I tasted four separate Barolos, including three single vineyard wines. Among the three single vineyard Barolos, the most expensive wine, the 1990 Barolo Cru Briccolina may be controversial, given the lavish quantities of toasty new oak apparent in the wine's spicy, smoky, vanillin-scented bouquet. The wine exhibits immensely impressive extraction of flavor, layers of full-bodied, black-cherry fruit, and a long, heady, rich, moderately tannic finish. It will easily last 20 years, but I hope the oak becomes more integrated. This is an impressive performance from Batasiolo.Batasiolo is one of the largest vineyard owners in Piedmont, owning over 250 acres, a vast empire in view of the tiny Barolo and Barbaresco estates that tend to resemble the morsellated Burgundy landscape. In the past, I have found Batasiolo wines to be straightforward and monolithic. Whether it's the quality of the vintage or an obvious effort to raise the quality level, Batasiolo's 1990s all performed exceptionally well.Importer: a Leonardo Lo Cascio selection, Winebow, Inc., Hohokus, NJ.