Bricco Boschis
BREE-ko bos-KEES
A historic Castiglione Falletto monopole where calcareous marls and ideal elevation produce some of Barolo's most elegant and long-lived Nebbiolo.
Bricco Boschis is a 7.3-hectare Barolo MGA in Castiglione Falletto, controlled almost entirely by Cavallotto. Named for a 19th-century vineyard manager, this south-facing site on calcareous marl soils yields structured, floral, age-worthy Barolo with remarkable complexity.
- Total area of 7.3 hectares within the Castiglione Falletto commune of Barolo DOCG
- Elevation ranges from 230 to 350 meters above sea level
- Predominantly southeast and southwest-facing aspects maximize sun exposure for Nebbiolo
- Soils are calcareous marl with white, yellow, and grey marls layered with sand and heavy clay
- Effectively a monopole of Cavallotto, who purchased the estate in 1928
- First bottled under the Bricco Boschis label in 1967
- Formerly known as Monte della Guardia; once owned by Countess Juliette Colbert de Barolo in the 18th century
History and Name
Bricco Boschis carries one of the more layered backstories among Barolo's MGAs. Originally called Monte della Guardia, the vineyard was historically associated with Countess Juliette Colbert de Barolo, a key figure in Barolo's aristocratic 18th-century wine culture. The site takes its modern name from Giuseppe Boschis, a vineyard manager who oversaw the land before it was purchased by Giacomo Cavallotto in 1928. The Cavallotto family has stewarded the estate ever since, bottling their first Bricco Boschis-labeled wine in 1967. Individual parcels within the MGA, including Vigna San Giuseppe, Punta Marcello, and Colle Sud-Ovest, were vinified and bottled separately until 1995. The MGA boundaries were officially formalized and slightly expanded in 2010 to incorporate a small portion of the neighboring Melera cru.
- Formerly named Monte della Guardia before taking the name of vineyard manager Giuseppe Boschis
- Cavallotto purchased the estate in 1928 and remains its dominant owner today
- First bottled as Bricco Boschis in 1967; individual parcel bottlings consolidated after 1995
- MGA officially designated and expanded in 2010 to include part of Melera
Site and Terroir
Bricco Boschis sits within Castiglione Falletto, one of the central communes of the Barolo zone, at elevations between 230 and 350 meters above sea level. The vineyard's multiple aspects, south, southwest, southeast, and west, give it broad sun exposure across the growing season, a significant advantage for ripening Nebbiolo in a cool continental climate. Soils are calcareous marl with alternating layers of white, yellow, and grey marls interspersed with sand and heavy clay components. This mix supports the structure and acidity that define Castiglione Falletto's Nebbiolo. The climate brings cold, often foggy winters with snow, cool and rainy springs, and a productive season that turns dry after mid-May, with good diurnal temperature variation supporting aromatic development and phenolic balance.
- Elevation of 230 to 350 meters with south-facing multi-aspect exposure
- Calcareous marl soils with white, yellow, and grey marl layers plus sand and heavy clay
- Cool continental climate with dry conditions from mid-May onward
- Diurnal temperature shifts support aromatic complexity and balanced acidity
Viticulture and Production
Bricco Boschis is planted exclusively to Nebbiolo, as required for all Barolo production. Cavallotto manages the site with a focus on long-term quality, reflecting the family's multi-generational commitment to the estate. The MGA functions as a near-complete monopole, with Cavallotto controlling the overwhelming majority of the classified area. Within the broader Bricco Boschis designation, Cavallotto produces several distinct bottlings drawn from specific parcels, most notably Vigna San Giuseppe, which is aged for extended periods and represents one of the estate's prestige cuvees. The combination of varied aspects across the hillside and the complex layering of the marl soils allows for nuanced expression across different parts of the vineyard.
- Exclusively Nebbiolo planted throughout the MGA
- Cavallotto holds a near-monopole position across the 7.3-hectare site
- Vigna San Giuseppe is the flagship single-parcel bottling within Bricco Boschis
- Multiple aspects across the site contribute to expressive, nuanced wines
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Open Wine Lookup →Wine Style and Aging Potential
Barolo from Bricco Boschis is known for its structural elegance rather than sheer muscle. The calcareous marl soils, combined with the elevated position and southern exposures, produce wines with firm but refined tannins, lifted floral aromatics, and notable mineral character. These are long-lived wines that reward patience; the best examples from Cavallotto benefit from a decade or more of cellaring. Floral notes of dried rose and violet are common, alongside red fruit, tar, and earthy mineral tones that deepen with time. The site produces Barolo that sits comfortably within the classical Castiglione Falletto profile: structured, complex, and built for the long haul.
- Firm tannins with elegant structure rather than extracted power
- Floral aromatics, dried rose, violet, and mineral notes are signature characteristics
- Best examples benefit from a decade or more of bottle aging
- Classic Castiglione Falletto profile: structured, complex, long-lived
Dried rose and violet aromas with red cherry, tar, and earthy mineral notes. The palate is firm and structured with well-integrated acidity, refined tannins, and a long, mineral-driven finish that deepens considerably with bottle age.
- Cavallotto Barolo Bricco Boschis$60-85The estate-level bottling from the monopole holder; classic Castiglione Falletto structure with floral, mineral complexity.Find →
- Cavallotto Barolo Bricco Boschis Vigna San Giuseppe Riserva$120-160Extended aging from the top parcel within Bricco Boschis; benchmark for the MGA's aging potential and elegance.Find →
- Bricco Boschis is a 7.3-hectare Barolo MGA in Castiglione Falletto, functioning as a near-monopole of Cavallotto
- Soils are calcareous marl with white, yellow, and grey marl layers, sand, and heavy clay; elevation is 230 to 350 meters
- Formerly named Monte della Guardia; renamed for vineyard manager Giuseppe Boschis before Cavallotto purchased it in 1928
- First bottled as Bricco Boschis in 1967; the MGA was officially designated and expanded in 2010
- Key single-parcel bottling within the MGA is Vigna San Giuseppe, one of Cavallotto's prestige cuvees