Description
Red Wine: 2015 | Bruno Rocca | Curra
Showcasing an ideal harmony between tannins and acidity, it reveals enticing notes of dark cherry, earthy spices, and a lingering hint of vanilla, creating a truly memorable experience on the palate.
Order from the Largest & Most Trusted Premium Spirits Marketplace!
Featured in
- ROLLING STONE
- MEN’S JOURNAL
- US WEEKLY
NOTICE: Many other small liquor store sites may end up cancelling your order due to the high demand, unavailability or inaccurate inventory counts.We have partnerships consisting of a large network of licensed retailers from within the United States, Europe and across the world ensuring orders are fulfilled.
Producer: Bruno Rocca
Ratings: WE | 93F | 95
Vintage: 2015
Size: 750ml
ABV: 13%
Varietal: Nebbiolo
Country/Region: Italy, Piedmont
Showcasing an ideal harmony between tannins and acidity, it reveals enticing notes of dark cherry, earthy spices, and a lingering hint of vanilla, creating a truly memorable experience on the palate.
Reviews:
- Wine Enthusiast: Iris, violet, wild berry and a whiff of espresso take shape in the glass. The taut, linear palate offers dried cherry, cranberry, star anise and ground clove, while polished tannins provide the backbone.
- Falstaff: Sparkling, shimmering garnet red. Opened with notes of dried rose petals, some plums, fine raspberry notes in the background. Gripping, handy tannin on the palate, opens up in many layers, firm pressure, tobacco in the finish, somewhat drying.
Producer Information
Bruno Rocca is a critically well-regarded, family-owned wine estate based in the Barbaresco region of Piedmont, in northwest Italy. It makes wines from various Piemontese appellations and varieties but is best known for its complex, refined, aromatic Nebbiolo wines from the Barbaresco DOCG. For many decades the family operated a mixed farm, but the modern estate began to take shape in 1958, when the family moved from the centre of Barbaresco to the south of the prized Rabajà zone and bought some prime vineyards. Initially, the harvested grapes were sold to the Barbaresco co-operative. This continued until 1978, when Bruno Rocca took over the estate and made the first wines under the family name. In the 1990s, the winery gained an international reputation and began to acquire further vineyards. In all, there are about 15 hectares (37 acres) of estate vineyards, including the 3.5-hectare (8.6-acre) plot in Rabajà (where there is also some Dolcetto) and plots in four further Barbaresco crus (vineyards), with some Chardonnay and Barbera alongside the Nebbiolo. Further from home, the company owns three hectares (7.5 acres) in the Monferrato Astigiano area, devoted to Barbera d’Asti. The winemaking style at Bruno Rocca is generally regarded as “modernist”. Barbaresco grapes are fermented in wooden vats, with stainless steel tanks used for other wines. Individual vineyards are vinified separately, with larger vineyards divided into plots. Fermentations use native yeasts and have medium-to-long maceration times (on skins). Grapes are destemmed prior to ferment although ferments are almost entirely whole grapes (i.e. the grapes are not crushed following destemming), with delicate pumpovers and no punchdowns. The aim is to keep skins as intact as possible until the fermented wine is run off or pressed.






Reviews
There are no reviews yet.