Tasting Notes and Scores
Like Tignanello, the 2016 Solaia is a wine of extraordinary nuance and finesse. Super-ripe blackberry, plum jam, espresso, menthol, licorice and sweet spice build as the sublime 2016 shows off its personality and breeding. The 2016 somehow manages to be incredibly deep and also light on its feet. Sweet floral and spice notes add the closing shades of nuance to an exotic, beguilingly beautiful Solaia endowed with an eternal finish and mind-blowing beauty. The 2016 is an epic Solaia. That's all there is to it.
Antonio Galloni
Speechless here. I thought the 2015 was already perfect but this is perfect, too. But in a different way. It is so structured and multidimensional. Full-bodied, powerful and intense with incredible tannin backbone and depth. The dark-berry, wet-earth, oyster-shell and mushroom flavors are phenomenal. 20% less production than 2015. Give it four or five years to come together. Try after 2025.
James Suckling
This red leads off with a slight oaky edge, featuring vanilla and resin accents that meld with the black cherry and blackberry fruit flavors on the palate. This is all about purity and finesse, featuring a vibrant structure that fits harmoniously with the flavors. Cedar, iron, tobacco and fruit elements converge on the finish, which is very long, fresh and satisfying. Cabernet Sauvignon, Sangiovese and Cabernet Franc. BS
Wine Spectator
First produced in 1978, Solaia comes from a 20-hectare south- to southeast-facing plot at Antinori's prized Tignanello estate. The stony, well-drained soil is a mix of galestro and alberese. Coconut, black tea and ripe blackberry are interlaced with a fragrant herbal and earthy undertow. It is a bit austere at the moment but the acidity is positively racy. Velvety-smooth tannins are seamlessly integrated and the finish is jam-packed. This will need a few years to come around.
Decanter World Wine Awards
Decanter World Wine Awards
2020-06-24
‘One of the best vintages ever’, according to Albiera Antino ri. Cooler summer with very good diurnal variation and another very long harvest. They started picking Cabernet Franc at the end of September, Sangiovese 28 September to 1 October and Cabernet Sauvignon until 12 October. Before 2016 they used to pre-order barrels but now, with Raymond and Taransaud, they order only 20–30% pre harvest and the rest post harvest so their barrels are tailor-made. (This is what many Bordeaux châteaux do anyway apparently.) They no longer have Seguin Moreau for Solaia as they weren’t happy with the later ordering apparently. Blend has changed a little – Cabernet Franc has been increased a bit because of global warming – to 72% Cabernet Sauvignon, 20% Sangiovese, 8% Cabernet Franc. This continued in 2017, 2018 and in 2019 they reached a peak of 10% Cabernet Franc – and only 15% Sangiovese, which doesn’t like the rain there was in 2019. Very dark purplish crimson. Balsam notes. Chunky and ambitious. Savoury. Still very chewy but in the glass it smoothed out. (JR)
Jancis Robinson
Jancis Robinson
2023-06-22
I fussed over scoring this wine more than I'd like to admit—tasting through three samples under different conditions at various intervals and testing my impressions blind against wines in its peer group. Most importantly, I tasted this 2016 vintage against the 2015 vintage over and over again. I confess to a few nights of restless sleep as a result. Ultimately, my decision to award 100 points to the 2016 Solaia came on impulse and with the most natural sense of purpose. I had also given the 2015 vintage a perfect score, and intellectually, it seemed impossible not to pick a favorite among these two stunning expressions. I will also state, outright, that the wines are very different, principally because the 2015 vintage shows more overall opulence and sweetness that extends to the pronounced textural richness of the mouthfeel. The 2016 vintage, on the other hand, is more chiseled and sharp with mineral shadings of campfire ash and graphite at the rim of its dark fruit. The mouthfeel is more streamlined and tight at its core, suggesting that the wine will unfold and soften beautifully with time. I feel like 2015 is the Dolce & Gabbana of the situation and the 2016 is the Armani Privé. The personalities of the two wines are distinct, yet my admiration for each is identical.
Monica Larner
Robert Parker
2019-09-19
Umbria
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Tuscany
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Tuscany
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Tuscany
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