(Image: Dave Fletcher - Fletcher Wines | www.jamesmorgan.com.au)

About

For the Wines

"I consider myself lucky to be making wines in the Langhe and even luckier that I have no legacy to follow. It's led to a freedom to play and deconstruct tradition, all in an attempt to start afresh without any boundaries. I'm on a constant search for great vineyards, and always trying to make wines that give a sense of passion and place. Not all of them are single vineyards, because I think great things can come from careful crafting. Not all the wines will be produced each year either, as nature dictates most of what I do.
I use everything I've learnt from my experiences of making wine and working in the vineyards around the world, pulling out the methodology that I believe in and then injecting a few twists and turns.......Hopefully it all works for you!
For those that need to know.....
I use 100% spontaneous fermentation but with a 'pied de cuve' method. I use old wood in the form of Barriques and Botte Grande. Sometimes I have to buy new wood to get old wood and this gets used on the X-blend and the Chardonnay. I never, ever, filter the wines or use fining agents!

​In the Vineyards

50% of the vineyards I work with are certified organic and the other half is under conversion. As a day job I work for one of the biggest Biodynamic producers in Barolo and Barbaresco. I believe 100% in these techniques for my own grape production and strive for better health and lower impact for the vines and their surroundings. Not wanting to contribute to an ever increasing mono-culture in the Langhe, I offset the land used for my grape production with ownership of the equivalent area in Forest, swamp and grasslands rich in biodiversity." - Fletcher Wines

2023 Fletcher C23 Langhe Chardonnay

Review by Gary Walsh

Posted on 4 April 2025

'Langhe Chardonnay is an unusual thing. I think of Claudio Viberti, who makes a few of them, and is a bugger for the grape variety in general. I don’t quite know how I feel about it in general, but this is a good wine. I believe this is grown in Barbaresco. 

Pear, peach, cashew, spice, aniseed, a subtle struck match thing here too. It’s fleshy and nutty, has a smooth line of fine acidity, a little flinty texture, but it also has presence and restrained power. Almond and spice, a drizzle of lime in the mix, with a finish of excellent length. It’s a flavoursome wine, though it keeps itself pretty trim. A fine and different expression of Chardonnay, and very good it is too.'

94 Points

“On winemaking level for the Chardonnay it’s pretty much like the Favorita. Whole bunch pressed, no sulphur, oxidative handling going through to the barrels. Fermented in wood. It’s about 30% new French oak every year and the rest is varying ages, left on lees for 9 months.” “Harvesting from soils and our climate on white’s tends to generate fatness and glycerol, kind of classic Italian style. To combat that I pick a portion of the whites really early around sparkling production, so around 10% alcohol and that just gives me a thread on the wine, gives it a little bit of electricity through the palate. The second pick always builds body, fruit flavour and aromatics.” - David Fletcher

2024 Fletcher The Minion Nebbiolo

“I feel like Yarra Valley you’re getting good acidity, structure and and an elegant Nebbiolo so it just works better.” - David Fletcher

2024 Langhe Nebbiolo DOC

100% Nebbiolo from two different zones. Barbaresco & Alba. 100% destemmed. Open ferment, very little plunging, every 2 to 3 days. No post ferment soak. Old wood. 300ltr hogs head. Elevage for 12 to 14 months.

“The Langhe Nebbiolo has evolved a little bit from what it was originally. It used to be 100% Roero fruit and called Nebbiolo d’Alba because that’s the zoning there. The past few years I’ve been incorporating/blending with fruit from young Barbaresco vineyards that’s essentially changed the name to Langhe Nebbiolo because you can’t call it Nebbiolo d’Alba if you’re getting fruit in the Barbaresco zone” – David Fletcher

“The differing parcels go into open top fermenters that post ferment go to old wood for between 12 and 14 months aging. This vintage is now sourced 100% from the Barbaresco and Alba regions. It is 50% from our vineyards and 50% from two growers we work closely with based in Roncagliette (Barbaresco) and Serragrilli (Neive)” – David Fletcher

 

2022 'Recta Pete' Barbaresco DOCG

David on adding Ronchi Cru to the blend:

“After we lost our Starderi fruit in 2020 I went out looking for a new vineyard and one of the things that I was really interested in was working with purely East facing slope as the weather’s getting warmer. East is becoming a more favorable position because it’s only morning sun. it doesn’t get the west exposure of the afternoon sun which can be quite intense.

I managed to get a parcel of that just to see what it was like and to see whether I could start regularly producing from this site for both Recta Pete and as single Cru bottling as well. So, in 2021 we exactly that, made it separately. We were very happy with the quality but we in fact blended into the Recta Pete. That wasn’t because the quality wasn’t there to be bottled on its own as a Cru but just because our desire was to build the qty of Recta Pete which is our most sought after wine and namesake. We want to have a good entry level Barbaresco coming out every year” - David Fletcher

The Wine Front review by Gary Walsh

Posted on 26 June 2025

“Four Crus go into the composition of the Recta Pete. Faset, Roncaglie, Serragrilli (Neive) & Ronchi.” and then they go on to say it’s 40% Faset, 30% Ca’ Grossa, 20% Serragrilli and 10% Ronchi. Well Ca’ Grossa sits below Roncagliette and Roncaglie, so I’m not sure what the story is here, though that’s the text from I’ve been given from the importer, Franc about Wine

Cherry, almond, liquorice and aniseed, a dusting of baking spice. It’s medium to full-bodied, red fruits with a nice crunch to acidity, tannin has a gently dusty and peppery profile, the perfume is present, and the wine, despite the warm vintage, has a cool and pleasing ‘mineral’ character to it. Finish is crisp and long, with some orange peel bite to close. Excellent.'

94 Points

 

2022 Fletcher Barbaresco Faset

The Wine Front review by Gary Walsh

Posted on 2 July 2025

'It’s kind of interesting to see the name Fletcher alongside Barbaresco. I guess it’s similar to Palmer and Barton alongside Bordeaux, give or take a couple of centuries. I wish I’d tasted the excellent 2022 Recta Pete alongside this, as I reckon it could be a fraction better.  Importer: Franc about Wine

Cherry and raspberry, hazelnut and roast peanuts, spice, dried flowers. It’s nutty and red fruited, a pumice stone grip to tannin, quite some flesh and power, some orange juice tang to acidity, slightly broad, but pulls itself in nicely on a finish of good length. Needs some time.'

93+ Points

2022 Fletcher Barbaresco Ronchi

The Wine Front review by Gary Walsh

Posted on 2 July 2025

'New bottle shape I think, so I took my own happy snaps. Albino Rocca make a notable Ronchi. Importer: Franc about Wine

Raspberry and strawberry, ginger and spice, a floral almost honeyed top note, maybe lavender and dried roses. It’s medium-bodied, a distinct stony feel to tannin, sandstone and hazelnut skin, some bergamot perfume too, a fine crunch to acidity, a twist of amaro bitterness and liquorice root, with a cool ‘minerally’ finish of excellent length. This has tension and perfume, even though it’s from a very warm vintage. Excellent.'

95 Points

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