Dolcetto d'Alba, GD Vajra 2024 is no longer available
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Dolcetto d'Alba, GD Vajra 2024
Red Wine from Italy - Piedmont
This vivid and vibrant dolcetto is bursting with the fragrance of blueberries, damsons, and wild herbs. Crunchy, with bright red cherry fruit on the palate, and a graphite mineral edge, this is a joy of a wine – medium-bodied and refreshing. The Vajra family have always loved dolcetto and this is a wonderful example of why. To support this top Italian grower’s impressive efforts in boosting indigenous plant species, we are helping to fund a range of initiatives, including selection and planting of 20ha of cover crops and up to 10m of hedgerows.
is no longer available
Code: IT44691
Wine characteristics
- Red Wine
- Medium-bodied
- Dolcetto
- 75cl
- Drinking now
- 12% Alcohol
- no oak influence
- Cork, natural
- 566 g (Empty bottle weight)
- Vegetarian
- Vegan
Bestselling wines
G.D. Vajra
The GD Vajra estate is found in Vergne, the highest village of Barolo in north-west Italy, where the vineyards sit at an altitude of up to 400 metres. The estate is named after Giuseppe Domenico Vajra, who founded the estate in 1972, using vineyards that had been in the family since the 1920s, but which were only economically viable to farm once the Italian DOC system was introduced in the 1960s and Barolo’s worldwide popularity started to spike.
The estate is now run by his Giuseppe’s son Aldo who, with the help of his wife Milena and their children, tends all 40 hectares of vines. The elevated growing conditions here mean that grapes ripen later than in nearby vineyards, but possess an innate elegance as a result. The dry micro climate also results in relatively small yields helping to ensure grapes of excellent quality.
10 of the 60 hectares are planted with nebbiolo for Aldo’s Barolo, located in such prized vineyards as Bricco delle Viole, Fossati, La Volta and Coste di Vergne. Here the soil is rich in calcareous marl, with rocky outcrops, giving fragrant and particularly long-lived wines.
This is a truly diverse operation, ranging from semi-sweet sparkling wines to single-vineyard Barolo. Aldo adheres to old-style winemaking methods, such as ageing his Barolo in barrel for three and half years prior to bottling, though blends these with new techniques. He explains his approach, saying that ‘traditional wines are more elegant, with more delicate perfumes, leaner, somewhat ...
The Guardian
A core of blue fruit brings a welcome graphite coolness to this dolcetto.