Winemaker Notes
Very deep ruby red color with garnet highlights. Ample, rich and complex bouquet with numerous scents of fruit and a background of vanilla, licorice and cocoa notes. Full, powerful flavor with a great structure, yet elegant and sensual at the same time, harmonious and very persistent.
Ideal with roasts and meat dishes, also with sauces, and mature cheeses.
Professional Ratings
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Robert Parker's Wine Advocate
The Braida 2020 Barbera d'Asti Ai Suma shows a very ripe bouquet featuring air-dried fruit, raisin and prune. There is a lot of muscle and power in this wine delivered in terms of texture, concentration and alcohol that in this vintage measures a whopping 16%. Think of this as the Amarone of Asti. The finish is creamy soft and slightly sweet.
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James Suckling
This is quite ripe and spicy with dried cherries, moist bark and hints of undergrowth. Medium- to full-bodied, dense and concentrated with a juicy core of red and dark berries and velvety tannins. Lingering and flavorful.
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Wine Enthusiast
Concentrated aromas of black plum, blackberry, anise, vanilla and wild flowers leap out of the glass. Rich on the palate with dense, ripe black-hued fruits mixed with sweet and savory spices, fine tannins from the oak give the wine more heft as it finishes brightly with vibrant acidity.
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Wine Spectator
Ripe and marked by toasty new oak, with a core of plum, blackberry and fruitcake flavors picking up accents of vanilla and caramel as this builds to a long, expansive finish. Powerful. Drink now through 2027. 1,000 cases made, 500 cases imported.
Friendly and approachable, Barbera produces wines in a wide range of styles, from youthful, fresh and fruity to serious, structured and age-worthy. Piedmont is the most famous source of Barbera; those from Asti and Alba garner the most praise. Barbera actually can adapt to many climates and enjoys success in some New World regions. Somm Secret—In the past it wasn’t common or even accepted to age Barbera in oak but today both styles—oaked and unoaked—abound and in fact most Piedmontese producers today produce both styles.
Recognized as the source of the best Barbera in all of Italy, Asti is a province (as well as major city) in Piedmont, consisting of a gentle, rolling landscape with vineyards, farmland and forests alternating throughout.
Barbera d’Asti can be made in an array of styles from relatively straightforward, fruity and ready for consumption early, to the more concentrated, oak aged version with an ability to cellar impressively for 10-15 years and beyond. Some of the very best sites for Barbera in Asti are concentrated in the subzone of Nizza Monferrato. Other red varieties grown here include Freisa, Grignolino and Dolcetto, which can be bottled varietally or blended into Barbera.
Historically consumers commonly associated the Asti region with Asti Spumante and Moscato d’Asti, both playful, aromatic, sparkling wines made from the Muscat grape. Asti Spumante is less sweet, fully fizzy and more alcoholic (yet still clocking in at only around 9% alcohol) while Moscato d’Asti is sweeter, gently sparkling (“frizzante”) and closer to 5 or 6% alcohol. Each is produced in stainless steel tanks to preserve the fresh and fruity flavors of the grape, often including peach, apricot, lychee and rose petal. Asti is also the spot for the pink-hued Brachetto d'Acqui, a slightly sparkling wine ready to charm with its raspberry and rose flavors and aromas.