Barolo San Rocco 2014

AZELIA

Barolo San Rocco
2014

Country
Italy
Regulated designation
Denominazione di origine controllata e garantita (DOCG)
Region
Piedmont
Appellation
Barolo
Varietal(s)
Nebbiolo 100 %
Alcohol percentage
14.5%
Colour
Red
Sugar
Dry
Length of aging
24 months
Producer's website

About this winery

Azelia is still something of a Barolo lover's secret. Though the estate is not a high-profile one, proprietor Luigi Scavino is cousin of Enrico Scavino of the renowned Paolo Scavino estate, and shares ownership of the famed Fiasco hill in Castiglione Falletto with him. Luigi, his wife Lorella and son Lorenzo Scavino own and maintain 16 hectares of vines in Castiglione Falletto, Serralunga d'Alba (including Cru Barolo from Margheria, San Rocco and Voghera Brea) and Montelupo Albese (for their...

See the AZELIA detail page for more information on this brand

Product notes

GROWING AREA - Serralunga d’Alba GRAPE VARIETY - Nebbiolo 100% SURFACE - 2,1 hectares EXPOSURE AND ALTITUDE - South / 320 m a.s.l. SOIL - Clayey and calcareous TRAINING SYSTEM - Guyot / 4.500 vines per hectare AVERAGE AGE OF VINES - 65 years VINIFICATION - with indigenous yeasts, for approximately 55 - 60 days with submerged cap / 31 °C AGING - 24 months in large casks AVERAGE PRODUCTION - 7,600 bottles, 520 magnums, 60 double magnums

Tasting notes

A cuirassier. Fleshy, extremely focused. Here Serralunga d’Alba is present with signs of licorice, spices and dark fruits. Cherry, currant and blueberry melt harmoniously together. Velvety and sweetly ripe, with splendidly integrated tannins. San Rocco gives an impression of great power, austerity, with an incredible aging potential. Pure complexity. A strong character. Monumental.

Press reviews

James Suckling

- 96 points -

(Vintage 2017)

Very pure fruit with crushed strawberries, spices and white truffles on the nose. The palate is full and tight with brightness and focus. Firm, creamy tannins. The super quality of fruit really comes through here. Drink in 2024.

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Wine Spectator

- 95 points -

(Vintage 2000)

Full-throttle style of Barolo with prune, leather, grilled meat and spices on the nose. Full-bodied, chewy and ultraripe, with wild vanilla and intense fruit on the palate. Voluptuous and showy. Best after 2007. 950 cases made, 650 cases imported.

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Wine Spectator

- 95 points -

(Vintage 2001)

Very concentrated and complex on the nose with blackberry, dark chocolate and toasted oak aromas. Full-bodied and very ripe, with loads of fruit and a long, caressing finish. A powerful and rich wine. Builds on the palate. Best after 2009. 930 cases made, 650 cases imported.

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Decanter

- 94 points -

Aldo Fiordelli, (Vintage 2017)

A serious wine to cellar, this opens with restrained aromas of fresh and dried cherries, black pepper, enticing violet and liquorice root. Intensely floral in flavour, it has an assertive, almost aggressive acidity at present, with muscular, still-rugged tannins at the end (although the initial impression is softer). Not really ready to drink now, but will improve with ageing.

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Vinous

- 94 points -

Antonio Galloni, (Vintage 2017)

The 2017 Barolo San Rocco is powerful and tightly wound. All of its energy is focused inward today. There is terrific brightness and focus to the red berry fruit, but the 2017 is not in a mood to show much today. Readers will have to be patient. I am encourage by the wine's solid feel and pure power.

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Wine Advocate

- 92 points -

Monica Larner, (Vintage 2017)

The Azelia 2017 Barolo San Rocco shows some tightness and firmness initially, but it ultimately reveals an open and accessible quality of fruit with dried raspberry, cherry and wild plum. Those fruit flavors take a sudden turn to embrace some of the more mineral aromas associated with Serralunga d'Alba, such as iron ore and rusty nail. This hot and dry vintage release of 7,500 bottles doesn't show the same depth or complexity that we saw in the classic 2016 growing season. Instead, this wine is fruit forward and a little more contoured and streamlined overall. On the close, you do get a point of dusty astringency that should subside with time.

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Wine Spectator

- 91 points -

(Vintage 1999)

Very attractive nose of blackberry and flowers leads to a full body, with silky, fine tannins and a long, gorgeous finish. Refined and balanced. Hard not to drink now.—'99 Piedmont blind retrospective (2009). Drink now. 780 cases made, 610 cases imported.

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Jancis Robinson

18,5

(Vintage 2000)

Extremely lively – great lift. Sweet start with admirable complexity. Masses of tannin – very chewy, but not overwhelming the fruit. Again, a wine with integrity and a true expression of place.

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