| Classification | Cru Classe |
| Type | Red |
| Producer | Tenuta San Guido |
| Wine | Sassicaia |
| Vintage | 2022 |
| Country | Italy |
| Region | Tuscany |
| Appellation | Bolgheri |
| Grape | Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc |
| Alcohol % | 13.5% |
| Volume | 0,75 |
| Condition | Perfect |
| Label | Perfect |
| Drinkable | 2028-2060 |
| Stock | 23 |
The 2022 harvest in Bolgheri created ideal conditions for Tenuta San Guido's flagship wines. A warm, dry summer with Atlantic breezes stabilized temperatures, and selective harvesting in late September allowed peak ripeness to be reached without loss of freshness. Cabernet Sauvignon and Cabernet Francc reached phenolic ripeness under these conditions. The 2022 Sassicaia displays the power and elegance with concentrated dark fruit and a mineral backbone that shows that the gravelly soils of Bolgheri are very valuable for Bordeaux varieties.
The Tenuta San Guido 2022 Bolgheri Sassicaia reveals a beautiful fruit profile with fresh blackberry, tart cherry and Mediterranean tones of blue rosemary blooms and lavender sachet. I tasted this wine several times over the course of a few months, and it has already shown a happy evolution coming into slow focus like the faint colors that emerge from a Polaroid photograph. Indeed, the bouquet appeared more closed just a short while ago. The wine's strongest suit is its elegantly streamlined mouthfeel and its contained 13.5% alcohol content. These qualities add to the silky cleanness of the mouthfeel and the accessible freshness of this vintage. I am confident that this bottle will improve with time. It requires patience.
A bit shy aromatically, this concentrated red exhibits flavors of black currant, black cherry, blackberry, tobacco and sweet spices that show a hint of eucalyptus, with assertive tannins that take hold as this evolves through the finish. Although closed and compact at this stage, this is balanced, fresh and long overall. Cabernet Sauvignon and Cabernet Franc.
Plenty of red currant, cedar, iron and terra cotta aromas follow through to a medium to full body with graphite, sandalwood, red currants and fresh Mediterranean herbs such as thyme and rosemary. The tannins are chewy but polished in texture. This is a Sassicaia that needs three or four years of bottle age to come together and soften. A structured wine for the cellar.
88% Cabernet Sauvignon, 12% Cabernet Franc, harvested throughout September. 13–15 days’ maceration. Aged for 23 months in French oak barriques (225 litres). TA 6.1 g/l, pH 3.45, RS 0.25 g/l. See my earlier note. This bottle presented by a Frenchman!
Transparent crimson. Savoury, balsam, appetising nose. Much drier (as opposed to sweet) than the other wines here. Strong French influence on the reticent structure. Lots of fresh tannin currently dominates the fruit but the fruit is pretty nuanced and interesting. But it’s still extremely youthful. The most youthful wine here. Aerate before serving for many years. (JR)
The 2022 Sassicaia is a very pretty, expressive wine. There’s a bit more Cabernet Sauvignon (and less Franc) in this year’s blend, and that really comes through in the wine’s flavor profile and slightly bruising tannins. Dark cherry, plum, leather, licorice, graphite and incense give the 2022 striking aromatic presence to match its rather brooding personality. There’s a bit of tension in the tannins that needs time to resolve. Yields were down about 20% because of intensely cold weather in spring, variable conditions during flowering and set, and then searing heat and drought throughout the summer.
The 2022 Sassicaia is a deeper, youthful magenta/red color with a slightly deeper aromatic profile of rosemary, gravelly earth, sage, mossy earth, and fresh black cherries. The palate has slightly broader shoulders but remains elegant. It has more plushness on the mid-palate, while its acidity shines through with the finish. It will need several years to shed its baby fat and show its full potential.
The blend is common for Sassicaia:
Cabernet Sauvignon provides a backbone, dark black currant flavors and structured tannins that age beautifully. But why add Cabernet Franc? The 15% Cabernet Franc gives flavor lift and soft texture. In the coastal climate of Bolgheri, Franc matures beautifully with Cabernet Sauvignon, bringing violet notes and helping to balance the intensity of the Cabernet Sauvignon. The combination works well because both varieties grow on gravelly, well-drained soils near the Tyrrhenian Sea.
The intense blackcurrant is immediately striking, complemented by cedar and the characteristic graphite minerality that distinguishes great Cabernet Sauvignon. There are savory notes of dried herbs and tobacco leaf that speak to the terroir of the Maremma. On the palate, Sassicaia 2019 shows remarkable concentration without heaviness. The tannins are firm but refined, balanced by an underlying freshness. The finish shows pencil sharpening and dark chocolate, classic signs of authentic Bordeaux style winemaking. This wine has a beautifully developing structure, but the fruit intensity makes it drinkable now for those who can't wait.
Best between 2027 and 2045. Aged in French oak barriques for 24 months to give the wine structure and time to fully integrate; store in a dark place at 12-14°C (54-57°F). Over time, the fruit aromas are expected to evolve from the original blackcurrant aromas to more complex notes of leather and truffles, and the oak will gradually become part of the wine's texture rather than a separate element.
Tenuta San Guido changed Italian wine with the release of its first commercial variety, Sassicaia, in 1968. Marchese Mario Incisa della Rocchetta had been experimenting with Bordeaux varieties since the 1940s, revolutionizing the region's obsession with Sangiovese. His nephew, Piero Antinori, convinced him to release the wine on the commercial market. The result? A new category called "Super Tuscan." Today, under the direction of winemaker Graziana Grassini, the 2,500-hectare estate produces about 180,000 bottles a year. Best of Wines considers Sassicaia the benchmark for Italian Cabernet Sauvignon.
Sassicaia's 90 hectares are located between 45 and 60 meters above sea level in Bolgheri, where clay-limestone soils mixed with galestro (loose marl) and alberese (limestone) create perfect drainage. The Tyrrhenian Sea, just a few kilometers away, moderates the temperature: there are hot days and cool nights. Why does it matter? Cabernet Sauvignon needs heat to fully ripen, but the sea breeze prevents overripening and preserves acidity. Gravelly sediments provide deep rooting and flavor concentration. This terroir received its own DOC, Bolgheri Sassicaia DOC, in 1994.
In order for the tannin structure of a wine to show its best behavior, fats and proteins are needed. These are excellent options:
Serve at 18°C and decant 90 minutes before dinner. This vintage is influenced by coastal waters, so the wines open up relatively early compared to inland Tuscany.
Fermentation takes place in temperature-controlled stainless steel tanks for two weeks, followed by malolactic fermentation in barriques (small French oak barrels). Then the all-important aging begins: 24 months in French oak, with about 33% from new oak. Why are only a third of the barrels new? Because Sassicaia's philosophy is to enhance, not mask, the fruity flavors. The relatively low percentage of new oak enhances the expression of Cabernet Sauvignon varietal character and terroir. After barrel aging, the wine is released after another six months of bottle aging.
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