Giacomo Conterno

Italian winery


title: "Giacomo Conterno" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["wineries-of-italy", "langhe"] description: "Italian winery" topic_path: "geography/italy" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giacomo_Conterno" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Italian winery ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/9a/Giacomo_Conterno-barbera.jpg" caption="Detail of a Giacomo Conterno Barbera d'Alba Cascina Francia."] ::

Giacomo Conterno is an Italian wine producer from the Piemonte region in the district of Langhe. From a winery located in Monforte d'Alba, the Barolo and Barbera wines are made by traditionalist methods and are widely considered among the finest produced in the Barolo zone.

History

From unclear descriptions of its origin, the Cantine Giacomo Conterno production of Barolo may have begun in 1908 with the founding of Giovanni Conterno's tavern in San Giuseppe near Monforte d'Alba, or after his son Giacomo Conterno returned from service in World War I, with the first Barolo riserva either bottled in 1912 or 1920. Notwithstanding, Conterno coming from a family with viticultural roots in the region going back to the 18th century, is considered one of the first small Barolo producers to bottle an own wine, beginning in the 1920s during a time when Barolo was normally sold in cask or demijohn and intended for early drinking. Giovanni Conterno died in 1934 and Giacomo Conterno created a Barolo with vast aging potential, named Monfortino for the home village Monforte d'Alba. For 54 years two Barolos, a normale and riserva, were produced from purchased grapes, made by the motto that a Barolo at the time of bottling should be "undrinkable", though be a great bottle after twenty, thirty, forty years.

Giacomo Conterno's sons, Giovanni and Aldo Conterno, formally took over the estate in 1961. With the older Giovanni Conterno already responsible for winemaking since the 1959 vintage, Aldo Conterno eventually parted over conflicting winemaking philosophies with his brother, and founded his own estate Poderi Aldo Conterno in 1969.

In 1974 Giovanni Conterno purchased the Cascina Francia vineyard in Serralunga, bringing an end to the era of purchasing fruit from local farmers. The first vintage of wine made from own vineyard was 1978, though the name Cascina Francia did not appear on the label of the normale until the 1980 vintage.

Giovanni Conterno's youngest son Roberto began to work by his father's side in 1988, Roberto Conterno continued the family industry in the strict traditionalist fashion.

Production

While the Barolo riserva Monfortino is only produced in exceptional years, the Barolo Cascina Francia is not made every year either, exemplified by the difficult 2002 vintage of rain and hail, which allowed only for a small amount of grapes acceptable to make Monfortino, but not Cascina Francia, the first time that a riserva was produced but no normale.

The Nebbiolo and Barbera grapes come from the 16 ha vineyard Cascina Francia in Serralunga d'Alba, entirely owned by the Giacomo Conterno estate.

From the 2009 vintage wines are forthcoming from the newly acquired 3 ha Cerretta vineyard holding with 2 ha of Nebbiolo and 1 ha of Barbera, with the Nebbiolo classified as Langhe Nebbiolo. The wines are to be vinified in the same traditional manner as the Cascina Francia wines.

  • ;Barbera d'Alba DOC Cascina Francia Aged 2 years in botti (traditional large casks). The production is 1800 to.

  • ;Barolo DOCG Cascina Francia Not made in less than satisfactory vintages, the wine macerates on its skins for 3–4 weeks at controlled temperatures below 30 °C and is aged 4 years in botti. The production is ca. 1800 winecase.

  • ;Barolo riserva DOCG Monfortino Made only in exceptional vintages, the wine macerates on its skins for up to five weeks with no temperature control regardless of how high the fermentation temperatures may go, and is aged 7 years in botti. The production is ca. 580 winecase.

References

References

  1. Belfrage, Nicolas. (1999). "Barolo to Valpolicella, The Wines of Northern Italy". Faber & Faber.
  2. Stevenson, Tom. (2005). "The Sotheby's Wine Encyclopedia". Dorling Kindersley.
  3. Johnson, Hugh. (2005). "The World Atlas of Wine". Mitchell Beazley.
  4. Kramer, Matt. (1989). "Making Sense of Wine". Running Press.
  5. Asimov, Eric, ''The New York Times'' (April 5, 2010). [https://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/07/dining/07pour.html?pagewanted=all A Rare Tasting of Conterno Barolos]
  6. Parker, Robert M. Jr.. (2008). "Parker's Wine Buyer's Guide". Simon and Schuster.
  7. O'Keefe, Kerin, ''The Wine News'' (October/November 2008). [http://www.thewinenews.com/octnov08/cover.asp Safeguarding Barolo] {{webarchive. link. (2010-11-29)
  8. Kramer, Matt, ''Wine Spectator'' (May 18, 2010). [http://www.winespectator.com/webfeature/show?id=42698 Belief in Barbera]
  9. Cooke, Jo, ''Wine Spectator'' (February 20, 2004). [http://static.winespectator.com/webfeature/show/id/Piedmont-Vintner-Giovanni-Conterno-Dies_21904 Piedmont Vintner Giovanni Conterno Dies]
  10. Suckling, James, ''Wine Spectator'' (January 31, 2005). [https://www.winespectator.com/magazine/show/id/10907 The Great, the Good and the Ugly in Piedmont]
  11. Sanderson, Bruce, ''Wine Spectator'' (December 5, 2007). [https://www.winespectator.com/blogs/show/id/15270 A Barolo Icon]
  12. Beltrami, Edward, ''The Wine News'' (October/November 1997). [http://www.thewinenews.com/octnov97/quinitaly.html Italy's Quintessential Wines] {{webarchive. link. (2012-03-10)
  13. Yarrow, Alder, vinography.com (June 27, 2009). [https://www.vinography.com/archives/2009/06/giacomo_conterno_barolo_and_ba.html Giacomo Conterno Barolo and Barbera: Italy's Greatest Wines?]
  14. polanerselections.com [https://www.polanerselections.com/producer/giacomo-conterno Giacomo Conterno]
  15. ''barriques'']] in combination with shorter [[maceration (wine). link. (2012-04-14)
  16. Asimov, Eric, ''The New York Times'': The Pour (April 6, 2010). [http://dinersjournal.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/06/comparing-cascina-francias-monfortino-riservas-and-conterno-barolos/ Comparing Conterno Barolos: Cascina Francias and Monfortinos]
  17. Baudains, Richard, ''Decanter.com'' (May 23, 2006).[https://www.decanter.com/people-and-places/wine-articles/487167/beyond-barolo Beyond Barolo]

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

wineries-of-italylanghe