Barbaresco DOCG
Barolo’s sister appellation — Nebbiolo from the Tanaro river hills. Generally more aromatic and earlier-drinking than Barolo. Home to Angelo Gaja’s historic single-vineyard work.
About Barbaresco
Barbaresco is the close cousin of Barolo — a 100% Nebbiolo DOCG immediately northeast of Barolo around the towns of Barbaresco, Treiso, and Neive. The terroir differences from Barolo are real but subtle: Barbaresco vineyards are at slightly lower altitudes, closer to the Tanaro river, and on predominantly Tortonian marl soils. The result is wine that is generally more aromatic, more accessible at younger ages, and slightly less powerful than Barolo — though the best Barbarescos age as long as the best Barolos. The aging requirements are shorter: 26 months minimum vs Barolo’s 38 months; Riserva is 50 months vs Barolo’s 62 months. Angelo Gaja’s work at Gaja in the 1960s-1980s elevated Barbaresco internationally — his single-vineyard bottlings (Sori San Lorenzo, Sori Tildin, Costa Russi) demonstrated that Barbaresco could equal or surpass Barolo at the top tier. Other major producers include Produttori del Barbaresco (the historic cooperative), Bruno Giacosa, La Spinetta, and Marchesi di Gresî.
Terroir & regulation
Principal producers
- Gaja
- Produttori del Barbaresco
- Bruno Giacosa
- La Spinetta
Editorial notes
Barbaresco drinks earlier than Barolo (8-15 years for serious bottles vs 15-25 for Barolo) but the best examples age similarly long. Gaja’s decision to declassify his single-vineyard Barbarescos to Langhe Nebbiolo in 2000 is a notable editorial event.