Sandrone Dolcetto d'Alba 2024 Front Bottle Shot
Sandrone Dolcetto d'Alba 2024 Front Bottle Shot Sandrone Dolcetto d'Alba 2024 Front Label

Winemaker Notes

Dark purple color. The nose of red and black fruits is quite forward, with a distinct vein of bright blueberry, framed by mineral and sottobosco notes. On the palate, the fruit dominates, especially the blueberry, a fruit of less apparent sweetness and more freshness. Tannins are subdued but ripe and give a fine-boned structure. It is a less extracted version of Dolcetto than the last few vintages, rather one of transparency and lightness if compared to its recent siblings. The finish is long, dominated by bright acidic fruits and ripe but mellow tannins.

Blend: 100% Dolcetto

Professional Ratings

  • 93

    Intense and reductive style with tense plums and black cherries Very vinous and lightly spicy. Super-juicy on the palate with medium body, moderate to refreshing acidity and well poised tannins.

  • 90
    A preview of the next release, the 2024 Dolcetto D'Alba is a youthful magenta color and has a fresh, lifted nose offering bright aromatics of fresh violets, blackberries, and red-fruited highlights. Medium-bodied, it has a clean, refreshing feel throughout, with a light chalky texture. It’s a highly charming wine to drink over the next few years.
Luciano Sandrone

Luciano Sandrone

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Luciano Sandrone, undefined
Luciano Sandrone Winery Video

Luciano Sandrone is one of the most iconic producers in Barolo, and his is both a well known and extraordinary story. He started to learn viticulture at the age of 14 or 15, and after years of work as a cellarman he depleted his life savings and purchased his first vineyard on the Cannubi hill in 1977, though he could only manage his land on the weekends while he continued to work. He made his first vintage in 1978, in the garage of his parents, and then spent years refining his ideas about how to make a wine of distinction and utmost quality that respected the traditions of Barolo while incorporating new ideas and understanding about viticulture and vinification. He made every vintage until 1999 at home, until the winery he constructed in 1998 was ready for use.

Sandrone's wines are sometimes described as straddling the modern and traditional styles in the region: elegant, attractive and easy to appreciate right from their first years in bottle, but with no less power and structure than traditional Barolos. Along with the extremely low yields in the vineyard and an obsessive attention to training, pruning and harvesting, Sandrone has a very rational approach in the cellar. This approach, however, is also unique and outside of simple classification: Sandrone subjects his wines to medium-length maceration period, shorter than traditional, but makes limited use of new oak in the maturation process, which takes place in 500 liter tonneaux, all signs of a more traditional approach in the cellar. The entire range of wines, all limited in production, are jewels of impeccably balanced concentration and precision, and the ability to age for long periods of time.

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An easy drinking red with soft fruity flavors—but catchy tannins, Dolcetto is often enjoyed in its native Piedmont on a casual weekday night, or for apertivo (the canonical Piedmontese pre-dinner appetizer hour). Somm Secret—In most of Piedmont, easy-ripening Dolcetto is relegated to the secondary sites—the best of which are reserved for the king variety: Nebbiolo. However, in the Dogliani zone it is the star of the show, and makes a more serious style of Dolcetto, many of which can improve with cellar time.

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Alba

Piedmont, Italy

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An historic village situated right in between the famous regions of Barolo and Barbaresco, Alba is also the name for the larger wine region surrounding the village.

In a sense, “Alba” is a catch-all phrase, and includes the declassified Nebbiolo wines made in Barolo and Barbaresco, as well as the Nebbiolo grown just outside of these regions’ borders. In fact, Nebbiolo d’Alba is a softer, less tannic and more fruit-forward wine ready to drink within just a couple years of bottling. It is a great place to start if you want to begin to understand the grape. Likewise, the even broader category of Langhe Nebbiolo offers approachable and value-driven options as well.

Barbera, planted alongside Nebbiolo in the surrounding hills, and referred to as Barbera d’Alba, takes on a more powerful and concentrated personality compared to its counterparts in Asti.

Dolcetto is ubiquitous here and, known as Dolcetto d'Alba, can be found casually served alongside antipasti on the tables of Alba’s cafes and wine bars.

Not surprisingly, given its location, Alba is recognized as one of Italy’s premiere culinary destinations and is the home of the fall truffle fair, which attracts visitors from worldwide every year.

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