The wine world needs to give more recognition to classical wines that embody the greatness of time and place. This is one reason that JamesSuckling.com has chosen the Bertani Amarone della Valpolicella Classico 2015 as our Wine of the Year for 2024. It comes from vineyards on the Tenuta Novare estate in the northeastern Italian region of Valpolicella Classico, where vines have thrived since the Roman Empire. The wine’s balance and refinement are breathtaking, illustrating the greatness of neoclassical wines today – wines that draw from the past but reflect contemporary precision in viticulture and winemaking, offering the ultimate in harmony and drinkability. And its superb character and nature shines through in the glass despite the traditional grape-drying processes used to produce this red.
We believe this can be said about nearly all the wines on our Top 100 World list. Regardless of origin, these wines exhibit pristine character and satisfying drinkability. We tasted and rated over 40,000 wines in the last 12 months to find them, and it was more than worth the effort. Our team of 12 tasters at JamesSuckling.com, including myself, traveled the world, visiting vineyards, speaking with winemakers, and tasting wines, as well as rating bottles daily in our tasting rooms in Tuscany, Napa Valley and Hong Kong.
Of all the wines we reviewed, Italian wines accounted for the lion’s share, with over 9,100 wines rated. France followed with 9,000 wines reviewed, while the United States accounted for almost 6,800 wines. Spain was next with 3,800, Argentina had just over 2,300, Germany comprised 2,000 bottles, Australia about 1,700, and Chile nearly 1,550. Austria and New Zealand each reached around 800 each. We also tasted hundreds of wines from other regions worldwide, from Hungary and Greece to Canada and Uruguay.
Italy also had the most wines on our Top 100 list, with 26, followed by France (18), the United States (15), Germany (12), Argentina (6), Spain (6), Chile (6), Australia (5), Austria (4), South Africa (1) and China (1).