The producer
Bruno Giacosa was a visionary who helped place the Langhe on the world wine map. Originally a grape trader (negociant) sourcing grapes for other large producers, before starting to make his own wines, he gained great knowledge of the vineyards across Barolo and Barbaresco – which without doubt guided his purchase of top vineyards in the region – Barbaresco Asili, Barbaresco Santo Stefano, and Barolo Le Rocche del Falletto.
In the mid 1960s, Bruno Giacosa was amongst the first producers (along with Angelo Gaja and Beppe Colla) to make single vineyard bottlings of Barolo and Barbaresco. The wines are made in a traditional style with as little intervention as possible, from fermenting only with wild yeast to ageing of the wines in large untoasted casks, which impart no flavour onto the wines. The wine range is divided in wines labelled ‘Casa Vinicola Bruno Giacosa’ which are made from purchased fruit, and wines labelled ‘Azienda Agricola di Bruno Giacosa’ which are made exclusively with estate owned grapes. Riserva bottlings are distinguished with red labels and are made only in the best years and age for longer before being released onto the market.
The wine
Only made in the finest years – usually a couple of times a decade – Giocosa’s Falletto Vigna Le Rocche is inarguably one of Barolo’s most iconic wines. Le Rocche is a sub plot – with the oldest vines and the highest altitudes – of the estate owned Falletto vineyard in Serralunga. The Riserva bottling is aged for 3 years in large French oak casks. The cuvee has been named ‘Falletto Vigna Le Rocche’ from the 2011 vintage. Structure and power with intense purity of fruit, complexity, and balance will leave you speechless.