| ex Vat | € 1.595,00 |
| in Vat | € 1.929,95 |
| Volume | Magnum |
| ex Vat | € 3.450,00 |
| in Vat | € 4.174,50 |
| Volume | Double Magnum |
| Classification | DOCG |
| Type | Red |
| Producer | Giacomo Conterno |
| Wine | Monfortino |
| Vintage | 2019 |
| Country | Italy |
| Region | Piemonte |
| Appellation | Barolo |
| Grape | Nebbiolo |
| Alcohol % | 14.5% |
| Volume | 0,75 |
| Condition | Perfect |
| Label | Perfect |
| Drinkable | 2026-2055 |
| Stock | 0 |
| Volume | 1,5 |
| Condition | From Original Wooden Case |
| Label | Perfect |
| Drinkable | 2030-2060 |
| Stock | 1 |
| Volume | 3,0 |
| Condition | In single OWC |
| Label | Perfect |
| Drinkable | 2030-2060 |
| Stock | 0 |
The 2019 Barolo growing season was what producers expected. There was a cool spring, a warm but not scorching summer, and most importantly, cold nights in September that locked in the acidity. The harvest took place in October, under typical Piedmont conditions: foggy mornings and dry weather. For Giacomo Conterno's Barolo Riserva Monfortino, this year brought exactly what Roberto Conterno was looking for: structured tannins, bright acidity, and a concentration that required seven years of aging in Slavonian oak.
It's been a while, alas. The last vintage of this legendary wine was 2015. Skipping forward to a year of natural richness and concentration, the Giacomo Conterno 2019 Barolo Riserva Monfortino is a magnificently executed wine. It carefully reins in the soaring power of Nebbiolo and whittles it down to extreme finesse and precision. This is the essence of the grape with no extra bells or whistles. Roberto Conterno tells me he chose not to make Monfortino in 2016 because he considered 2015 to be a superior vintage. (There is an image problem with 2015, he concedes, because 2016 was more consistent overall than 2015; however, his experience with 2015 is better.) The 2017 vintage was a contender for Monfortino, but the wine was not made. The 2018 vintage also came close to production, but a lack of diurnal temperature shifts at the end of the growing season disqualified it, Roberto Conterno explains. His heart settled on 2019, a vintage that reminds him of the tension and energy found in 2013. However, the DNA of the 2019 vintage is slightly different because this edition sees 27% fruit blended from Arione. This site adds finesse and elegance. The rest of the blend represents a special selection from Francia, and that is where this wine gets its power and age-worthy tannins. The 2019 will be released in October 2025.
A complex and deep wine that’s as graceful as it is powerful. Aromas of earth, strawberries, dried cherries, restrained orange peel, sweet dried violets, potpourri and licorice root. Full-bodied and concentrated, with graphite flavors and thick, dusty, muscular yet ripe tannins. Still youthful and vibrant, with refreshing acidity. More impressive on the palate than on the nose, suggesting it needs time to fully evolve.
Grapes come from Francia and Arione in Serralunga d’Alba. Bottled in March 2024 and will be released October 2025.
Lustrous mid ruby with orange tinges. Very fine and noble. Very closed but with real subtlety and finesse. Lots of substance underneath. With aeration, raspberry and minerality. Embryonic and super-finely balanced – fine tannins woven into the fruit. (WS)
The 2019 Barolo Riserva Monfortino has closed down considerably since I last tasted it. Then again, the 2019 is a very serious Monfortino that includes the entirety of Conterno’s production from both Francia and Arione. Today, the tannins are pretty imposing, but modern Monfortinos have shown an ability to assimilate their tannin with much less time in bottle than was once required. Production for the 2019 is on the higher side because of the blending of sites, so readers should have a relatively easy time sourcing this.
I’ve tasted the 2019 Barolo Monfortino three times before bottling at the estate, and it’s one of those vintages where no Francia was made, so all the fruit went into the Monfortino. This is a highly structured expression of the cuvée, yet it shows remarkable finesse and nimbleness in the glass. Aromas of leather, smoky earth, cherries, and floral cologne emerge with clarity and depth. The palate is tightly woven and precise, with firm yet balanced tannins, vibrant acidity, and a long, resonant finish. It’s already showing beautifully, and this is truly as good as it gets. The nobility of its structure is profound and promises decades of evolution. Speaking with Roberto Conterno during this tasting, he likened the wine to the 2013, but noted that it carries more elegance even now, something he attributes to the inclusion of Arrione in the final blend.
Monfortino always needs time to open up, especially (very) young vintages. So the first impressions is somewhat restrained. The nose is layered, with a slow buildup of dried rose, sour cherry, tar, licorice and wet earth that emerges over time. On the palate, Serralunga's signature dense tannins, nice acidity, and savory, iron grip emerge on the finish. This is a wine for the long haul, and we advice not to open a bottle before 2030. It needs time.
The blend of this wine is simple:
100% Nebbiolo from Serralunga d'Alba.
So why does one grape produce such a complex flavor? Nebbiolo has thin skins, ripens late, and is very sensitive to site. In Cascina Francia, limestone and clay put great pressure on the vines. This stress gives Monfortino its resin, rose, and truffle aromas and tannin backbone, allowing it to age for 50 years.
Drink between 2030 and 2060. The tannins are still tightly packed and the acidity razor sharp. Both provide fuel for aging; store lying flat and away from light at a stable temperature of 12-14°C. Expect resin and rose notes to give way to truffles and forest floor after 15 years.
Why is Giacomo Conterno something special? Well, they haven't changed their winemaking. While most Barolo's moved to modern technology in the 1980s, the Conterno family continues to do what Giacomo started in 1924. That is, a week-long maceration followed by years of aging in large Slavonian botti. Giacomo Conterno is the most uncompromising address in Piedmont. Monfortino is only produced in vintages that Roberto deems worthy.
Cascina Francia is located in Serralunga d'Alba, on a west-facing slope at about 400 meters above sea level. The soil is locally called Helvetian, a dense calcareous clay with limestone and marl from Sant'Agata Fossili. It is well drained and low in nutrients. Why it matters. Because hungry vines produce small berries, and small berries produce concentrated wines. Serralunga is one of the most rigorous corners of Barolo. The wines here are closed when young, with firm tannins that will outlast most of their drinkers.
This is what makes Monfortino stand out. Roberto Conterno macerates the Nebbiolo on the skins for several weeks. The wine is then placed in huge Slavonian oak botti (traditional large barrels, not small barriques) and aged for about seven years before bottling. Why botti and not barriques? Because large barrels add very little vanilla or toast. The wine tastes of Nebbiolo and Serralunga, not of wood.
What does this wine need? Fat, protein, umami. The tannins need something to hang on to:
Decant at least 3 hours before serving; serve at 16-18°C.
With track & trace code