Monogram Franciacorta Cuvee Saten Brut Front Bottle Shot
Monogram Franciacorta Cuvee Saten Brut Front Bottle Shot Monogram Franciacorta Cuvee Saten Brut Front Label

Winemaker Notes

Saten has bright straw yellow hue with creamy mousse, and a fine, persistent bead. Rich, complex nose of spring flowers and ripe fruit. The elegant palate is soft and delicate, due to the lower dissolved carbon dioxide content.

Professional Ratings

  • 94
    Acacia and white lime-flowers, chalky minerality, yellow plums and pastry notes. Multifaceted, detailed and complex. Medium-bodied with a tightly knit structure, this has good mousse and weight, grapefruit and zesty, long acidity. Silky finish. Disgorged October 2023.
  • 90
    This wine opens with aromas of mixed citrus, orchard fruit, roasted nuts and pastry dough. The rounded palate shows flavors of apricot and honey finishing with a sea-salt note and crisp acidity.
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A term typically reserved for Champagne and Sparkling Wines, non-vintage or simply “NV” on a label indicates a blend of finished wines from different vintages (years of harvest). To make non-vintage Champagne, typically the current year’s harvest (in other words, the current vintage) forms the base of the blend. Finished wines from previous years, called “vins de reserve” are blended in at approximately 10-50% of the total volume in order to achieve the flavor, complexity, body and acidity for the desired house style. A tiny proportion of Champagnes are made from a single vintage.

There are also some very large production still wines that may not claim one particular vintage. This would be at the discretion of the winemaker’s goals for character of the final wine.

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Containing an exciting mix of wine producing subregions, Lombardy is Italy’s largest in size and population. Good quality Pinot noir, Bonarda and Barbera have elevated the reputation of the plains of Oltrepò Pavese. To its northeast in the Alps, Valtellina is the source of Italy’s best Nebbiolo wines outside of Piedmont. Often missed in the shadow of Prosecco, Franciacorta produces collectively Italy’s best Champagne style wines, and for the fun and less serious bubbly, find Lambrusco Mantovano around the city of Mantua. Lugana, a dry white with a devoted following, is produced to the southwest of Lake Garda.

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