, Coteaux du Languedoc  
2005 Mas Amiel, "Notre Terre", Cotes Du Roussillon

2002 Chateau Pradeaux, Bandol Rouge
 
Thursday, August 21st, The Wine Market, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m.
11367 Nuckols Road, (804) 747-5550
Cal-Ital and the Rhone Rangers
07 Terrazzo Bianco Verdicchio/Trebbiano
NV Sacred Stone Master's Red Field Blend
05 Starry Night Adara Rhone-Style Blend
05 Pietra Santa Pinot Noir
 
Thursday, August 21 River City Cellars, 5 to 7 p.m.

2931 W. Cary St., (804) 355-1375
Beer Tasting
 
Thursday, August 21, Grapes and Barley, 6 p.m. until …   

4356 S Laburnum Ave, (804) 222-8809
Genealogy: A Family Tree with Naima Akers
food and wine paired with family tree workshop
cost $10
 
Down the Road:
Vegetarian Wine Dinner at Edible Garden, Wednesday, Sept. 10 at 6:30 p.m. , call for details (804) 784-2011
Have a wine or beer event?  Please let us know in the comments sections.

 


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8 comments.
Amy D McCracken - Email this User
8/26/2008 at 3:00:38 PM
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Hello! Just wanted to get the 4th Annual Richmond Wine Opener on the calendar. The Wine Opener is a premier wine and food event that benefits the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. It will be held in the rotunda at the Science Museum of Virginia on Thursday, Nov. 6th at 6:00 p.m. It's two days after the election. You can raise a toast--or drown your sorrows. For details contact Amy at ammcracken@cff.org or phone 527-1500.


genevelyn - Email this User
8/25/2008 at 5:15:08 PM
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Hi John-
Thanks for the comment. I thought of your past laments on your wine blog that there aren't many wine dinners for vegetarians when I included it. Full disclosure: I am hosting this dinner. I wrestled with whether or not I should promote an event I am hosting on this site, but as it is an unusual dinner I went ahead and did so. I do hope that other restaurants and those of us in wine sales will post their events on this site, which is intended to promote all wine happenings in Richmond, VA.
John's wine blog, Anything Wine, is also locally focused and can be found here:
http://anythingwine.wordpress.com/

Check it out!


John Witherspoon - Email this User
8/25/2008 at 2:08:32 PM
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nice write up Gen! And thanks for the reminder about the veggie dinner at Edible Garden, I had forgotten about it.


genevelyn - Email this User
8/24/2008 at 11:15:36 AM
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Brian
I last found Fontodi at Grapes in Barley by the airport.

Jason-
Biscardo--where do you find it?

Steph- TMI!! :)

DC--tried the Casalino per your suggestion, very nice!


Stephanie - Email this User
8/22/2008 at 9:41:35 AM
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Aglianico will be great test of my will power. Patience to perfection. Thanks for the great images, too- deep, sexy eyes; hairy chests in wife beaters...and the rich purple and maroon hues in a large round glass.


Jason S - Email this User
8/21/2008 at 8:15:15 PM
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I am looking forward to autumn, when I can enjoy a big amarone with some grilled game... Biscardo is a good value at around $40-$50 and widely available in town. Great info in here, G!


Brian - Email this User
8/21/2008 at 10:56:12 AM
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I am a big fan of Fontodi (and its Supertuscan cousin, Flaccianello, which is wonderful, though very expensive), but have not seen it in Richmond. Where have you found it?


Richmond.com Article Feedback - Leave your comment today!

Very informative article. You forgot to mention the women have those melted chocolate chip eyes too. Yowzah! I'm still partial to my humble 2006 Bell'Agio Chianti in the bottle with the woven base. Also, the 2006 Casalino Chianti Classico is a steal at $11.99.



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