Michele Romano

Ca' Rome' di Romano Marengo

Vigna Cerretta Barolo Nebbiolo 2011

Wow. Big fan. Lots of bright red fruits like cherries and raspberries in the beginning. Great acidity. It is more earthy than I expected, but not unwelcome. I really appreciated the almost floral/rosy note that contrasts the brightness off the bat. Still pretty tannic, I imagine this would only get better with age. Tasted expensive. I have no clue how much it costs. Only improved with time/air as we ate dinner. Super cool to taste how it “opened up” and how it changed. — 3 months ago

Michele Chiarlo

Tortoniano Barolo Nebbiolo

Smooth. Perfect barolo. Sorry but it was wonderful — 7 months ago

Ca' Rome' di Romano Marengo

Rio Sordo Barbaresco Nebbiolo 2020

Great for its youthfulness. Would benefit from another year or two in the cellar. — 2 months ago

Romano Dal Forno

Monte Lodoletta Amarone della Valpolicella Corvina Blend 2017

Despite a 17 pct alcohol level this wine is perfectly in balance. Blood sausage, long afterburn rather sweet. — 5 months ago

Andrew, Brecht and 1 other liked this

Michele Satta

Piastraia Bolgheri Rosso Red Blend 2000

Dusty tannins and some good fruit mixed with smoky flavors. — 7 months ago

Tom and Andrew liked this

Michele Chiarlo

Reyna Barbaresco Nebbiolo 2017

Beautiful wine with a hint of spice. Will be even better tomorrow. — 8 months ago

Michele Satta

Bolgheri Piastraia SuperTuscan Blend 2021

The wine opens up nicely as it breathes. An enjoyable Cabernet, Merlot, Sangiovese blend. — 3 months ago

Azienda Agricola Reverdito Michele

Barolo Nebbiolo

JKT
9.1

Very good Barolo with lean muscular strength that rippled through the evening — 5 months ago

Ericsson liked this

Romano Dal Forno

Vigneto Monte Lodoletta Valpolicella Superiore Corvina Blend 2013

Presented double-blind at Tasting Group. The wine pours a deep garnet color with a near opaque core; medium+ viscosity with moderate staining of the tears and no obvious signs of sediment. On the nose, the wine is developing with powerful notes of ripe and some dried fruits: bramble berries, slightly stewed black cherry, dried herbs, stony earth, baking spices. On the palate, the wine is dry with medium+ tannin and medium acid. Confirming the notes from the nose. The finish is long. The alcohol is high.

Initial conclusions: this could be a Grenache-based blend, Corvina-based blend or Sangiovese-based blend from France or Italy. I felt the combination of slightly stewed cherry and spices ruled out what I would want from a Sangiovese blend. Which, left me to decide between Southern Rhône or Valpolicella. I liked this wine…the oak treatment was interesting. I was getting a French barrique. Hmmm…

So, for my final conclusion: I’m calling this a Grenache-based blend, from France, from Southern Rhône, from Chateauneuf-du-Pape, 2017, from a more modern leaning producer using a good portion of barrique. I’ll be damned! I don’t hate my call but I gotta get better at distinguishing these wines from Southern Rhône. I probably just need to drink more of both, lol. Tasty stuff! Drink now through 2039.
— 5 months ago

Mark, Douglas and 6 others liked this
Zach D

Zach D

That’s a super tough blind tasting. Good deductive reasoning. Cheers