Advertisement

Who Likes This Wine(9)

  1. RickyT12

    RickyT12

    1,012 Tasting Notes

  2. PascalC

    PascalC

    313 Tasting Notes

  3. RJ&JJ

    RJ&JJ

    251 Tasting Notes

More

Food Pairing Tags

Community users think this wine goes best with:

Add My Food Pairing Tags

Community Tasting Notes (10) Avg Score: 90.9 points

  • We decided to open this to honour Enrico Scavino who passed away late February 2024.

    Incredibly fresh; young. Light on its feet. Liquorice, iodine, leather, fennel, on the nose. Beautiful long finish. The first of 6 bottles, plus we have a 6 bottle case of the Bric del Fiasc from the same vintage. One or two a year for the next 5 or 6 years.

    A great Barolo.

    Do you find this review helpful? Yes - No / Comment

  • Opens for 2 hours.
    Nice ruby color out to thick clear lined rim.
    Really nice leather, plum, the leather is wonderful. Pepper, some aged Bordeaux characteristics. The VA is a bit much. Fungi wet forrest floor on the nose. Hints of game meat, red berries, Overall enjoyable wine that is drinking well right now.

    Do you find this review helpful? Yes - No / Comment

  • Not sure I agree with some of the previous posters in terms of the heaviness of the oak. I found the wine to be drinking quite well after a 2 hour aeration/decant. Classic Barolo on the nose with stone and minerals and dried fruits. Decently long finish that showcases the fruit. Will wait 2 years for next bottle but quite enjoyable,

    2 people found this helpful, do you? Yes - No / Comment

  • Opened and decanted in advance and paired with bbq. This was still quite young and tight. Bit more oak and not totally integrated yet. This is a vineyard that I’ve loved with other producers and might be fun to try an older one of these. At this stage it’s clearly not the Burlotto or the Vietti but it’s also quite a bit different price point.

    1 person found this helpful, do you? Yes - No / Comment

  • Seemed to be in a transitional phase. The fruit is in hibernation making the oak overly prominent today (at least in this particular bottle).I open this to try along side of Monvigliero bottling a from burlotto and Alessandria. I won’t open the next bottle of this Scavino until 2025 based on how it tasted today.

    2 people found this helpful, do you? Yes - No / Comment

View all 10 Community Tasting Notes

What Do You Think? Add a Tasting Note

Professional reviews have copyrights and you can view them here for your personal use only as private content. To view pro reviews you must either subscribe to a pre-integrated publication or manually enter reviews below. Learn more.

JancisRobinson.com

Vinous

  • By Antonio Galloni
    2013 Barolo: The Late Releases (Oct 2017), 10/1/2017, (See more on Vinous...)

    (Paolo Scavino Barolo Monvigliero Red) Login and sign up and see review text.

JancisRobinson.com

JamesSuckling.com

Full Pull

  • By Paul Zitarelli
    Full Pull Dibs, 10/27/2017

    (Paolo Scavino Barolo Monvigliero) Hello friends. I usually prefer to have a meticulously planned-out offer calendar. But this time of year, events often seem to conspire against that, and some flexibility is required. This was not today’s originally-scheduled email, but on Wednesday we were offered advance access to a series of beautiful Scavino Barolos (including library wines) that just landed in Seattle. The only catch: we need to stake our claim Monday morning; after that, our dibs expire. So yeah, that required a reshuffling of the calendar, but it’s totally worth it. We partnered with Scavino’s local importer last April to do a seminar, and it was overbooked and hugely popular among attendees. What I said then: The winery was founded in 1921 and is now led by Enrico Scavino (third generation) and his two daughters Enrica and Elisa. The wines are fabulous expressions of the varied terroirs that surround the winery (here is their vineyard sourcing map). We are rarely able to offer Scavino’s high-end Barolos, as they have the dangerous combination of being well-reviewed and imported in small quantities. As you’ll see below, that devilish combo of strong reviews and small quantities is very much in effect today. But before we get into that, I want to include an introduction to this set of wines from the eloquent Jon Marvin of Cavatappi Distribuzione, Scavino’s local import partner: Riccardo Sgarra from Scavino graced us with his presence and a preview of the extremely exciting 2013 vintage in Barolo in January this year. Well our second shipment has come to Seattle, as well as a couple of library releases which are drinking beautifully. Every year Scavino offers us a couple of wines from their library and this year we’re fortunate to receive the ’06 Carobric and the ’03 Bricco Ambrogio.  Carobric was created in 1996 and has long been a blend of Cannubi, Rocche di Castiglione, and Bric del Fiasc. Historically, Barolo was a blend of many different communes and crus in the area, with the single vineyard phenomenon being fairly recent in the overall scheme of things.  Carobric is an important wine that shows how a great symphony or choir is most often the result of many beautiful pieces that complement each other.  2006 is a great vintage that is just starting to hit its stride, being in a place that is starting to show secondary and tertiary aromas and flavors, but it still has a decade or so in front of it. And then there’s 2003, yes, that vintage.  When Riccardo was here everyone who saw the lineup we were showing around got excited about the 2013’s and the ’06 Carobric, but there was a general feeling of disinterest about the ’03 Bricco Ambrogio.   Guess which wine was requested for the most when all the pre-sell requests from various tastings and events that we did during his visit were tallied up?  You got it, the 2003 Bricco Ambrogio!  The cru is damn near a monopole for Scavino in the village of Roddi just south of Alba, and in a decade’s time now it has shown the greatness that Enrico envisioned it had when he purchased it in 2001.  It was one of the only crus to not be destroyed by hail in the devastating 2002 vintage and that wine is beautiful today, and when you taste the 2003 you’ll curiously wonder what magic dust might have christened this piece of earth! A quick word about 2003 here for those still on the fence, as in my humble opinion we’re now seeing some fascinating wines emerge over 10 years later.  It was hot, very hot…like people died all throughout Europe kind of hot, and it’s pretty easy for all of us wine know-it-alls to pooh-pooh everything that we come across from such excessive years.  I remember travelling in Europe the following years and being told that in 10 plus years the wines would be very compelling, even youthful, and that they would surely surprise.   We’re seeing that today, and I recall winemakers telling me that the numbers they saw in their labs were off the charts all over the place.   The wines had higher alcohol levels, higher levels of tannins, higher phenolics, even higher acidity levels, and the wines weren’t out of balance per se, they were actually very balanced, just at a level that people hadn’t seen before!  So all that said, I’ve had a number of 2003 wines from Germany, Alsace, Burgundy, and Piemonte in the last few years that have been quite a surprise.  There’s some good deals out there if you look around, and this ’03 Bricco Ambrogio is a perfect place to start! Now then, onto the wines:Release price: $76. Available: 20 six-packs. Wine Advocate: Copyrighted material withheld. Wine Enthusiast: Copyrighted material withheld.

NOTE: Some content is property of JancisRobinson.com and Vinous and JamesSuckling.com and Full Pull.

Add a Pro Review Add Your Own Reviews:
 

Advertisement

×