Masi 'Mazzano' Amarone della Valpolicella Classico - $130.49

Wine Details

Price: $130.49
Producer: Masi
Region: Amarone della Valpolicella Classico
Varietal: Dry Red Table Wine
Container Size: 750 ML
Flavors: anise, coffee, licorice, maple, prune
  • Red Wine

Product Description

  • Deep ruby red with faint garnet and dusky edges. Elegant, strong and austere on the nose with a bouquet of violets, plums, incense, vanilla, candied fruit and cocoa. Full-bodied on the palate, soft and dry. The aftertaste has flavours of plums, bitter cherries, sweet cherries, candied fruit and hazelnut chocolate. Long and lingering on the finish. Confidently predicted to age magnificently.

Expert Ratings

Ratings   Vintage Source Flavors
WineEnthusiast - 93 Details: Exotic and mature, with a classic nose of prune, licorice, maple and sweet sherry. The palate is quite round and generous, and it spreads out like a comfortable blanket on a feather bed. Finishing touches of smooth tannins and flavors of coffee and anise are ideal. 1999 WineEnthusiast anise, coffee, licorice, maple, prune
WineEnthusiast - 97 Details: This is wonderfully integrated and complex, offering a dizzying array of spices that blend seamlessly with notes of leather and cherries. Wonderfully velvety in texture and round in the mouth, but also boasting a long, spice-filled finish. A tremendous effort. Drink now–2020. 1990 WineEnthusiast cherries, leather, spices

Food Pairings

Category Pairing
Red Meat Beef Stew, Casseroles / Hot Dish
Pasta & Grains Risotto

Wine Terms

Name Value
Italy Makes nearly as much wine as France, but lags behind in their classification system. As a result, Italian wine isn’t taken as seriously as French wine. Most Italian wine is made from native grape varieties that don’t grow well elsewhere, such as Nebbiolo and Sangiovese. The most important regions are Piedmont, where Barolo and Barbaresco dominate, Tuscany, home to Chianti, Montepulciano, and the Super-Tuscans (a collection of relatively new reds), and the Northeastern region, where you’ll find Soave, Valpolicella, and Bardolino. Italy’s soils and climates are varied and ideally suited for viticulture, from the Alpine foothills in the north to the Mediterranean coast in the South. Its hilly landscape provides sun and cooler temperatures, even in the warmest regions. Italy has two categories of fine wines. DOCG, which means regulated and guaranteed place name, refers to a small group of elite wines. DOB wines are those with regulated (but not guaranteed) place names. A lower tier of table wines are grouped into IGT wines, which indicate the location on the label, and ordinary table wines, which carry no geographical indication except, “Italy.”
Valpolicella This important red-wine region in Veneto ranks just after Chianti for Italy's total DOC red-wine production. The wine is made primarily from Corvina, Rondinella, and Molinara grapes, although four other varieties can comprise up to 15 percent of the blend. Valpolicella's standard DOC wines are rather light and very fragrant and fruity. Those labeled superiore have a higher minimum alcohol content and are aged for a minimum of 1 year. The best wines are generally those labeled classico, which indicates that they come from the steeply terraced vineyards of the inner classico zone.
Veneto The home of some of Italy’s most famous wines, this area in the Northeastern quadrant of Italy produces Soave, Valpolicella and Prosecco.