The Chianti Classico Report 2023

Sarah Heller MW tastes through the region to deliver the top-scoring Chianti Classico wines among new releases - including Gran Selezione bottles that truly shine - as part of the Italy Report 2023

Words by Sarah Heller MW

chianti classico wine region with italy report 2023 logo

The first wine region to be officially delimited, historical Chianti (later Classico) has been a victim of its own success several times over – both before and after Cosimo III de Medici drew up its boundaries in 1716. Though it is finally rid of the ‘fiasco wine’ image acquired in the 1970s, in contemporary times Chianti Classico has been known as an infinitely reliable source of premium wines or, dubious honour, as home to the world’s most undervalued fine wines.

This is partly due to scale. At 7,000ha, it dwarfs Italy’s other major fine wine regions like Barolo and Brunello at around 2,000ha each, or tiny Barbaresco at under 700ha. Its nearly 47 million bottles are over three times the annual production of Amarone. Never mind that Bordeaux has ten times the production volume and well over ten times the hectarage. Also, Sangiovese – unlike ‘rival’ Nebbiolo – is ubiquitous in Italy, being the country’s most planted grape (not apparently an issue for Brunello di Montalcino, where Sangiovese goes by ‘Brunello’). It is also possibly due to a lingering sense that a moderately structured, light-coloured wine of 13.5% alcohol couldn’t really be a fine wine made for extended ageing (though Burgundians would likely beg to differ).

The region’s contemporary watershed moment initially drew scant attention in fine wine circles outside of Italy. 2014’s Gran Selezione classification stipulated a longer ageing time of 30 months – though not necessarily in wood, unlike other prominent Tuscan Sangiovese DOCGs – versus 24 for Riserva, plus the use of estate fruit. Nothing major, arguably, and yet the reverberations have been substantial.

ipsus harvest
'The exquisitely polished and elegant IPSUS' from the historical Mazzei family is among newer projects helping drive the Chianti Classico region forwards

My earliest experiences with Gran Selezione wines from vintage 2010 and even earlier, which were allowed to bear the designation if they fulfilled the requirements, suggested that they hadn’t quite found their footing. Too many producers, possibly burdened with similar prejudices about ‘fine wine’ to those I outlined above, released heavily extracted, murky wines collapsing under the weight of their new oak. However, from tasting some great early-2010s wines now – Fèlsina Colonia 2011, Castello di Ama Bellavista 2011 and Isole e Olena Gran Selezione 2010 – I’ve found the best examples blend darkness and flesh with exotic ethereality.

The truth is that the new wine quality would have been impossible were it not for a 1987 consorzio project called Chianti Classico 2000, which sought to improve the quality of vine material and cultivation methods. The resultant Sangiovese clones had smaller, thick-skinned berries, leading naturally to these darker wines. While many producers have since moved on, working on their own to improve vine material and vineyard management, there is no denying the critical role this project played.

Now, the best examples of early-2010s Gran Selezione wines blend darkness and flesh with exotic ethereality

It would also be ignoring a critical narrative strand not to mention the dissatisfaction among some producers (and media) with the decision to base the new quality designation on maturation time rather than site. On its face, this does seem rather odd in a place as various as Chianti Classico, where vineyards are tucked in among forested hills, criss-crossed by streams and rivers, that gradually open to the south. This is to say nothing of the complex geology and famous alberese (calcareous marl), macigno (sandstone) and galestro soils (flaky shales).

In response, in 2021 the Consorzio announced a list of subzones called UGAs (Unità Geografiche Aggiuntive, pronounced ‘oo-ga’ by locals). As of 1 July, they may appear on the front labels of Gran Selezione wines.

The UGAs are substantially larger than the Langhe’s MGAs, more communes than single vineyards. They are largely based on municipal divisions, with a few differences: the two wings of the Castelnuovo Berardenga ‘butterfly’ at the southern end of the zone are split into the western Vagliagli UGA and the eastern Castelnuovo Berardenga UGA; Montefioralle, Lamole and Panzano UGAs, defined by geology, altitude or stream and river flows, are carved out of Greve in Chianti. The wines of high-altitude Lamole especially (see Castellinuzza Proprietà Cinuzzi, Lamole di Lamole and the delightful Filetta di Lamole from Fontodi) have a unique delicacy and perfume that justifies this distinction. However, the largeness and internal diversity of the UGAs makes it impractical to identify UGA-wide traits in many cases.

Still, because using UGA names typically gives more specific location information than commune names, I have identified UGAs even when discussing non-Gran Selezione wines – though technically these are not allowed to bear UGA names. I acknowledge this may lead to confusion but hope that with time some regularisation will resolve the issue.

chianti classico aerial view
Chianti Classico's new subzones (known as UGAs) hope to better capture and communicate the region's complex and varied terroir

Another imminent shift in the Gran Selezione is a tightening of the blending rules to require 90% Sangiovese and exclude international grapes. Most traditionalists seem pleased, and I largely agree that Bordeaux varieties (still quite ubiquitous among the wines in this tasting) tend to have an outsized impact, bringing dark tones and thiol-driven notes that feel alien to Sangiovese. However, others resent the restrictiveness.

Arguably, the diversity of traditional grapes provides ample material to work with, and the quality of their clones has improved dramatically. Among our samples were around 50 wines with Canaiolo (Paolo de Marchi of Isole e Olena has a masterful touch with the variety), another 40 with Colorino, 15 with Malvasia Nera, 10 with Ciliegiolo, and a handful each with Mammolo and Pugnitello (check out Rocche di Montegrossi’s Gran Selezione Vigneto San Marcellino). Other than Colorino, a loose substitute for Bordeaux grapes with its dark, full, structured wines, these natives are variations on the Sangiovese theme. Some are more fragrant (Canaiolo, Malvasia Nera and especially Mammolo); some daintier (Ciliegiolo), others chubbier (Pugnitello), but all keep the blend within Sangiovese’s natural stylistic spectrum.

As Italy’s star has risen in the fine wine sphere, it feels apt that its most historical region should shine too

A lingering thorn in the side of the Gran Selezione has been the local Supertuscans, a very different group from the Bolgheri Bordeaux blends. Pure Sangiovese wines like Fontodi’s Flaccianello, Fèlsina’s Fontalloro, Isole e Olena’s Cepparello and above all Montevertine’s Le Pergole Torte were instrumental in showing the world what pure Sangiovese could achieve in this extraordinary territory at a time when Chianti Classico’s regulations forbade varietal wines. Now this hindrance no longer exists, the strong brand identity of these wines, which have mostly eschewed reincorporation into the DOCG, could steal oxygen from Chianti Classico.

However, a decade in, the Gran Selezione is visibly gaining traction, helped along by the release of new projects like the exquisitely polished and elegant IPSUS from the historical Mazzei family and the ascension to superstar status of Gran Selezione wines from Castello di Ama, Fontodi, Barone Ricasoli, Querciabella, Isole e Olena and more. As Italy’s star has risen in the fine wine sphere, it feels apt that its most historical region should shine too; it only took 300 years for the Medici Grand Dukes’ vision to play out.

Tasting notes and scores from Club Oenologique’s Chianti Classico Report 2023 (featuring only those wines scoring 90 points and above) are available to all registered users of The Collection, the online home of our premium wine and spirits content. To register for free, click here

Sarah Heller MW's top new-release Chianti Classico wines