Author Archive
A foretaste of things to come
Posted by: | CommentsThe Society’s Tastings & Events team, already having a very busy summer, are gearing up for a very busy autumn. In the soon-to-be published Tastings & Events booklet for October to December we will be featuring 27 events, including tastings with South African, Spanish and Portuguese wine growers, wines for Christmas, our ever-popular Call My Bluff events and our Exhibition range. Dinner at The River Café with Giovanni Manetti from Fontodi, and a tutored vertical tasting of Château Haut-Brion will also feature.
We try and visit as many parts of the country as possible in a year (the first six months of this year have included Truro and Inverness!) We’re always open to new ideas and new venues, so if you’ve got any thoughts on these we would love to hear them.
Click here for details of our tastings & events through to end September.
Ewan Murray
Head of Tastings & Events
We’re certain it’s Certan
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Last night’s tasting with Alexandre Thienpont featured 10 vintages of Vieux Château Certan, Pomerol, where Alexandre has been making the wine since 1985, following on from his father and grandfather. Alexandre is softly spoken and a man of few words, but his passion shines out in what he does say, and his wines certainly speak for themselves.
The property is planted with 65% merlot, 30% cabernet franc and 5% cabernet sauvignon (which compares to the plantings in 1985 of 50% merlot, 25% cabernet franc, 20% cabernet sauvignon and 5% malbec). The merlot provides the broad base, the cabernet franc the structure and the cabernet sauvignon adds ageability. Would that it were that simple – Alexandre has 23 distinct parcels of vines on the property, and it is the way in which these parcels are blended each year according to their character that gives the château its unique identity. While many châteaux have their own hallmark vintage after vintage, Vieux Certan’s hallmark is it’s variety – each year it can be very different, and that’s what gives it its charm, its intrigue and, ultimately, its collectability.
All wines were double decanted 2 hours before tasting. These wines are not available from The Society, having been sold en primeur. Approximate current UK market prices (per bottle) are, however, included at the bottom of each tasting note, purely for information.
Tasting notes belong to me and my palate – others will, I am sure, have different notes, but this is what I made of these splendid wines.
2007 – An early-drinking wine from a merlot year. Alexandre reckons it should be drunk now to 2016. Chewy ripe tannins, a good level of acidity supporting a loosely packed bundle of warm cherry and plum flavours. A finish of wood and spice and good length. (£60)
2006 – A big hit of fragrant red fruit on the nose, and a palate of concentrated plum enveloped by a very well defined structure. Alexandre says this is quintessential Vieux Château Certan. The same assemblage as the 2007, i.e. 80% merlot and 20% cabernet franc, but the franc is more dominant than the proportions suggest. NB – 2006 was a year when the rains came mid-harvest. Many picked during the rain to get it all in before it rotted; they therefore picked unripe fruit. Alexandre waited until the rain stopped and the sun came out once more. When he picked, he lost 20% (equivalent to 1,000 cases) of his crop to rot, but the ripe healthy grapes came through the sorting table and gave this wonderful wine that won’t be properly ready to drink until 2015, but will last for years beyond that. (£110)
2004 – in the ludicrously hot 2003 they only made 20% of their normal output, and so were raring to go with 2004. The nose is very fresh, and on the palate the dusty tannins and cassis fruit of the franc creates a beautiful structure from where we can just spot the warming dark merlot fruits peering out coyly. Chewy and earthy, yet refreshing, finish overlaid with red fruit make it very appealing. This was a dry year where the cabernet franc ripened to perfection, and the resulting wine will keep even longer than the 2006. (£80)
2002 – Another merlot year, and has far less complexity than the ’04 and ’06 – ‘mono-dimensional like the 2007′, as Alexandre puts it, but nonetheless round, attractive, charming, delicious and ready to drink right now. (£75)
2001 – Cabernet sauvignon found its way into this blend to lend some more structure to this merlot-favouring vintage. A beautiful broad red fruit palate, wonderfully open and expansive, pleads: “Drink me now!” (£100)
2000 – Transport me to my desert island this very minute!! All three varieties hit the spot, making a wonderfully complete and balanced wine. A savoury edge to a rich red fruit nose gives way to a rich, red fruit palate, concentrated to the full with a thick layer of silky smooth ripe tannin all dancing on a swirling sea of acidity – sorry to wax so lyrical, but this is a great wine that will be in its prime in a decade or so, and hang around for a good deal of time after. (£150)
1999 – A cool year with a mild summer. Merlot to the fore, with 85%, then 5% cabernet franc and 10% cabernet sauvignon. A chewy little number with rounded, sweet plums and raspberries. Ready to drink today, but with the support of tannin and acidity to carry it along very nicely for another 6 to 8 years. (£85)
1998 – Same blend as the ’99, but a warmer, drier year. Lovely all round structure with liquorice and darker fruits to the fore. It was really interesting to taste the ’99 and ’98 side by side – identical blend and yet the nature of the vintage is what makes them so different. (£120)
1996 – Lovely date, fig and plum on the nose lead into an abundance of richness and ripeness of the same fruits on the palate – truly, truly delicious. (£75)
1993 – very different to any of the preceding wines. The cabernet franc comes through really strongly – that dusty cassis reminded me of very good Loire reds, but then the ripe yet delicate Victoria plum comes sailing through on a lightning streak of acidity. A really refreshing drink. (£65)
We look forward to the wines of 2009 and 2010 – both are 85% merlot, 5% cabernet franc and 10% cabernet sauvignon. For those who have long memories, Alexandre says that the 2009 will be like the 1948 which, until now is the best wine they believe they have ever made), while the 2010 will be more akin to 1945 or 1950. Looking at the longevity of the wines that we tasted with him, it will be quite a while before we can put those wines to that test.
After the tasting members’ positive and excited comments came thick and fast. In a world where so many competition-winning wines seem to be big in terms of texture, flavour and alcohol, these wines truly found favour with Society members. Esteemed wine writer Margaret Rand attended the tasting, and commented: “… the wines were so restrained and so complex. They ought to be force-fed to Napa growers, really!”
Alexandre himself was delighted with the way the wines showed themselves. A compliment to the team at Merchant Taylors’ Hall who looked after the wines, but actually without realising it he was complimenting himself. A wonderful estate with a wonderful winemaker at the helm. Of that we can be Certan.
Ewan Murray
Head of Tastings & Events
And what about 2011?
Posted by: | CommentsI returned yesterday from a visit to Bordeaux with Jo Locke MW. While all the hype about 2010 continues, and prices continue to drip, drip, drip slowly out of Bordeaux (click here for details of timings of our 2010 en primeur offers), in Blaye, Bourg, Castillon and Entre-Deux-Mers, concern is for the current happenings in the vineyards rather than the markets.
It has not rained in these parts since February, and growers’ attitudes range from fretting over the lack of water right through to ‘que sera sera’. Those who have older vines with deeper root systems are less worried, as they will likely be
reaching right down to the nappe phréatique (water table) but for those who have more recent plantings, these drought conditions are causing some frowns. Driving past the vines bore this out – the older the vines, the healthier looking the leaves. Some of the younger vines’ leaves were visibly wilting. There was one man in particular, however – Thierry Lurton of Château de Camarsac – who was particularly pleased with the wall-to-wall sunshine because of the way he powers his chai (see right)!
Flowering, which last year happened at the end of the first week in June, happened before mid-May! It hasn’t been that early since 1976. Pictured left is a young bunch of cabernet sauvignon at Château de la Dauphine. Hard to believe that we’re not even at the end of May. If things continue at the same pace, harvest is anticipated for 3rd September. It is early days yet, though – watch this space for further news as and when we get it.
Ewan Murray
Head of Tastings & Events
All in the family
Posted by: | CommentsEvery family has its own stories, and at The Society we love working with winemakers who have a story to tell. It’s no coincidence, therefore, that earlier this week 26 family-run wine companies came together under one roof at our traditional mid-May London tasting (which takes advantage of the fact that the wine world comes to London this week for the trade-focused London International Wine Fair at ExCeL).
54 wines using 35 grape varieties from 17 countries were on show, with 300 members privileged to taste the wines while meeting and talking to the growers. The list is like a Who’s Who of the wine world:
Susana Balbo, Willi Bründlmayer, Sebastian De Martino, Mike & Simon Roberts, Basaline Despagne, Fabio Montrasi, Jean-Paul Tollot, Jean and Christine Gardiés, Denis Jamain, Florence Quiot, Annegret Reh-Gartner, Éva Keresztury, Giuseppe Malazzini, Silvia Allegrini, Gaston Hochar, Matt Sutherland, Luis Lourenço, Paul Symington, Johann Krige , Cristina Amézola, Marcelino Piquero, Jim Clendenen and Eric Lemelson plus representatives from three other families (McHenry Hohnen, Schlumberger, Alfred Gratien).
The white table that attracted most members was von Kesselstatt’s, where Annegret’s Piesporter Goldtröpfchen Riesling Kabinett 2008 and Josephshöfer Riesling Spätlese, 2005 were very popular; the main red interest was split between Gaston’s Chateau Musar 2004, Giuseppe’s Brindisi RossoVigna Flaminio 2007 and Silvia’s Valpollicella 2010.
For Fabio, Jean & Christine, Eva, Luis, Cristina and Eric it was their very first time at a Society tasting, and they were blown away by both the positive reception they and their wines received, and members’ thirst for knowledge. A perfect evening for those who know nothing, and for connoisseurs – the growers were delighted to tell anyone and everyone about their wines.
The next pre-London Wine Fair rendez-vous is on 21st May 2012. In the meantime, if any of you were there, tell us what you thought of the event. For events closer to your front door, keep an eye on our Tastings & Events programme.
Ewan Murray
Head of Tastings & Events
Video: As easy as falling off a blog…
Posted by: | CommentsThere’s really not much to this blogging lark – anyone can do it!
PC/Smartphone? Check.
Wordpress? Check.
Something worth saying? Er …
This is what separates the best from the rest, and with this in mind we invited several of the best-known wine bloggers to Stevenage to get a feel for the community that is The Wine Society.
One of the UK’s most active and respected wine bloggers (and general social media geek and all-round good guy) Rob McIntosh, aka @thirstforwine, brought along cameraman @bennycrime and filmed the visit. Take a look at the resulting video – a short, concise and chirpy peek behind the scenes.
La Fleur-Pétrus – the house wine …
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A bottle of wine priced at c£150 per bottle classified as a house wine??? If you live in the house where the wine is made, as Edouard Moueix does, then all becomes clear!
Last night 114 members came together at London’s Merchant Taylors’ Hall to taste 12 wines from properties owned or associated with Ets. Jean-Pierre Moueix. Châteaux Belair (St Emilion), Gazin, La Fleur-Pétrus and Hosanna (all Pomerol) were introduced by Edouard and then tasted. Below are my own scribblings which will hopefully give you an impression of how the wines performed.
Château Belair 2007 – plummy, fruit-gummy fruit in a sappy, oaky envelope. Soft, ripe tannins. Leafy cassis on the finish. Showing great promise.
Château Belair 2005 – blueberry and menthol on the nose. Deep, concentrated plummy fruit with grip and a fresh, austere finish. Still needs time to knit together, but such depth.
Château Belair 2001 – a fresh nose of wood and leaf with a rich plum and redcurrant fruitiness. Great structure, grip and acidity supporting the fresh fruit. Very more-ish. £60 per bottle, max. 6 bottles per member.
Château Gazin 2007 – very primary. Overt oak and yeastiness overlay to the red fruit on the nose. Really grippy and crisp on the palate with the same primary red fruit. Amazing balance, with a mineral edge. Infanticide to drink it now – will reward cellaring.
Château Gazin 2003 – Very tight on the nose, giving nothing away, but what a palate! Silky smooth texture, acidity and tannins in harmony allowing the red fruit to sing. As light as a feather. My joint personal wine of the night, defying the commonly held (often justifiable) views of the overly hot 2003 vintage.
Château Gazin 2001 – grippy, chunky, fleshy, feisty, warming, wholesome. Very pleasing, broad and balanced and absolutely ready to drink now. £65 per bottle
Château La Fleur-Pétrus 2007 – fresh, vibrant, grippy and still very young. Cranberry and Victoria plum surrounding by a wonderful structure and freshness with a gentle oaky finish with more grip. In it for the long haul.
Château La Fleur-Pétrus 2005 – beautifully scented with great depth of plummy flavour, but not wanting to show much more at the moment. Edouard’s least favourite of the evening – he said it’s like a stubborn teenager who sits there sulking not doing what you want him to do! He knows it will come to its senses one day!
Château La Fleur-Pétrus 1995 – beautifully fresh and still youthful, but drinking very well with a delightful sweetness to the fruit and a roundness edged by light grip. Gentle, and all in balance. My other personal wine of the night.
NB – my concentration wavered on the next three due to my having to deal with a couple of allegedly corked bottles (ah the trials and tribulations of an Events Manager!), so the notes are a little stunted, I’m afraid.
Château Hosanna 2007 – tight, balanced, savoury edge. Enormously long finish with fresh red fruit carried along on a wave of acidity.
Château Hosanna 2005 – Slightly bitter edge to the fruit (but attractively so) and great depth and concentration.
Château Hosanna 2003 – More typical of the 2003 to my mind – a little raisined (but again in an attractive manner) and is great for drinking now and over the next 5 years or so (in my humble opinion).
A great tasting, very well received by those present, and topped off by Belair 2001 in magnum over supper. Whatever your own personal house wine, it was enlightening to get such an insight into the house of JP Moueix, and through the dining room window of Edouard in particular.
Ewan Murray
Head of Tastings & Events
Yesterday to Moro
Posted by: | CommentsOne of the best restaurant atmospheres in London can be found at Moro in Exmouth Market where chef-proprietors Sam and Sam Clark have been cooking their own take on southern Spanish food since 1997. 80 members were privileged to dine at Moro in the company of one of Spain’s most passionate and innovative wine producers Telmo Rodriguez.
Six wines from Galicia, Rioja, Ribeira del Duero and Malaga each had a story that was communicated in a fascinating and entertaining way by Telmo – if you want to know all about the Duke of Wellington, muscat and massaging ladies in Malaga, then Telmo is your man!
The wines are all made from grapes grown on bush vines, rather than trellised vines, with minimum intervention with nature – all are cultivated along biodynamic lines.
We started with Gaba do Xil Godello 2010 from Valdeorras. While Rias Baixas’s albariño is grabbing the headlines in Galicia, we see godello from neighbouring Valdeorras as an exciting alternative to white Burgundy. This wine has just been bottled and will be appearing in our List in July. Elegant, ever so slightly creamy, zesty and with a crisp acidity, it was the perfect match with cuttlefish and baby broad beans in a mint dressing.
Next was Mountain Blanco Moscatel 2009 from Malaga, a dry white muscat whose crispness and grapey fragrance offset the scallops with crispy capers, smoked paprika and shaved fennel very well indeed.
Two wines were selected to accompany the slow-roasted lamb with new season’s garlic and mashed potatoes. Pegaso 2005 is 100% garnacha from the small village of Cebreros in Castilla y Leon. This version is grown in slatey soil (Telmo does a granitic version too from the other side of the village) and the freshness given by the 3,000 ft high vineyards, coupled with the natural rich spiciness of the garnacha grape and the concentration coming from low yields, was a great accompaniment to the softly spicy lamb. (This was my personal wine of the night.)
Lanzaga Rioja 2007 is made in the traditional way in large 1,500 litre foudres rather than the more current barricas maturation. This lets the fruit do the talking rather than the oak, and it was refreshing to drink a Rioja where the taste buds were not being bombarded by overly-rich vanillins and tannins, but rather being caressed by gentle red and black fruits.
Of the two wines the Lanzaga had the more immediate appeal, but going back to the Pegaso in the glass an hour or so later the tannins had softened to reveal a previously concealed complexity of dark fruits and sweet spices.
Matallana 2005 (the 2004 is currently listed), a big bruiser of a wine, came alongside the delicious ewes’ cheeses and its broodiness was attenuated by the lifted sweetness of the cheeses. Again, a wine that needed time to even start showing a hint of its true colours, but balanced absolutely perfectly. It’s a wine for the long-term – Telmo says 30, 40 or even 50 years!
The beautiful yoghurt cake with pistachios and pomegranate was beautifully rounded off by MR 2008 from Malaga – the baby version of Molino Real, Telmo’s sweet, fresh, lemony, grapey and oh-so-not-cloying dessert wine from vineyards over 2,000 feet up.
A memorable evening indeed – it was the third time we have been to Moro, and we would go again to Moro tomorrow if we could .
South African Blog de blog
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At The Society we pride ourselves on our relationships with our suppliers. Some provide exclusive parcels of wines for us – others come to the UK specifically to pour wines for and talk to members at bespoke tastings & events.
In this instance we have a digital offering – Mike Ratcliffe of Warwick Estate in Stellenbosch has a Society-specific video blog for members concerning the new vintage of Warwick Trilogy. Click on the picture to reveal all
The Vinitalian Job
Posted by: | CommentsTemperatures reaching 32*C; 12 pavilions with thousands of wines from every corner, nook and cranny of Italy; a buzz on the midnight streets of a city with not a hint of bad behaviour … it must be Vinitaly in Verona.
To experience Vinitaly (once through the crush of thousands of people trying to get through ridiculously small and few entrance gates – grrr!) is to take a glorious tasting tour of this beautiful country. From the purity of Alto Adige to the richness of Puglia and from the elegance of Etna to the patience-worthiness of Barolo, there is so much diversity and such great value for money to be had.
We visited firm members’ favourites, several of whom are really on song including:
- Joseph Hofstätter (Alto Adige) with the freshest pinot bianco around
- Fontodi (Chianti) whose vineyards are certified from the 2008 vintage (although have been working organically since 2001)
- Allegrini (Veneto) – fantastic freshness from a difficult 2010 vintage for Valpolicella
- Contesa (Abruzzo) – great Pecorino as ever
- Barberani (Orvieto) – celebrating their 50th vintage
- Monaci (Puglia) – from the best value Copertino we know to the depth and warmth of Le Braci.
Keep your eyes on the just-published list too for newer, lesser-known wines such as Falanghina and Aglianico from the La Guardiense cooperative in Campania, or elegant and perfumed wines from native grapes at the Nicosia estate on the sides of Mount Etna.
I have enjoyed joining Sebastian for a two-day exploration of this potted version of Italy tasting over 200 wines from around 40 growers, both well-known and up-and-coming. We firmly believe that the quality of The Society’s Italian offering at the moment is hard to beat for breadth, depth and value for money. Come taste and see!
A chance to taste Bordeaux in Bordeaux
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This first week in April, every year, is the time when the great and the good of the wine trade head out to Bordeaux to taste the latest vintage before heading back home to prepare the famous en primeur offer. The Society’s Sebastian Payne MW & Joanna Locke MW are out there as I type, tasting their way around the Right & Left Banks.
Members will recall that October saw the first ever UK consumer tasting for the Union des Grands Crus de Bordeaux (UGCB) in partnership with The Wine Society. It was a very successful event showing the 2008 vintage from over 100 Bordeaux properties.
In May the event is being repeated on an even grander scale in Bordeaux. Hangar 14 on the Quai des Chartrons overlooking the river is the venue for a tasting of the 2008s together with another vintage from the past decade from each of the member châteaux of the UGCB. Le Week-end des Grands Crus takes place on 7th & 8th May, offering the chance to have a foretaste of what you might have ordered from the 2008 en primeur campaign, as well as to get closer to the wines of Bordeaux by tasting them in the city and talking in detail with the people that grow the grapes and make the wine.
Following the tasting there are a number of Wine Passion dinners taking place in the properties, the perfect occasions to discover, or rediscover, French cuisine and the excellent food & wine matching opportunities that lie there.
Click here for all required information about le Week-end des Grands Crus.
We have five pairs of tickets for the tasting to give away, courtesy of the UGCB, to the first five members drawn at random who give the correct answer to the following question:
What is being tasted at Le Week-end des Grands Crus in May 2011?
A. Solely wines from 2008.
B. Wines from 2008 and another vintage from this decade.
C. Solely wines from another vintage from this decade.
Answers should be received via e-mail at tastings@thewinesociety.com before 5pm on Tuesday12th April 2011. Bonne chance!






