Pertimali

This venerable estate, one of Montalcino’s finest, continues to make wines of notable personality.

Eighteen hectares (of which eight are under vine) located in one of the absolute best Sangiovese crus of Montalcino is the treasure that the Livio Sassetti-Pertimali estate can laugh all the way to the bank with. In fact, the estate’s Sangiovese vineyards could all make Brunello, and so any Rosso made here is actually a declassified Brunello (not surprisingly, they try to make as little Rosso as possible). To differentiate the two wines, they age their Rosso in stainless steel only, while the Brunello is aged for a minimum of three years in large oak barrels (20-50 hectoliters in size). Furthermore, the grapes for the Rosso are picked a little earlier than they are for the Brunello (roughly one to two weeks, depending on the vintage) and are already selected as such in the vineyard. Lorenzo Sassetti is the winemaker, and he told me that the vines he chooses to make the Rosso from will vary from year to year based on the quality of the fruit. What all this means is that Pertimali’s Rosso di Montalcino really is a simpler, fresher wine and not the luscious baby-Brunello typical of many other wineries in the area. I actually quite enjoy this bright, crisp, flinty version of Rosso. The average age of the vines ranges from 15 to 30 years, though esca is rampant in Montalcino and so the average age of the vines is decreasing steadily throughout the denomination.

By Montalcino standards, the estate is an old one: it was founded at the beginning of the 1960s, though the Sassetti family owned the Patrizo estate in Sant’Angelo in Colle in the 1800s. It was Livio Sassetti who decided to trade up and move to the current location as he thought, quite correctly, that it was better suited to making great Sangiovese wines. More recent news about this estate is that they have bought a new facility in Torrenieri where they plan to bottle as well as store bottles (the vinification of the wines will continue in the current winery close to the town of Montalcino). The estate has also recently bought another 2.5 hectares of vineyards from Angelo Sassetti (all Sangiovese for Brunello production). After a slightly difficult spell during which the wines were not of the quality level they had always been, Pertimali seems to be back on track with wines that can be some of the sleekest and purest of Montalcino. ANTONIO GALLONI