Chianti Classico

My Bestest Girl and I managed to work our way through four lovely bottles of chianti over the weekend, consumed in equally delightful settings such as overlooking the river Arno in Florence in the late summer sunshine, and in the shade of the Leaning Tower of Pisa as the sunset. In order of comsumption they were:
Petra Ebo Val di Conia 2003

This one's a "super tuscan" blend with cabernet and merlot.
Borgo Scapeto Chianti Classico 2003
I swear this one smelt like chocolate!
Lamole di Lamade Chianto Classico 2003
We picked this one cause K was going to Lamole.
Castelgreve Chianti Classico 2003
This was the driest of the lot, with high percentage (95%) sangiovese. But i just loved how it smelt.
I haven't really got comprehensive tasting notes for each - I know, I'm bad, but hey, I was on holiday! But here are my overall impressions
Lovely ruby coloured wine, with thick glycerine rolling round the edges of the glass. Beautiful aromatics on the nose with hints of vanilla, chocolate, red berries, especially cherry and strawberry at times. I was practically inhaling the wine, as i loved taking huge big sniffs of the lovely aromas! The wine is dry and almost sour in the mouth, in a sour cherry acidic way, tannins are well structured and with what I'd call fine, light to mild oak. I'm not huge oak fan, so this was great for me. There can be hints of leather and herbs in some wines, but not heavy in the cabernet sauvignon sense.
Hints: The wine did best when it was allowed to breath. One restaurant gave us gigantic brandy-snifter glasses and the wine improved with drinking. Or was that just my perception ;) I think I'll be decanting any I buy in the future, even if I then our it back in the bottle to serve it!
Overall: Chianti is definetly a wine style I get a lot out of. I'll have to be careful of the cheap and nasties, and keep my eye out for the bargains, but if a sales person can recommend a nice drop for a good price, then I'll be stocking up on these babies.

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