
This rich Tuscan red tied $180 Tignanello in Wine Spectator’s pages

- 94 pts Wine Spectator94 pts WS
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2022 Castello Romitorio Romitorio Toscana 750 ml
Retail: $29 | ||
$24 | 17% off | 1-11 bottles |
$22 | 24% off | 12+ bottles |
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- Temperature controlled shipping options
- Get credited back if a wine fails to impress
Even We Did a Double-Take
When we first sipped Romitoro at Castello Romitorio, we could tell everyone at the dinner table shared an overwhelming feeling that we’d just stumbled onto a masterpiece.
Our day at the estate had been all Tuscan hillsides and era-defining artwork, then suddenly WHOA—we were surrounded by beauty of a different sort: not just the mouth-watering pasta, but the bold, elusive, and iconoclastic Super Tuscan that stopped our conversation in its tracks.
Wine Enthusiast Winemaker of the Year Carlo Ferrini consults for Romitorio, and the Sangiovese master proves his mettle with this blend from the property belonging to Sandro Chia, one of the most prolific artists of our time. Made famous by leading a group of Italian painters at the forefront of a post-avant-garde (Trandavantgarde) movement in the 1970s and 1980s, Chia is, like his idol Leonardo DaVinci, inspired by an eclectic array of art, and he chose the vineyards at Romitorio when he decided to tackle wine as his newest medium.
Even the ancient Romans who built the castle on the steep hillside saw viticultural magic when they started grape cultivation on the soils of pure white clay. The soils are nutrient-deficient, which forces the vines to struggle and put their muscle into complex and concentrated berries, but deep enough to allow the vines to dig for water in the hot Tuscan summers. The precise Chia family only practices manual harvest and sorting before maturing the wine in oak for a year, which gives this red its irresistible spice notes on the palate.
When we drove up the massive peaks over the Mediterranean landscape, we understood how the secluded castle earned its name: Romito means “hermit” in the local dialect, and the castle is isolated high on the northwestern hills of Montalcino. Chia constructed the cellar as a living workshop adjacent to the hilltop castle in the 1980s, and with its modern paintings mixed with Roman artifacts, it’s a multimedia tribute to wine. Of course, each of the labels was designed by Sandro himself, so you not only get a stunner of an iconoclastic wine, but a piece of art by an icon.
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