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  • Country ranking ?

    319
  • Producer ranking ?

    5
  • Decanting time

    1h
  • When to drink

    now to 2035
  • Food Pairing

    Pizza &Pasta

The Tb points given to this wine are the world’s most valid and most up-to-date evaluation of the quality of the wine. Tastingbook points are formed by the Tastingbook algorithm which takes into account the wine ratings of the world's best-known professional wine critics, wine ratings by thousands of tastingbook’s professionals and users, the generally recognised vintage quality and reputation of the vineyard and winery. Wine needs at least five professional ratings to get the Tb score. Tastingbook.com is the world's largest wine information service which is an unbiased, non-commercial and free for everyone.

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The Story

Valpolicella, as we conceive it to be, is a wine which can be defined from a multitude of related wines by the particular methodology we use to produce it. In fact, we faithfully follow the same qualitative and procedural criteria that we use for Amarone. It is enough to just think that, since the 2002 vintage, all grapes that go into the making of Valpolicella are subjected to a light but advantageous drying process which lasts around one and...

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Wine Information

Sexy, brooding and full-bodied, the ’11 Valpolicella from Dal Forno performs like a “baby Amarone,” bursting from the glass with an explosion of juicy blue and red fruits, rose petals, new saddle leather, cigar box, melted chocolate and underbrush. At once caressing and kinetic with acidity, this muscular wine uncurls on the palate, revealing its fine-grained tannins and sweet inner perfume. This full-bodied Valpolicella sports terrific dry ex...

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Information

Origin

Verona, Veneto

Inside Information

It's a wine derived from its very antithesis—a fanatical, unrelenting, and nearly ascetic-minded effort that has created Amarone’s ultimate expression. Dal Forno’s reinvention was radical from the start. In 1990, he dispensed with Slavonian oak, the traditional vessel for aging Amarone, and brought in French oak barrique. He then experimented with the passito method (aka, appassimento, drying of the grapes) and different aging regimens, releasing the wines only after five years’ maturation in various combinations of barrique and bottle aging. He was also one of the first to reject the somewhat bland Molinara grape—one of Amarone’s traditional constituents—finding an attractive replacement in Oseleta, which enhanced the wine’s cosmetic (intensifying color) and structural (heightening acidity) expressions.

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