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 Cantina Roberto Voerzio
  
                    One of the world’s greatest red wines, Barolo is the only Italian wine that can command the same
                    respect as say Bordeaux or Burgundy. It is a traditionalist’s wine, full-bodied, distinctive,
                    tannin-rich (so perfect for long ageing) and tremendous in quality. So it may come as a bit of a
                    surprise to find a young winemaker with an essentially simple vision commanding a place on
                    Barolo’s centre stage.
                
 Lowest production in Piedmont
 
                    Founded in just 1986, Roberto Voerzio is often considered with the modern school of Barolo,
                    although nothing could further from the truth. Citing Bruno Giacosa and Giovanni Conterno among
                    his heroes, he adheres to the Italian winemaker’s traditional principles such as long ageing in
                    cask (or botti). To this he adds his signature: fantastically low yields and meticulously
                    maintained vines that equal wines that taste fresh despite two decades of cellaring. Opting for
                    single vineyard wines where possible (he has as many as seven in his portfolio, although it
                    would be very uncommon for all seven to be released in the same vintage), his drive for
                    perfection is rare, even among the demanding Piedmontese. Low yields naturally equal low
                    production but Voerzio is perhaps among the lowest of them all - just 150-450 cases are released
                    each year, making this one of Italy’s most covetable wines.
                
 One of the best Italian wines on the planet
 
                    Voerzio has just 22-hectares in La Morra’s finest sites, giving him a collection of grand cru
                    vineyards matched by few growers. His vigilance in the fields has earned him the reputation of
                    delivering the purest expression of Nebbiolo possible, and it does not take an oenologist to see
                    that from the very first vintage his wines are simply gorgeous. His 2000 Barolo Sarmassa di
                    Barolo earnt a massive 98 points from Antonio Galloni’s Vinous, while other vintages
                    consistently score in the high 90s. Unsurprisingly, these do not come cheap: Roberto’s
                    reputation and high regard by critics, along with the tiny production make his Barolos some of
                    the most expensive and collectable bottles in the world.
                
 Notable facts and vintages
 - In 2007, Roberto Voerzio, began a trend among top producers when he unveiled his Barolo Fossati Case Nere 10 Anni Riserva 2003 released in 2013. Production is tight, averaging 3,000-4,000 bottles only in appropriate years. For the past few years, prices for all vintages have been moving upwards and slated for release later in 2019, a single (in bond) bottle of 2009 vintage will set investors back nearly €600.
 - James Suckling’s “Top 100 Italian Wines 2018” placed Roberto Voerzio’s 2014 Barolo Cerequio at number 53, prices on the rise by more than +25% in the one year period from June 2018.
 - With his “modernist” approach in the vineyard and “fusionist” tactics in the cellar, Roberto Voerzio was one of the original "Barolo Boys” - a term coined by the New York Times in 1990 (and later title of the 2014 documentary) as the generation who, in the late eighties propelled their Piemonte wine to worldwide fame while revolutionising things in Langhe.