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WTN/Wine Advisor: Valpolicella revisited (Tommasi '05)

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WTN/Wine Advisor: Valpolicella revisited (Tommasi '05)

by Robin Garr » Fri Jan 25, 2008 11:34 am

Valpolicella revisited

My recent tastings and talk about Italian red wines made from the Montepulciano grape in Abruzzo and Marche has inspired quite a conversation on our WineLovers Discussion Group about Montepulciano as an attractive alternative to Chianti when you're in the mood for an amiable, food-friendly Italian red.

Today, let's take a quick look at yet another tasty and table-ready Northern Italian favorite, Valpolicella.

Made in the Veneto region, in the scenic hill country north of Verona and east of Lake Garda in Italy's beautiful lake country, Valpolicella's name sounds like Italian music. One legend, accepted as fact in many references (including Jancis Robinson's hefty Oxford Companion to Wine), holds that the name comes from "Val - poly - cella," or "the valley of many cellars."

Many authorities doubt this story, perhaps because it's almost too pretty to be true. An extended discussion on our forums a couple of years ago brought up other possible translations: "Valley of the Little Po river" or "Doubly blessed valley." All these alternatives, unfortunately, leave open the question of why the early Valpolicellans would have chosen a name that mixed Latin and Greek.

Perhaps it's best to forget the etymology and just enjoy the wine. It's worth noting that Valpolicella's most famous and expensive wine, Amarone, is an unusual variation indeed, a wine made by drying ripe grapes into raisins before pressing them to yield a rich, powerful potion. For a sort of poor man's Amarone, look for Ripasso, a regular Valpolicella boosted in octane by aging it with the left-over grape skins from the previous year's Amarone, a process that adds body and power, albeit at the expense, it seems to me, of freshness and elegance.

Everyday Valpolicella is good enough for me, particularly if it's Valpolicella Classico, made in the older, central zone that comprised the entire wine region until the late '60s, when - like many other Italian wine regions - its boundaries were expanded to increase production capacity.

Valpolicella is made primarily from Corvina Veronese, Rondinella and Molinara, indigenous grapes rarely seen in other wine regions; under modern regulations, wine makers may add smaller amounts of Barbera, Sangiovese or even non-Italian grapes like Cabernet and Merlot.

Today's featured wine shows plenty of the typical dried-cherry flavor that's often a dead giveaway for Valpolicella in "blind" tastings, with a touch of fruit-forward character and a whiff of smoke that give it a slight, not overly obnoxious hint of New World style.

Tommasi 2005 "Vigneto Rafael" Valpolicella Classico Superiore ($13.99)

Very dark garnet. Characteristic Valpolicella dried-cherry flavor with a not-so-characteristic edge of smoke and grilled meat. A load of cherries on the palate, a mix of dried and red Maraschino, bold and fresh; there's a core of mouth-watering acidity, but it stays in the background behind all the bright cherry fruit. Tart dried cherries and a whiff of smoke linger in a long finish. Intriguing but a bit offbeat, on the fruit-forward side for a Valpolicella. U.S. importer: Solar Wine Imports Ltd., Great Neck, N.Y. (Nov. 13, 2007)

FOOD MATCH: Its bright cherry fruit made a particularly appealing match with a fancified "Welsh rabbit" made with sharp Cheddar, chicken, broccoli, green peppers and onions.

VALUE: With the strong Euro hammering the prices of quality European wines, there's no ground for complaint with this lower-teens price.

WHEN TO DRINK: Valpolicella isn't intended for aging, although I wouldn't worry about keeping this sturdy example around for another year or two.

PRONUNCIATION:
Valpolicella = "Vahl-po-lee-CHEL-lah"

WEB LINK:
The winery Website offers a fact sheet in English on this wine:
http://www.tommasiwine.it/Tommasi2/wines/rafael.htm

FIND THIS WINE ONLINE:
Locate retail vendors and compare prices for Tommasi "Vigneto Rafael" Valpolicella on Wine-Searcher.com:
http://www.wine-searcher.com/find/Tomma ... g_site=WLP

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Re: WTN/Wine Advisor: Valpolicella revisited (Tommasi '05)

by Clinton Macsherry » Fri Jan 25, 2008 2:28 pm

Robin Garr wrote:For a sort of poor man's Amarone, look for Ripasso, a regular Valpolicella boosted in octane by aging it with the left-over grape skins from the previous year's Amarone, a process that adds body and power, albeit at the expense, it seems to me, of freshness and elegance.

Everyday Valpolicella is good enough for me. . ..


Amen to that. I've thoroughly enjoyed the Amarones I've (too infrequently) tried, and I love a crisp Valpo, but I haven't yet found a Ripasso hits the sweet spot for me.
FEAR THE TURTLE ! ! !
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Re: WTN/Wine Advisor: Valpolicella revisited (Tommasi '05)

by Jon Peterson » Fri Jan 25, 2008 3:08 pm

Your post is right on time, Robin. My wife told me at noon today that we were having folks over for dinner tonight! The entre is Beef Stroganoff and if memory serves, Hugh Johnson's pocket guide says that Valpolicella is the wine to have.
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Re: WTN/Wine Advisor: Valpolicella revisited (Tommasi '05)

by John Tomasso » Fri Jan 25, 2008 3:31 pm

A producer with a name like that - how can you go wrong? :lol:
"I say: find cheap wines you like, and never underestimate their considerable charms." - David Rosengarten, "Taste"
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Re: WTN/Wine Advisor: Valpolicella revisited (Tommasi '05)

by Robin Garr » Fri Jan 25, 2008 3:52 pm

John Tomasso wrote:A producer with a name like that - how can you go wrong? :lol:

Best wine name to come along since Urzinger-WurzGARRden!
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Re: WTN/Wine Advisor: Valpolicella revisited (Tommasi '05)

by Mark Lipton » Fri Jan 25, 2008 3:53 pm

Robin Garr wrote:
Today's featured wine shows plenty of the typical dried-cherry flavor that's often a dead giveaway for Valpolicella in "blind" tastings, with a touch of fruit-forward character and a whiff of smoke that give it a slight, not overly obnoxious hint of New World style.


I found this characterization of Valpolicella interesting, Robin. To me, the dried cherry character is far more prevalent in Tuscan Sangiovese, especially Chianti. I've found more of a fresh, black cherry character to the Valpolicellas I've had (except for a recently sampled '04 Anime Valpo that was more about Bretty Band-Aids™ than any fruit). I wonder now if I am just an outlier in the Fruit Identification Spectrum?

Mark Lipton
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Re: WTN/Wine Advisor: Valpolicella revisited (Tommasi '05)

by Robin Garr » Fri Jan 25, 2008 4:01 pm

Mark Lipton wrote:I found this characterization of Valpolicella interesting, Robin. To me, the dried cherry character is far more prevalent in Tuscan Sangiovese, especially Chianti. I've found more of a fresh, black cherry character to the Valpolicellas I've had (except for a recently sampled '04 Anime Valpo that was more about Bretty Band-Aids™ than any fruit). I wonder now if I am just an outlier in the Fruit Identification Spectrum?

I doubt you're an outlier, Mark ... of course we all have individual taste sensations (and probably more important, individual idiosyncracies in the way we identify familiar smells).

I do find "dried fruit" in particular, primarily cherry but also a broader spectrum, to be a strong identifier in Valpolicella for me, and in my limited defense, I picked that up in conversations with wine makers during a couple of visits to the region, so I don't think it's a totally wacky conclusion.

Like you, I'm a great fan of Tuscan Sangiovese, but the "dried" descriptor simply never occurred to me there. I think usually of tart black cherries, usually with a note (oak?) that comes across as a kind of undifferentiated brown spice.
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Re: WTN/Wine Advisor: Valpolicella revisited (Tommasi '05)

by Anders Källberg » Fri Jan 25, 2008 5:45 pm

Robin Garr wrote:Everyday Valpolicella is good enough for me, particularly if it's Valpolicella Classico, made in the older, central zone that comprised the entire wine region until the late '60s, when - like many other Italian wine regions - its boundaries were expanded to increase production capacity.

Nice to read about Valpolicella, Robin. However I'd like to point out that there are many good wines made also outside the Classico part of the region, so no need to become fixed with looking for "Classico" on the label. Just think about the wines of Dal Forno Romano, Roccolo Grassi, Corte Sant'Alda, Fattoria Garbole, just to mention some that are among the best in the whole of Valpolicella.
Cheers, Anders
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Re: WTN/Wine Advisor: Valpolicella revisited (Tommasi '05)

by Bill Hooper » Fri Jan 25, 2008 7:43 pm

Robin Garr wrote:All these alternatives, unfortunately, leave open the question of why the early Valpolicellans would have chosen a name that mixed Latin and Greek.


I would guess that the reason for this is the stong Venetian cultural ties to Greece.
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Re: WTN/Wine Advisor: Valpolicella revisited (Tommasi '05)

by Ricardo Boncan » Fri Jan 25, 2008 8:49 pm

Hi Robin,

What a timely topic. We had a simple Italian-inspired dinner at Le Buffet last night, which Jay L. will be posting his tasting notes and comments on soon (if he has not done it yet). On the topic of Valpolicella, we had a 2004 Villa Girardi Valpolicella which was drinking excellently. I found it to have a restrained fruit forward nose, with nice balanced structure. Would have preferred a slightly longer finish but it was not bad at all. Good QPR at $25 considering the other wines we had were in the $40-$50 range and prices here are 20% more than the U.S.

Ricardo

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