Название: Best of Bordeaux
Автор: Rolf Bichsel
Издательство: Автор
Жанр: Кулинария
isbn: 9783033059160
isbn:
fi
ed urbanisation is virtu-
ally a miracle, and a tribute to the efforts of the chateau owners who fought for
the creation of their own appellation which has existed since the 1986 vintage.
Ever since, this appellation has produced both red wines (80% of bottles) and
dry whites on assorted undulations of gravel and sand. The rare limestone soils
are kept for the white wines. The best reds are elegant, slender, well structured
and suitable for laying down. The white wines are fruity and juicy, assuredly
ample and lively yet always well balanced and good for laying down.
Sauternes
2,200 hectares of vines I 200 producers I 4 million bottles a year
Barsac is part of Sauternes but not vice-versa, and these two villages together
with Bommes, Preignac and Fargues are situated on the left bank of the Garonne
around 40 kilometres south of Bordeaux. Semillon is the main variety at 80%,
supplemented by Sauvignon and some Muscadelle, growing on gravel, sand,
limestone and clay soils. The grapes are harvested late in multiple harvests. One
hectare in Sauternes produces around 1,500 to 2,000 bottles of sweet wine. Sau-
ternes wines have gained aromatic precision, finesse, freshness and sophistica-
tion. They are sweet and fruity but not clumsy, even quite light in their own
way. They make delicious aperitifs, are excellent accompaniments to modern
cuisine as well as Asian dishes and snacks, and can be drunk young or left to
age for decades.
Graves
3,500 hectares of vines I 240 producers I 20 million bottles a year
Graves begins at the city gates of Bordeaux: Pessac-Léognan is a village appella-
tion in this underrated region. It extends for around 60 kilometres along the left
bank of the Garonne as far as Langon and has characteristic gravel soils (‘graves'
in French) mixed with sand and clay. Around three quarters of its wines are pow-
erful, characterful reds. The whites offer structure and sophistication.
57
Right bank Appellations
Saint-Emilion
5,500 hectares of vines I 800 producers I 35 million bottles a year
Nine communes around the small town of Saint-Emilion, around 50 kilometres
east of Bordeaux, are entitled to use this AOC. The principal variety is Merlot.
The Saint-Emilion Grand Cru designation is reassessed every year, while the
Saint-Emilion Grand Cru Classé A (4 estates), Premier Grand Cru Classé B (14
estates) and Grand Cru Classé (65 estates) classifications are reviewed every ten
years or so. The best wines come from the limestone plateau and its slopes of
clay over limestone around the town, and from a gravel, clay and sand terrace
to the north-west of the region (commune of Figeac – Cheval Blanc). The soils at
the foot of these slopes (Pied de Côtes) consist of clay, sand and gravel. Merlot
(around 60%) is supplemented by Cabernet Franc and a little Cabernet Sauvi-
gnon. Specific locations have a signi
fi
cant impact on the style: subtle and excep-
tionally elegant but with good aging potential (plateau), lively and dense medi-
um-bodied wines (slopes and lowlands), particularly fruity with character and
finesse (Figeac), characterised by woody notes and rich in extract in the style of
a Bolgheri (modernists), or compact and sharp (lowlands along the Dordogne).
Pomerol
800 hectares of vines I 150 winemakers I 4 million bottles a year
Pomerol, an oval four kilometres long and three kilometres wide on the right
banks of the Garonne and Dordogne, is the smallest of the large Bordeaux ap-
pellations in terms of size. The best ferrous loam soils with varying proportions
of clay and gravel can be found on the ‘plateau' around the church. In the west
towards the Isle – the Gironde's third river – the soils contain clay and sand and
produce lighter wines. In the east, Pomerol adjoins the vineyards of Saint-Emil-
ion (Figeac and Cheval Blanc estates). Merlot is the main variety at 80% and
produces elegant, velvety, full-bodied yet smooth wines.
Fronsac / Canon-Fronsac
1,100 hectares of vines I 150 producers I Around 8 million bottles a year
These two neighbouring appellations stand on a horseshoe-shaped chain of
hills between the Dordogne and the Isle, at a somewhat higher altitude than
those in Pomerol and Saint-Emilion in a relatively windy location, which has a
major impact on the maturation process and style of wine. Only a few winemak-
ers, mostly members of the Expression de Fronsac cooperative, produce great
wines. Clay over molasse and limestone soils, around 80% of which are planted
with Merlot, produce the most ‘Italian' of all the Bordeaux wines with angular
СКАЧАТЬ