Tignanello is produced exclusively from the vineyard of the same name, a parcel of some 57 hectares with limestone-rich soils and a south western exposure at 350-400 meters above sea level at the Tignanello estate. It was the first sangiovese wine to be aged in small oak barrels, the first modern red wine to use such non-traditional varieties as cabernet in the blend, and among the first red wines from the Chianti Classico area to be produced without white grapes. The wine, originally called "Chianti Classico Riserva Vigneto Tignanello" (a Chianti Classico Riserva from the Tignanello vineyard), was produced for the first time from a single vineyard parcel in 1970, when the blend contained 20% of canaiolo and 5% of trebbiano and malvasia, both white grapes, and the wine aged in small oak barrels. In 1971 it became a Tuscan red table wine rather than a Chianti Classico, and was called Tignanello. In the 1975 vintage the percentage of white grapes was definitively eliminated from the blend. Ever since 1982, the blend has been the one currently used. Tignanello is bottled only in favourable vintages, and was not produced in 1972, 1973,1974, 1976, 1984, 1992, and 2002.