2021 Ca' del Baio Barbaresco Asili

$54.99

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Unfortunately for us, Ca’ del Baio is no longer the best-kept secret in Barbaresco it once was.  The news, thanks to their rave reviews, the annual visits of the PRIMA gang and the profiling of the Grasso sisters in Suzanne Hoffman’s excellent book ‘Labor of Love,’ is definitely out!  But, no matter, the Grassos are still some of the nicest people in all of the Langhe and their wines among the region’s most compelling. With four generations of family knowhow and over 30 vintages behind it, Ca’ del Baio is no Johnny-come-lately to the Barbaresco scene, and with holdings in vineyards like Asili and Pora in the Barbaresco zone and a wonderful spot on the backside of Vallegrande in Treiso, the current generations of the Grasso family, Giulio, Luciana and their three savvy daughters, are important landholders and winemakers, no matter how you look at it.  The family home and cellar are in the tiny hamlet of Treiso, the smallest and least-visited of the three major Barbaresco villages, and the easiest to miss if you’re driving through the area.  The vineyards that fan out from this little town are vertiginous in the extreme and only sparsely covered with the kind of sandy, marly soils that create the most structured, longest lived Nebbiolos in the entire Barbaresco zone. If you step outside the Grassos’ stylish new tasting area and look up their steep driveway, the breathtaking slope that rises in front of you is the family’s home vineyard of Vallegrande.  It provides the fruit for one of their two single-vineyard bottlings (and a Riserva)- a dense, intense but elegant wine built on a core of wild strawberries and plums with Treiso’s textbook cooler climate elegance and crisp, lithe tannins.  It’s a wine that shows why Barbaresco is often called the more ‘feminine’ of the three major Nebbiolo production zones.  The Grasso’s other major vineyard holding is on the other side of the hill near Barbaresco village on the famous Asili hill.  The Asili cru has been the source for some of Barbaresco’s most iconic wines over the years and brings together all of the attributes for which this area is so well known.  Tighter wound and more introverted than just about anything else we’ve tasted so far from 2021, the 2021 Barbaresco Asili is a wine of immense pedigree, verve and potential longevity.  Richer in texture than the Vallegrande right now, it’s a wine that will reveal its many charms only slowly over the next decade or so while also exuding the Burgundy-like elegance very unique to the site.  What a great Asili!  2021 is truly a stunning vintage for Barbaresco- a classic vintage with more vibrancy and elan than most and potentially as long-lived as any in recent memory too.  Think 2010 and 2016 here.  By the way, Paula Grasso (pictured second from the left, next to my wife Anne) is the oldest of the three sisters and married to our good friend Carlo Deltetto of Deltetto in Roero’s Canale whose wines PRIMA directly imports.  I wanted to remind you that we’re your source for their wonderful Roero Arneis, sparkling wines and terrific Barbera and Roero Riserva reds. 

James Suckling: Strawberries, watermelon, pomegranate, fresh violets and a lot of orange peel. Then the full-bodied palate shows pinot-like elegance, almost silky tannins and great concentration of fruit, with rhubarb notes, fierce tannins that are elegant and ripe, refreshing acidity and a long, precise, polished aftertaste. Drink or hold. 96 points

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