|
||
|
PETITCHEF |
Add your blog-site | Add your recipes | Receive daily menu | Contact us | |
Wine Question: Does Vintage Matter?
I thought about highlighting one of the unheralded vintages in Bordeaux, but to challenge myself and the preconceived notions about certain vintages, I decided to sample a wine from the Barolo region of Italy’s Piedmont from a year considered disastrous: 2002. Not only was 2002 a cold and rainy vintage, but hail devastated the vines (and grapes). Many top producers didn’t even make wine. Those that did, for the most part, took all of the grapes from their best sites and, instead of making single-vineyard wines and/or reserve wines, put them into a “regular” Barolo. So how did this wine taste? It wasn’t bad at all; actually, it was pretty nice. Though it wasn’t without flaws: it definitely lacked fruit and was a little too dry. (I can’t believe I am pegging a beverage made from fruit as “lacking in fruit.” Not to mention calling a liquid “too dry.” Welcome to the convoluted world of wine writing, where logic is a major casualty.) I will say it was more an exercise in evaluating a vintage based on what was in the bottle, rather than being in lockstep with the press and critics. So does vintage matter? Well, yes. Especially where unpredictable, cataclysmic weather events (such as hail, excessive heat, frost) occur. Not so much, however, in arid lands that have predictable weather and irrigated soil. (Examples: Washington and Argentina.) The point of posing this question is to make a request to those who buy wine to enjoy in the present or the future: do not get too caught up in the doom-and-gloom or hyperbolic praise about the quality of a vintage. One more note about Barolo and Italy’s Piedmont: most wine nerds, when asked what region outside of France they hold nearest and dearest, would probably say Piedmont. Whether the grape is Dolcetto, Barbera, or Nebbiolo (the grape of Barolo), some of the most exquisite reds can be found here. Seek them out! Just, uh, not the 2002s.
Possibly Related Posts: Turnip Redemption The Wine to Enjoy on This Deck: Chilean Sauvignon Blanc The World’s Most Neglected Wines (Part Four): Cabernet Franc from the Loire Valley Talking Champagne With Jean-Pierre Vincent Through Rosé-Colored Glasses: Champagne Nicolas Feuillatte related searches : Wine
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||