France
Bordeaux 2011: An Update
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There has been little written so far on the quality and style of the 2011 vintage in Bordeaux. However good some of the wines turn out to be, its almost inevitable fate is that it will be overshadowed by the much lauded 2010 and 2009 which preceded it. We prefer to keep our counsel until we have tasted the wines, which are currently being prepared for a week of trade and journalist tastings just before Easter.
The Wine Society Bordeaux team will be three this year – Sebastian and myself as usual, plus our new Head of Buying, Tim Sykes (in what will be only his third week with us; there’s dedication for you – I’m not sure he realises what he is letting himself in for!).
This first week will include visits to all the first growths, and tastings of many of the other, often most sought-after wines, all potential candidates for our first Opening Offer this year (see our website for details on changes to our Bordeaux Opening offer process for 2012).
We go back for more on 16th April, to ensure that we have tasted, at least once, as usual, any wine which we later decide to offer en primeur. I am just finalising our two visit programmes and starting to look forward to this year’s marathon, despite the prospect of taster’s teeth for the Easter weekend! We will keep you posted on the campaign from our perspective, and on our Opening Offers as they take shape.
Joanna Locke MW
Buyer, Bordeaux
Several Shades of White: Tasting With Basaline Granger-Despagne
Posted by: | CommentsDespagne’s wines, which we have been importing since around 1989, offer delicious proof, and a tasting with Basaline Granger-Despagne last week allowed Society staff to gain further insight into their increasingly eclectic portfolio.
Reds are of course made – and indeed many members will know of Despagne on account of their dangerously moreish Château Bel Air, Perponcher Réseve Rosé – but unusually it was white wines with which they made their name. When Basaline’s father set up the business in the late 1960s he believed it represented a gap in the market, and he was vindicated by immediate interest from countries with an established predilection for white wines (such as Germany, the Netherlands, the UK and Switzerland).
Several famed French wine regions abound with underrated white wines (e.g. Châteauneuf-du-Pape), and dry white Bordeaux continues to slip under the radar for many in this country – a situation that, understandably, frustrates Basaline. A trio of whites from Despagne’s current range offered serious proof that both the diversity and value of these wines make them more tempting than ever.
The 2010 vintage of Château Bel Air, Perponcher Réseve, Bordeaux Blanc (£8.50 per bottle) is one of the most enjoyable aperitif wines one could hope to find for the price, offering a beautifully balanced, citric, refreshing mouthful that is both complex and crowd pleasing.

The distinctive label for Les Amants de Mont Pérat was based on a series of sculptures by Basaline's sister-in-law.
Still only found in Bordeaux and Bergerac, muscadelle offers a delicious, subtle floral hint and some added weight to the wine. Used 50:50 with sauvignon, it produces a zesty yet substantial white, with very impressive length of flavour for its price tag. The individualism of the wine and its eye-catching label (a beautiful, modern drawing and a minimalist typeface in place of the more identikit château sketches we are used to) may show the direction in which white Bordeaux is going; if so, it’s an even more exciting prospect.
Lastly, the more traditionally-styled Château Mont Pérat Blanc (2008, £14.50) offered a taste of the more explicitly food-friendly style typified by the great wines of Graves and Pessac-Léognan. Though mainly sauvignon blanc, the addition of 30% semillon lends the wine a slightly waxy character, with marmalade-like fruit and complexity that makes these wines shine with so many different cuisines. These whites will only disappoint those whose tastes are for fashion rather than flavour – in my humble opinion, there’s no excuse not to try them.
Martin Brown
Digital Copywriter
A Wine Society Workshop
Posted by: | CommentsOn a Saturday morning that was still almost ‘deep and crisp and even’, ten wonderful warming reds from the right bank of the Garonne were tasted, discussed and enjoyed at The Wine Society’s second Stevenage-based wine workshop of 2012: ‘Bordeaux – Spotlight on the Right Bank’.
Having recently been visited by Edouard Moueix from Bordeaux négociant house, J.P. Moueix, the workshop, lead by The Society’s Bordeaux buyer Joanna Locke MW, featured a vertical tasting of three different vintages – 2003, 2005 and 2007 – from Moueix’ Pomerol property, Château Hosanna. From Château La Fleur Petrus (Pomerol), which has been owned by the Moueix famly since 1952, the 2007 and 2005 were compared and contrasted, followed by the same vintages from Château Belair, the Saint Emilion property which was bought by Moueix in 2008 from long established winemaker, Pascal Delbeck. While Moueix wines are known for their restraint and elegance, the more robust style of wine produced at their nearby neighbours in Pomerol, Château Gazin, were also featured. Comparing vintages from 2001, 2003 and 2007, members were able to fully appreciate the vast differences to the wines that bottle age and the many facets that contribute and determine the characteristics of a particular vintage, provide.Summing up at the end, one guest commented, “This has been so useful. You would never get to try vertically like this at home unless you opened umpteen bottles at once. When are you going to do the left bank and Burgundy?”
When indeed? Check the Tastings & Events section of The Society’s website for the list of all our up and coming workshops and you may find that ‘Demystifying Burgundy’ with buyer, Toby Morrhall, is on the 21st April!
Stephanie Searle
Tastings & Events team
Keeping Warm
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Murky East-Anglian skies and extremely chilly days call for robust warming reds. We like them with a bit of age. After rummaging in the cellar I found a glorious bottle of 1997 Flaccianello and a cheering 1990 Crozes Hermitage Thalabert.
Giovanni Manetti’s Flaccianello (we list the 2008 at present) is one of Tuscany’s finest wines and was a real treat. It tastes good after five years but better still after 10 and it can clearly last 20.
The 1990 Thalabert (the 2005 and 2006 are available from us currently) has now long lost its baby fat and initial fruit but has a wonderful mellow roasted quality. No point in hoarding longer.
It also served as a reminder to put in my order for 2010 Rhônes (offer closes at 9pm this evening). The inexpensive Villages mixed case is a no-brainer and Marcel tells me that it was an exceptional year for Côte-Rôtie. With some of the most hard-to-work slopes in France, and planted with vines since Roman times, Côte-Rôtie does not succeed fully every year, but when it does, you have something very fine.
Sebastian Payne MW
Chief buyer
My Fussy Valentine
Posted by: | CommentsWine Without Fuss subscribers will have received these recipes in their latest Premium Selection together with the perfect wines for the job. Members who don’t have anything suitable in the rack may like to make use of our Next Day Delivery service.
Despite the assurances of some (understandably) best-selling cookery books, the word ‘effortless’ has no place in the vocabulary of anyone who cares what they eat, but minimising effort is another matter, especially on the most romantic day of the year. This menu for two leaves plenty of time for canoodling. The starter is marinated the night before and cooks in under ten minutes. A slow cooker will prove its worth for the beef, which can be started in the morning and left to braise slowly all day, with the added bonus of glorious aromas when you return from doing other things. An authentic heart-shaped cheese rounds things off appropriately.Night in the Gardens of Spain
Give Pacific wild salmon the Atlantic kiss of life with this recipe, inspired by the last of the Seville oranges, brilliant for marinades. Place a 200g skin-on tail-fillet of wild salmon skin side down in a glass bowl. Add the juice of a Seville orange, or lemon and the finely-chopped stems of a small bunch of fresh coriander. In a saucepan, toast a pinch each of whole dried cumin and coriander seeds until they release their fragrance. Add 100ml medium Sherry, a tablespoon each of chilli-flavoured oil and top-quality Sherry vinegar and a dash of anchovy essence. Boil down to half the volume and leave to cool before straining over the fish. Leave overnight. Cometh the hour, preheat the grill. Put the fish, skin side up in the tray, without the grid, and pour the marinade around. Brush the skin with a little oil and grill for 6-8 minutes. Peel off the blackened skin, cut the fillet in half lengthwise and serve garnished with a mixture of salad leaves, including the reserved coriander.
Try this with a brisk Iberian white like Fefiñanes Albariño, 2010 (£14.95).
Love Me Tender
More than enough for two, with sublime leftovers. This can be simmered conventionally for two hours on a hob, but use a slow cooker for preference. Models and heat settings vary, but in principle, the beef and vegetables benefit from browning at high heat before 6-7 hours’ slow cooking. In a frying pan, heat a tablespoon of oil and soften an onion, carrot, two sticks of celery and a small fennel bulb, all finely diced. Transfer to the base of the cooker. Add a little more oil and brown a well-seasoned piece of lean beef topside, about 750g, on all sides. Lift it out of the pan and lay it on the vegetables in the cooker. Deglaze the pan with 500ml red wine, scraping up any beefy residues. Let it bubble for a few minutes while you tie together some sprigs of fresh parsley and thyme and a couple of bay leaves. Tuck under the meat and pour over the wine. Replace the lid and leave for at least six hours, until tender. Lift carefully from the cooker and transfer the vegetables and liquor to a blender (put the meat back in the slow cooker to keep warm) to make a smooth, tasty sauce. Carving will be difficult to let the meat collapse into chunks, or serve more elegantly in warmed individual casserole dishes, napped with the sauce and garnished with little potatoes and seasonal greens.
Serve with a generous South American red eg Koyle Reserva Carmenère, 2010 (£8.50).
Heart’s Delight
Say ‘cheese’ to the one you love
Far from being a Valentine’s Day gimmick, Neufchâtel cheese has been made in Normandy since the 16th century, and is protected by an appellation contrôlée. A heart-shaped cow’s milk cheese of the Chaource family, it’s velvety in texture, mild and subtly floral in taste. Once ripe, it should be eaten up, at its ethereal best, with a thin slice of walnut and raisin bread.
A medium white like Vouvray Sec Tendre, 2008 (£9.95) works brilliantly with soft, buttery cheeses.
Janet Wynne Evans
Specialist Wine Manager
A Video Interview with Edouard Moueix
Posted by: | CommentsLast week we were visited by Edouard Moueix from Bordeaux négociant house, J.P. Moueix. As well as owning some of the most illustrious properties on Bordeaux’s right bank – including Châteaux Petrus, Trotanoy and Magdelaine – the family-owned company produces numerous own-label blends and distributes wines from various Bordeaux châteaux. The Society has had the pleasure of working with Edouard and J.P. Moueix for a number of years.
Edouard is one of the most enthusiastic and engaging figures in Bordeaux wine, and so I enlisted the help of our trusty video camera to ask him about the company, the dramatic renovations at their recently acquired Saint-Emilion property, Château Belair Monange, and his interests outside wine.
I hope you enjoy the results, and should you wish to try some of his excellent wines, you can browse a selection at various price points below.
A selection of highlights from J.P. Moueix currently available from The Wine Society:
Christian Moueix, 2005, Bordeaux (£7.95 per bottle)
Moueix Côtes de Castillon, 2008 (£7.95 per bottle)
The Society’s St-Emilion, 2008 (£10.95 per bottle)
Château de la Commanderie, 2008, Lalande-de-Pomerol (£12.50 per bottle)
Château Certan Marzelle, 2005, Pomerol (£46 per bottle)
Château Hosanna, 2004, Pomerol (£60 per bottle)
A Good Week
Posted by: | CommentsI particularly enjoyed two member tastings in London last week.
First we displayed Pierre Mansour’s new range from New Zealand to a full house in RIBA. Particular highlights for me were the ranges from Hunter’s, Kumeu River and Prophet’s Rock.
I love Hunter’s food-friendly dry riesling, and our own Exhibition Marlborough Sauvignon which Jane Hunter supplies for is tasting particularly delicious. Pierre has done well to persuade the Brajkovich family of Kumeu River, chardonnay experts, to produce our own-label chardonnay too. Prophet’s Rock have made a pinot gris with real depth and flavour – the secret simply low yields, maturation on lees and later bottling. Their pinot noir is outstanding.

Steve Farrow being presented with the WSET's 'Gruppo Italiano Vini' Scholarship by Hugh Dupre and Jancis Robinson
The growers went on to a tasting in Harrogate. I went on to watch Steve Farrow, well known to members who visit The Cellar Showroom, receive his scholarship prize for passing his Wine & Spirits Education Trust Diploma with flying colours – a surprise for him, but not for us.
Later in the week, 100 members and guests were lucky enough to taste 10 vintages from 10 different châteaux from the commune of Margaux. As Charles Metcalfe pointed out, Margaux is a very diverse commune spread over quite a wide area with different soil types, and several of the classed growths have altered their vineyards since 1855. The château is just the brand name. It proved to be a vivid example, the diverse qualities, different years and properties. My notes are as follows:
Château Angludet, 2007:
Excellent healthy fruit and subtle palate. Good now.
Château du Tertre, 2006:
Particularly fragrant and delicious now, the property next to Château Angludet has a higher percentage of cabernet franc than other classed growths.
Château Durfort-Vivens, 2005:
A cabernet-based wine from a keeping vintage showing the bright vivid fruit, great perfume and length of flavour of the vintage, but still very young.
Château Kirwan, 2004:
Modern-style late-picked Margaux: generous flavour and enjoyable but less fine.
Château Rauzan-Segla, 2003:
A great vineyard in an exceptionally hot year, which burnt off some of the finesse. Spicy, rich, ready.
Château Giscours, 2002:
A vintage that needed time but the true Margaux fragrance grows in the glass. Lean, more old-fashioned Claret, but distinguished.
Château Prieuré-Lichine, 2001:
Full and generous and spicy. Excellent to drink now.
Château Ferrière, 2000:
A tiny vineyard but a superb, full, fine Claret. Delicious now but with a future too.
Château Palmer, 1996:
Not as rich and full as some recent Palmer vintages, but exuding class and quality.
Château Margaux, 1989:
Still a giant of real first-growth quality and many years ahead of it.
What a treat.
Sebastian Payne MW
Chief Buyer
The Ventoux
Posted by: | CommentsThe Mont Ventoux, known locally as the ‘geant de Provence’, dominates the landscape for miles around like a Mount Fuji, and it comes with a white summit that sparkles in the sun. The summit is white all year round but rarely thanks to snow: the Ventoux is a huge pile of limestone and at the summit it is quite bare.
The mountain features much in folklore and there are doubtless plenty of poems by Mistral. There are various stories about the name but one thing is certain and that is that it is seriously windy at the top. It stands at 1912m, making it the highest peak for miles around. An observatory was built on the summit and at the same time a road was built over the top. It’s a fun drive and only a wee bit scary near the summit, above the tree line where the rock is bare and white and when the gradient suddenly becomes interesting. The view from the top is fabulous, except on the day I chose to drive up, when low cloud reduced visibility to a few yards. It is of course one of the great cycling challenges and regularly features on the Tour de France.
The lower slopes are a sea of lavender and where there is shelter from the Mistral other crops are grown. There are fruit orchards and olives, and of course vineyards. The wines used to be called Côtes du Ventoux. Today the name has changed to Ventoux and it is very much a part of Rhône.
The Romans were possibly the first to grow grapes here; they saw the benefit of planting at slightly higher altitude amidst the ever-present cool Alpine breezes. There was a time when co-ops controlled all the production and then quality was not always good and prices always below that of simple Côtes du Rhône.
Things have changed. The climate is warmer and vintages here are more consistent. And the level of winemaking shows more skill and greater confidence.
Suddenly, too, there are a whole load of growers. The Ventoux has become smart. The fashion has brought higher prices (but not for all). A lot of Ventoux is sold to the Negoce – including Jaboulet, who make a very good wine at a very reasonable price. We are now buying from Château de Valcombe, which is excellent and which will feature in the 2010 Rhône opening offer.
Marcel Orford-Williams
Buyer, Rhône
The Society’s 2010 Rhône and Languedoc-Roussillon opening offer will be published next week.
The Perils of Tasting from Barrel in Burgundy: The Malolactic Fermentation
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One of the most challenging and interesting privileges of the buying job is to go out to Burgundy and taste a vintage from barrel in October, buy the wines and make an assessment of the vintage. October to December is the time when most buyers go to Burgundy to taste from barrel the wines of the main domaines and négociants of the Côte D’Or.
Last October I was tasting the superb 2010 vintage after a year in cask. A few wines are already bottled, mainly whites, but most are still in barrel or tank awaiting bottling usually January to March 2012. However, it is not without its pitfalls.
In theory, October is generally a good time to taste. Ideally the crucial secondary fermentation, the malolactic (hereafter malo) fermentation, will have taken place in spring.
Before the malo, wines are very difficult to judge, especially red wines, although the worst time is during the process itself where the reds can taste metallic and all sorts of buttery and cheesy aromas can occur in the whites as the malic (the sharper appley acidity) is transformed to the lactic acidity (the milder milk acidity). Then frequently for a couple of months after the malo the wine will not taste well. The aromas and the flesh of the wine seem to disappear leaving a hollow shell.
Temperature is one of the crucial factors required for the malo to take place. The process normally takes place as the temperature reaches 16-19ºC. Given Burgundy’s more continental climate, it is quite cool at vintage time (when the harvest is mid-September and global warming doesn’t mess it all up) and after the wines have finished their alcoholic fermentation they are sent to barrel to rest in the autumnal cool of the cellar and it is not until spring arrives that the temperature rises to the necessary level.
It has now been discovered that the traditional empirical Burgundy view that a six month delay between the two fermentations is beneficial for red wine, helping to soften the astringent nature of the tannins. It had long been held as controversial by the Bordelais. As sulphur blocks the fermentation none is added, and the men in white coats, the oenologues, considered that the wine is potentially at risk from spoilage yeasts and bacteria during this time. In Bordeaux’s warmer Atlantic climate, and because wines are stored above cellars in chais in the Médoc (because the water table is too high to dig cellars) the malo traditionally takes place in tank immediately after the alcoholic fermentation in October. It can be artificially inoculated to speed the process up. The wine is then sulphured and sent to barrel.
However, in the absence of sulphur, alcohol oxidises to acetaldehyde and this is a catalyst in red wines to encourage colour (anthocyanins) and tannins to form complexes that provide a round and velvety mouthfeel. Tannins not bound to colour are hard and spiky. For a number of years it has been the height of fashion in Bordeaux to delay the onset of the malolactic fermentation and for it to happen in barrel.
In very hot years like 2009 there is little malic acid in the grapes, whereas a cooler year like 2010 will have much more. In the cooler years the wine is transformed by this process and many ugly ducklings have become elegant swans. However, there is a Catch Twenty Two here. The higher acid the vintage, and thus the more beneficial to the wine for the malo to occur, the more difficult it is to start the process.
So that seems clear and fine then! The buyer must arrive in October when the wines will be tasting beautifully after a spring malo. If only it were that simple!
In practice the malo takes place when it wants to. Even in the same cellar in October there can be some wines that went through it early, some late, and some have yet to do it. The process is still only partially understood. Some say a new barrel which has less sulphur residue and allows more oxygen ingress helps the process, others say old barrels carry the malolactic bacteria, and help inoculate the process. Once the malo has finished, the maturation process begins and the wine starts to change. One should really consider a wine’s age and maturity not from the date of the harvest but from the date of the malo.
After the malo each cellar may then proceed quite differently. Some cellars rack from barrel to barrel. In this case the individual character of the barrel is preserved. Some cellars rack all the wine into tank and then back into barrel. In this case the barrels have been assembled and should taste similar. Some, like Jean-Marie Fourrier do not rack at all, which means his wines have more carbon dioxide in the wine, which can cut the richness of the wine, but against that the wine has been left to enrich itself on its lees without disturbance. Some add more or less sulphur at this time which can ‘bleach’ the flavours from the wine, which may require 6-8 weeks to recover.
Principally for this reason, I do not pay too much attention to assessments of Burgundy between one and six months after the vintage. In this media age we are all being pestered to give instant opinions but, in my view, it is very dangerous to assess a wine before malo as they can totally change character. A famous agent Russell Hone describes the 1993 red Burgundies as ‘performing a backflip’ after malo. It was very harsh and metallic before malo, softened appreciably after it and is now considered a great vintage.
Thus when one arrives in a cellar and before tasting one of the first questions to ask is when the malo, or malos took place, and were the wines racked afterwards, and in which case were they assembled in tank or racked from barrel to barrel. Now one can begin to assess the wines before you and make allowances if necessary for the blessed malo!
Toby Morrhall
Buyer, Burgundy
The Society’s opening offer of 2010 Burgundy will be available in late February.
Burgundy and Woodcock
Posted by: | CommentsNot that I’ve had much need of the word bécasse over the years. As Burgundy buyer Toby Morrhall has described, and as I was reminded at our local farmers’ market last weekend, woodcock is a rare and fine wild game bird. I once saw one close up because a French friend of mine has a passion for shooting feathered game, and one fell foul, illegally I seem to remember, of over enthusiasm at a birthday shooting party.
Last weekend’s woodcock had been shot ‘at too close range’ to make it saleable to a fine restaurant, which is apparently where most end up. Not a pretty thought, but, the meat in our Woodcock, Sage and Apricot stuffed Pheasant was just as it was billed: not quite as dark as pigeon, rich but not gamey, tender and velvet textured. And yes, I dug out a delightful, if modest, mature Burgundy to accompany it, which even my pinot-averse husband agreed was an ideal match. Here’s to the farmers’ market revival, for which I think we have a lot to thank our French friends and neighbours.
Joanna Locke MW





