Here's a wine available (as of a few weeks ago) at LCBO that I can wholeheartedly recommend: the 2006 Nipozzano Chianti Rufina Riserva, produced by the Marchesi de Frescobaldi. (Don't know what LCBO is? Lucky you. But they deserve some credit for stocking this.) This is the third vintage I've had of this wine, and I've been happy with all of them, but this one's the best. Dark fruits, soft full flavors but definite tannic backbone to keep it together, some nice chalky minerality behind it all showing up on the longish finish with some slight hints of mintiness, and hints of bitterness. A clear, clean, leafy version of "Tuscan funk" lurks barely perceptible behind this, perhaps ready to contribute some heady, perfumy, but unpredictable, notes with age. In short, fairly complex, and mixing classic Chianti characteristics with notes--including the slightest, but pleasant, hints of greenness or vegetality---that are definitely characteristic of Cabernet. I could imagine this wine repaying 5, perhaps even 10, years of cellaring by evolving into something stunning, but this is always unpredictable, the more so as I don't have any experience cellaring this wine. (Comments invited from anyone who does.)
Chianti Rufina is, if I recall correctly, one of three main zones for higher-end Chiantis, the largest being Chianti Classico covering a hilly area between Florence and Siena, with Chianti Montalbano and Chianti Rufina, each much smaller than the Classico area, being the other significant DOCG's. (I've also had very good Chianti from the Colli Fiorentini, i.e. the "Florentine Hills".)
Victor Hazan's superb, extremely well written and observed 1982 book "Italian Wine" (yes, he's Marcella's husband) reports Frescobaldi as "the most celebrated producer" of the area, with the Nipozzano Chianti "nearly as fine" as their single-vineyard, limited production Montesodi, but "much more accessible in price and quantity". At $21.55 Canadian at LCBO, that "accessible in price" still seems right 27 years on, given the quality of the wine. I acknowledge that's a heck of a lot to pay for a bottle if you're not a wine geek like me, but I'm much happier paying it for this wine than the $15 to $20 CDN I've paid for many a mediocre bottle from LCBO (or the $10-15 US I've paid for some mediocre bottles in the States).
I'll probably raise expectations too high if I quote Victor Hazan further on Chianti Rufina: "A choice Rufina can match in authority, and sometimes surpass, Chianti Classico at its finest. In character it is closest to a Chianti from Radda [...], making forceful first impressions that precede layer after layer of unfolding flavor." One of my best wine experiences ever (involving quantum physics, as well, so perhaps I'll post about it at some point) involved a wine from Radda, the Monte Vertine Riserva (I don't even recall seeing the word Chianti on the bottle), from the early 1980s. 1981 sticks in mind but at this remove---I had the wine in Turin in 1995 or so---who knows. And this wine, though less aged, reminds me of how that Monte Vertine might have tasted in its youth. So I think Hazan is right on in this comparison, and it says good things. Now this is just wine, for chrissake---if you want revelation, for less money you could go out and buy the remastered deluxe edition of John Coltrane's A Love Supreme. But still, good stuff. If you have the money, and the inclination, and you've already got a copy of A Love Supreme, give it a try. OK, try it even if you don't have a copy of A Love Supreme---but you really should get one of those, too.
Notes on previous editions of this wine:
2001, half bottle with dinner at Mövenpick, Zurich airport, August 2005: "Excellent---has dark fruits and some complexity/silkiness. Balanced."
2002 (tasted 2004 or 2005): "Even better than the 2001, probably. Velvety, fairly rich, notes of cocoa in the nose. Good with George's deep fried "little pizzas" from Campania, with red pepper, cayenne, tomato sauce. Stands up to it. Hints of minerality. Superb!" George is my son; he likes to cook on occasion, especially Italian. Perhaps it's his Italian heritage from my wife, who is 100 percent Italian-American; perhaps it's his food-obsessed (though not more so than your average Italian) heritage from my side of the family.