Barbera, two ways: Conterno and Sandrone

Barbera is one of the most food friendly red grapes since it can have wonderful red and black fruit aromas, invigorating acidity and lightness in tannin. Sandwiched between the “lesser” Dolcetto and the late-ripening Nebbiolo in the hierarchy of Piedmont red grapes, Barbera sometimes gets overlooked. But after tasting two impressive examples recently, I’m going to keep an eye out for it.

Old school choice
G. Conterno, Barbera d’Alba, Cascina Francia, 2005 ($30; find this wine)
A traditional producer, Giacamo Conterno makes some of my favorite Barolos and this Barbera from the Cascina Francia vineyard is also a gem–at a fraction of the price of the Barolos. Light in color, with aromas of dark fruits and some savory notes, the terrific wine has great poise through good acidity, some youthful vigor, and a well integrated, lingering finish. I really liked it now (a great choice for fall) and bought some extra bottles for continuing to watch it evolve over the next decade. Pairs well with fatty foods–how could you go wrong with a mushroom risotto?

Less old school choice
Sandrone, Barbera d’Alba, 2006 ($35; find this wine)
Luciano Sandrone is a self-described modernist and a traditionalist. This is another style of Barbera, one with more oomph, but attractive nonetheless in its more sultry rendition, particularly for drinking in the nearer term. Barbara Sandrone told me that they had good acidity but ripeness in 2006; the twenty day fermentation occurred in stainless steel then the wine proceeded to a malolactic fermentation in 500 liter oak barrels. The aromas really soar from the glass in this showy wine with richness and integration on the palate.

6 Responses to “Barbera, two ways: Conterno and Sandrone”


  1. There are so many great bottlings of Barbera out there: these two represent two extremes of the panorama. Great to see Italian wine appearing in Dr. Vino! Buona bevuta.


  2. I had some Conterno recently and it knocked my socks off! Great choice!


  3. 89 points from Wine Advocate. Please cross-post at The 89 Project. Also, you might win free wine. The 89 Project and Twitter Taste Live are hosting a contest leading up to TTL#8. The winner gets all four blind bottles free, including shipping.


  4. Interestingly enough, I’m drinking some Paitin Barbera d’Alba Serra Boella 2006 for Turkey Day. Cheers!


  5. @ Jeremy viva vino italiano! I don’t even know if that makes sense.

    @ Dale indeed!

    @dhonig do you mean to say that the WA gave the Conterno Barbera Cascina Francia a mere 89 points?!?

    @Bill – it’s more toward the modern style; contrast with the Conterno if you can!


  6. These both sound excellent, I actually just had mushroom risotto on Tuesday–it’s a shame, I wish I read about this wine earlier. Thanks for the post and Happy Thanksgiving.


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