Burgundy remained the inspiration even after the Judgment of Paris, and as Chardonnay’s toehold in California turned into a foothold, many newer producers, determined to adhere faithfully to the Burgundian playbook, began putting their wines through malolactic fermentation, a process that converts tart malic acid (at this point, it is customary to say, “Think green apple,” so I’ll say it: Think green apple) into softer, more palate-friendly lactic acid. It is a necessary step in Burgundy, where the northerly climate can leave the grapes with too much acidic bite. California, though, has the opposite problem: because the weather is often so warm, the grapes can be short on acidity.
Although some of the first serious Chardonnays in California benefited from malolactic fermentation, the process became a standard feature of Chardonnay production in California in the 1980s and frequently yielded thick, creamy, almost zaftig wines that also displayed a pronounced buttery note (a by-product of this secondary fermentation). It didn’t help that a lot of vintners were harvesting overripe fruit that was notably deficient in acidity. At the same time, the use of oak turned increasingly indiscriminate, to the point where the wood tended to overwhelm the wine. Thus the irony: classic Burgundian methods ended up taking California Chardonnay in a distinctly un-Burgundian direction. And this was true across all price points, from discount bottlings to high-end ones. Sweet, fat, and oaky emerged as the signature California style.
It is an undeniably popular one, a point underscored by the fact that the amount of California Chardonnay sold annually has quintupled over the last two decades. But you won’t find much California Chardonnay in my cellar. For me, most California Chardonnays are clumsy and cloying; they taste like melted popsicles and are exhausting to drink and pretty much impossible to pair with food. They are often described as cocktail wines, and that’s precisely what they are—except I wouldn’t want to drink them for cocktails, either. Nor am I a solitary refusenik; lots of grape nuts now live by that aforementioned abbreviation, ABC.
However, some of the long-established names still make svelte, delicious Chardonnays. The list includes not only Montelena and Hanzell but also Ridge Vineyards, Mount Eden, Stony Hill Winery, Mayacamas Vineyards, and Au Bon Climat. And some of the new names mentioned in the California chapter are making sensational Chardonnays in a restrained, Burgundian style, as well. That list includes Rhys, Copain, Wind Gap, Arnot-Roberts, Tyler, and Sandhi (in particular, look for the Rhys Horseshoe Vineyard Chardonnay and the Sandhi Sanford & Benedict Vineyard Chardonnay). But these producers account for just a small fraction of the Chardonnay that is made in California, so how much of a bellwether they are is hard to say. From what I can see, the butterball style of Chardonnay is still quite popular with many vintners and consumers alike; I certainly don’t see any indication that these confections are yet going the way of bell-bottoms.
If there is a grape that most wine geeks would like to see eclipse Chardonnay, it is unquestionably Riesling. No grape breeds devotion quite like Reisling, and Riesling has become the darling of sommeliers everywhere. In fact, one of them, the New York sommelier Paul Grieco, is such a Riesling fanatic that he often sports a temporary tattoo with the word Riesling in big letters down the length of his right forearm. He also started an annual celebration called the Summer of Riesling. Each summer, restaurants around the United States showcase this Germanic grape in all its geographic and stylistic splendor (Riesling excels at capturing the attributes of the vineyards in which it is grown; it has the same transparency that you find in Pinot Noir). It has been a wildly successful venture that underscores just how popular Riesling has become. In fact, if there is one commandment that holds sway in the wine world today, it is this: thou shalt never speak ill of Riesling.
But Riesling, too, has its problems—specifically, it has an identity problem. Should it be sweet or dry? In France’s Alsace region, where Riesling is the primary grape, vintners have split the difference: some of the Rieslings are dry, others are fairly sweet. It is a confusing situation made more confusing by the fact that the labels don’t tell you whether the wines are dry or sweet. Essentially, you need to be familiar with the producer’s style to know what kind of Riesling you are getting, which is not a great situation for consumers. The most reliably dry Alsatian Rieslings, and the best Alsatian Rieslings I know, come from Trimbach, a venerable producer whose winemaking history dates back to the seventeenth century. Trimbach has two wines, the Cuvée Frédéric Emile and the exceedingly rare Clos Ste. Hune, which I think are two of the finest dry Rieslings on the planet.
But Riesling’s true heartland is just over the border from Alsace, in Germany, and for at least the past sixty years or so, a certain amount of sweetness has been a defining attribute of German Rieslings. There is some dispute as to whether the “fruity” style can be described as traditional; while sweet wines enjoyed great prestige in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, they were rarities then, and most German wines were apparently fairly dry. The advent of sterile filtration enabled German winemakers to stop fermentations in order to consistently produce wines with discernible amounts of residual sugar. And German consumers developed a raging thirst for such Rieslings after World War II, a fact that is generally attributed to postwar sugar rationing, which had the paradoxical effect of giving Germans an insatiable sweet tooth.
The 1971 German Wine Law introduced a hierarchy known as the Prädikat scale, which was based on the ripeness of the grapes at harvest—that is, the amount of sugar they contained. From lowest to highest, the classifications were Kabinett, Spätlese, Auslese, Beerenauslese, and Trockenbeerenauslese. (Between all the cumbersome names, the classifications, and the morass of regulations, trying to decipher German wine laws is like trying to master the tax code; it makes Burgundy look like a paragon of simplicity.) A lot of dreck was marketed under these headings, but the best examples were elegant, complex Rieslings with a perfect balance of sweetness, acidity, and minerality and the added virtue of being very low in alcohol, typically just 7 to 10 percent. They were some of the most distinctive, enthralling wines in the world.
But in the 1970s and ’80s, German drinkers soured on sweetish Rieslings. During this period Germany saw a proliferation of French-influenced restaurants, and consumers demanded dry wines. The first wave of trocken (dry) Rieslings was pretty abysmal; they were often lean and harshly acidic (“battery acid” was a popular description). But thanks to better viticulture, and with some help from global warming, quality has improved dramatically in recent years, and numerous excellent dry German Rieslings are now on the market. Meanwhile, domestic demand for fruity Rieslings has effectively collapsed; German palates have been completely reoriented, and Rieslings with pronounced residual sugar are now outcasts in their own neighborhood. David Schildknecht, who covers Germany for Robert Parker’s Wine Advocate, humorously describes this volte-face as “bipolar Riesling disorder” and says that Germans have succumbed to “trocken fanaticism.”
The fruity style is being kept alive, barely, by foreign consumers, and Americans in particular, which is another ironic twist to this story. Back in the 1970s, Americans were smitten with Liebfraumilch, of which treacly Blue Nun was the foremost brand. The inevitable backlash made German wines a dead category in the United States for many years thereafter. The road out of perdition was paved by two importers, Rudi Wiest and Terry Theise, who together represent a who’s who of top German estates. Wiest and Theise brought in the finest off-dry and sweet German Rieslings and traveled the country preaching their virtues. These efforts paid off with the 2001 vintage, a superb year that generated enormous excitement and which created an ardent American following for the likes of J. J. Prüm, Dönnhoff, J. J. Christoffel, Dr. Loosen, Fritz Haag, and other great German growers. German wine imports to the United States have surged in the past decade, and the American market has truly become a lifeline for the fruity style. Theise told me a few years ago that if he stopped importing these wines to the United States, the producers would very likely
stop making them.
Hopefully that will never happen, and those of us who enjoy Riesling can continue to have it in a variety of styles, not only from Germany and Alsace but from other regions, too. The grape does well in a variety of places. Austria produces fantastic Rieslings, both dry and sweet. Australia has had a lot of success with dry versions. The grape also has a bright future in the United States. Some appealing Rieslings have been produced on the West Coast, but the most promising American Rieslings are coming out of the Finger Lakes region of New York State, whose steep, water-facing vineyards and mineral-rich soils call to mind the Mosel Valley. Two wineries, Hermann J. Wiemer and Dr. Konstantin Frank, were the Riesling pioneers in these parts and have been making good wines for decades. They’ve lately been joined by some stellar newcomers, such as Ravines and Bloomer Creek, and the overall quality of Finger Lakes Rieslings has really started to soar. It has truly become a Riesling stronghold and is one of the most dynamic wine regions in the United States.
Periodically other white wine grapes emerge as possible challengers to Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc. For a time Grüner Veltliner, a variety native to Austria, was the new “it” grape. It was popular with sommeliers in New York and San Francisco, who hawked it as a delicious alternative to Chardonnay. Personally, I think their enthusiasm got the better of them. Grüner can yield very good wines, but for my taste it just doesn’t possess much of a wow factor—certainly nothing like you find in the best Chardonnays or Rieslings. The Albariño grape from northern Spain then got hot. Albariño can make genuinely great wines—wines that can hold their own against good white Burgundies and German Rieslings. The Albariños from producers such as Pedralonga and Do Ferreiro, for instance, are sensational. However, there are also a lot of insipid Albariños, with an overbearingly tropical fruitiness—tutti-frutti would be a good way of describing it—that I find off-putting. There is just not enough of the good stuff at this point to enable Albariño to be anything more than a niche grape.
The grape that I would most love to see achieve superstar status is Chenin Blanc. Chenin is easily the most protean grape on the planet: it turns out sensational dry, off-dry, and sweet wines and can also be used to make terrific sparkling wines. Chenin isn’t exactly obscure, but it has never quite achieved the kind of renown and following that Chardonnay, Sauvignon Blanc, and Riesling enjoy. At one time it was the most widely planted white wine grape in California. But then Chardonnay took over in the 1970s, and Chenin has been an obscurity in California ever since. What’s preventing Chenin from attracting a wider following? No idea. Maybe it is a tactile thing: the wines often have a waxy texture, which some drinkers might find unpleasant. Whatever the case, Chenin has never quite caught on, which is unfortunate, because it can really make some head-spinning wines.
Perhaps, though, there’s some hope for Chenin. Nowhere is it grown in greater abundance than in South Africa, where it was first planted in the seventeenth century. Although plenty of Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc is grown in South Africa, too, the local wine industry has had particular success with Chenin in the years since apartheid ended and the industry was revitalized, and it is generally agreed now that Chenin is likeliest to emerge as the country’s signature white wine. South Africa does turn out some very tasty Chenins, and as these wines gain a greater international following, it might spark some interest in other Chenins, notably those of France’s Loire Valley.
The Loire, known as the Garden of France, is where Chenin reaches its apogee. A lot of mediocre Chenin is produced in the Loire, but the good stuff is as good as any white wine in the world. The Vouvray appellation in particular turns out magical wines. Domaine Huet is a legendary Vouvray producer (it was even mentioned in Sideways, which sent a frisson of delight down the spine of every wine geek in the theater) and makes some of the most enthralling wines you will ever taste. Huet demonstrates the incredible versatility of Chenin, crafting dry, semisweet, sweet, and sparkling wines. The three dry, or sec, Vouvrays, Clos du Bourg, Le Mont, and Le Haut-Lieu, are not only delicious; they have the added virtue of being amazingly affordable (around $30 a bottle) relative to the quality they offer. But Huet isn’t the only beacon in Vouvray; Philippe Foreau/Domaine du Clos Naudin, François Pinon, François Chidaine, Jacky Blot/Domaine de la Taille aux Loups, and Bernard Fouquet/Domaine des Aubuisières make outstanding wines, too, a number of which are also very attractively priced (Fouquet’s Cuvée de Silex sec is a sensational wine, and at $15 a bottle is so cheap that one almost feels guilty buying it).
François Chidaine and Jacky Blot also make stellar Chenins in the neighboring appellation of Montlouis, whose wines display the same floral, deliciously fruity style that you find in Vouvray, along with the same chalky minerality. But another Loire appellation, Savenièrres, shows Chenin in an entirely different light. There the Chenins (they go by the name Savennières) are steely, fairly austere, and intensely mineral. I wouldn’t necessarily say that they are challenging wines, but for people who like lots of perky fruit flavors, a Savennières can be something of a shock—a mineral-and-acid bath. It doesn’t help that the wines take years to reach full maturity and are even then pretty austere. Jacqueline Friedrich, an American writer residing in France and the author of A Wine and Food Guide to the Loire, describes Savennières as “the most cerebral wine in the world,” which is not necessarily a selling point in an era when consumers generally prefer the easy-sippin’ stuff. But I like the elusive, almost feline character of Savennières, and the good ones can be superb. The most famous Savennières estate is Coulée de Serrant, which makes a wine from the vineyard of the same name. These days the property is famous for another reason: it is owned by Nicolas Joly, the wine world’s best-known and most dogmatic proponent of biodynamic viticulture. But as I noted in Chapter Four, Joly’s wines don’t live up to the reputation of the estate and don’t make a particularly compelling case for the biodynamic approach. If you want to taste good Savennières, look instead for examples from Domaine d’Epiré, Damien Laureau, Domaine du Closel, Jo Pithon, and Domaine des Baumard. These are all terrific Chenins and will, along with those Vouvrays, underscore why this grape deserves its star turn.
THE GREATEST CHARDONNAYS
• Krug Clos du Mesnil (Champagne)
• Salon (Champagne)
• Taittinger Comtes de Champagne (Champagne)
• Jacques Selosse “Substance” (Champagne)
• Domaine François Raveneau Chablis Les Clos (Burgundy)
• Domaine Vincent Dauvissat Chablis Les Preuses (Burgundy)
• Domaine J.-F. Coche-Dury Corton Charlemagne (Burgundy)
• Domaine de la Romanée-Conti Le Montrachet (Burgundy)
• Domaine Leflaive Chevalier-Montrachet (Burgundy)
• Domaine Guy Roulot Meursault-Perrieres (Burgundy)
• Domaine Lafon Meursault-Perrieres (Burgundy)
THE GREATEST RIESLINGS
• Trimbach Riesling Cuvée Frédéric Emile (Alsace—dry)
• Trimbach Riesling Clos Ste. Hune (Alsace—dry)
• J. J. Prüm (Germany—numerous wines, all worth buying; these are off-dry and sweet)
• Willi Schaefer (ditto)
• Helmut Dönnhoff (ditto)
• Keller (ditto—these are dry)
• Schäfer-Fröhlich (ditto—these are dry)
• F. X. Pichler (Austria)
9
QPR
I DON’T KNOW if wine geeks have a greater affinity for abbreviations than other hobbyists, but we do toss around our share of them. DRC. ITB. VA. DP. RP. RO. OWC. (See the box below for the meanings.) Probably the most popular one, both in terms of usage and meaning, is QPR, or quality-price ratio. Spend any time lurking on a wine discussion board and you are apt to see this particular abbreviation invoked liberally to describe wines that are thought to offer good value for the money.
DRC: Domaine de la Romanée-Conti
ITB: in the wine business
VA: volatile acidity
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DP: Dom Pérignon
RP: Robert Parker
RO: reverse osmosis
OWC: original wooden case
It is sometimes used as a backhanded compliment, a polite way of saying that a big selling point is the price. Generally, though, it is a form of high praise, indicating that a wine is not only pleasurable but also an excellent deal for the quality. QPR has become a particularly prized attribute in the years since the economy slipped on a banana peel. Consumers, critics, and retailers alike are all fixated on value these days, and even as the economy recovers, that doesn’t appear to be changing. Amid the hard times, a lot of people have made a very pleasant discovery: you don’t need to spend much money to drink really well.
Value, of course, is a relative term, one defined by your personal circumstances and the state of the economy generally. In June 2008, I wrote a column for Slate touting what I believed were the world’s best-value blue-chip wines. I used $150 as the cutoff point, the price beyond which a wine could not be considered a value play. Suffice it to say, my timing was not ideal. The investment bank Bear Stearns had recently gone under, Lehman Brothers was teetering, and the housing market was starting to buckle. Just six months after that column appeared, the global economy was in freefall, and the article had become an amusing relic of a bygone era. Hundred-and-fifty-dollar value wines? As if! True, the market for the rarest Burgundies and Bordeaux, after briefly swooning, quickly recovered, and those wines have only gotten pricier in the years since the Great Recession hit. But the superaffluent who buy those wines are recession-proof in a way that most of us are not, and for many wine enthusiasts, the prolonged economic downturn has yielded a change in buying habits that is likely to last long into the future. People are no longer so willing to drop $80 on a Napa Cabernet or $50 on a highly rated Australian Shiraz. The sour economy didn’t sour consumers on wine; it has just made them much more selective and a whole lot thriftier.
The Wine Savant: A Guide to the New Wine Culture Page 12