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Gaja Langhe Costa Russi

Gaja Langhe Costa Russi (2006)

Füllmenge 0.75 L

98/100 PP

"The vineyard designate 1990 Barbaresco Costa Russi offers a fascinating glimpse back in time. Angelo Gaja would famously declassify this wine to Langhe Nebbiolo, starting with ... (vollständiger Text s.u.)

95
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349,00 €   465,33 € / L
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349,00 €   465,33 € / L

Zusätzliche Information

NameGaja Langhe Costa Russi
Preis349, 00 €
WeingutGaja
Jahrgang2006
Inhalt Liter0.75
Bewertung Punkte95
Alkoholgehaltmittel
Alkoholgehalt13.50 %

Vinee Beschreibung und Bewertung

98/100 PP

'The vineyard designate 1990 Barbaresco Costa Russi offers a fascinating glimpse back in time. Angelo Gaja would famously declassify this wine to Langhe Nebbiolo, starting with the 1996 vintage, and he added a small percentage of Barbera to highlight its overall acidic component. It ages in barrique for one year followed by oak casks for a second year. The 1990 Barbaresco Costa Russi is special, thanks to a high degree of elegance and finesse that is expressed in the wine’s fine tannic structure. Its composition is as soft and caressing as the ancient silk threads that make up precious Chinese textiles. Its appearance is beautifully luminous and profound with brilliant ruby and garnet highlights. Again, there’s a sense of tension and crispness that adds a jolt of vitality to the long finish. This is a true masterpiece, and if you have a bottle, you could double decant as much as 12 to 24 hours prior to drinking it. Drink: 2014-2030.'
(Monica Larner, robertparker.com)

96/100 PP

'The 1990 Barbaresco Costa Russi offers up ripe dark cherries, chocolate and spices, showing remarkable freshness and vibrancy all the way through to the close. The soft, enveloping personality of Costa Russi is totally seductive in this vintage, and it is perhaps the most thrilling and complete of these 1990s to enjoy today. Anticipated maturity: 2010-2030.

Angelo Gaja’s 1989s and 1990s are simply glorious. Gaja is frequently criticized, especially in Italy, a country that has an uneasy relationship with success of any kind. To be sure, Gaja likes to mix things up with views that are at times perhaps unnecessarily provocative. Prices have always been a point of contention among the estate’s detractors, as even Gaja’s father Giovanni sold his own wines at prices considered to be astronomical more than 50 years ago. At the end of the day, though, the only thing that counts is what is in the glass, and the simple truth is that these wines are utterly mind-blowing. Angelo Gaja had at least one big advantage vis-a-vis his neighbors. Gaja began working full-time at his family’s winery in 1969, and was followed a year later in 1970 by oenologist Guido Rivella. By the time 1989 came around Gaja and Rivella had been working together for nearly 20 years, and were perfectly positioned to make the most of these two historic harvests, which they certainly did. Gaja was so far ahead of his time that there are plenty of producers in Piedmont (and Italy) that still haven’t caught up to the groundbreaking wines he made 20 years ago. I have had many of Gaja’s 1989s and 1990s recently in less formal settings and have never been anything less than deeply impressed. Readers fortunate to own these bottles should be thrilled. For his 1989s and 1990s, Gaja carried out the malolactic fermentations in stainless steel and aged the wines for a year in French oak followed by a year in cask, an approach he employs today. Although Gaja’s wines are often flashy upon release, these bottles attest rather eloquently to the glacial aging that is the hallmark of the house style. One of the very few critiques I can make is that Sori San Lorenzo and Sperss were far less consistently profound twenty years ago than they are today. If there is one truism with Gaja, it is that one only needs to taste the Barbaresco to understand the quality of the vintage. When the Barbaresco is truly great (as it is in 1997, 2001, 2004 and 2007) all of the other wines will almost certainly be profound.'
(Robert M. Parker, Jr., robertparker.com)

96/100 vinous

'The most accessible of Gaja's single-vineyard wines, the 1990 Barbaresco Costa Russi offers up ripe dark cherries, chocolate and spices, showing remarkable freshness and vibrancy all the way through to the close. The soft, enveloping personality of Costa Russi is totally seductive in this vintage, and it is perhaps the most thrilling and complete of these 1990s to enjoy today.'
(Antonio Galloni, vinous.com)

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