Bordeaux vintages are typically remembered for the quality of the year’s wines or for a dramatic weather pattern during the growing season. Yet the conversation around the 2019 vintage, now being shipped, was markedly different, defined by the outbreak of COVID-19 in the early spring of 2020. While the pandemic had no effect on the wines themselves, the ensuing market volatility and economic headwinds—some of which have yet to abate—presented fresh challenges for the region, not only in getting the wines tasted by professionals, but also in bringing them to market. The 2019 vintage was the first year since 2010 for which I was unable to travel to Bordeaux and taste the wines from barrel during their en primeur period, and now global supply chain issues are causing delays in shipping.
Regardless of the powerful hype that roars to life every en primeur season, the real proof for a new vintage of Bordeaux is in the bottle later on. Over the last several months of 2021, I tasted nearly 500 finished wines from Bordeaux’s 2019 vintage via blind tastings conducted in our New York office. The results show a year whose wines are marked by extreme heat and drought, with impressive highs countered by less successful efforts.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der March 31, 2022-Ausgabe von Wine Spectator.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der March 31, 2022-Ausgabe von Wine Spectator.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
Shipwrecked Champagne Hoard Discovered Near Sweden
It sometimes feels like wine has a habit of falling into the briny deep. On July 23, Polish wreck diver and underwater photographer Tomasz Stachura announced that he and his Baltictech team had discovered the wreck of a 19th-century sailing ship near Öland, an island off the coast of Sweden—and it was crammed with bottles of Champagne and mineral water.
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Three Napa wineries filed a joint lawsuit in federal court in September alleging that Napa County officials violated their constitutional rights.
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Kistler's DARKER SIDE
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THE SPLENDOR OF CHAMPAGNE
THE REGION'S LEADING PRODUCERS DELIVER HIGH QUALITY AMID A DIVERSE RANGE OF STYLES
MICHAEL BATTERBERRY: 1932-2010 Gourmet, Journalist, Gentleman
Before Food Network, Top Chef or Yelp ... before the term “foodie\" ... before tomatoes were heirloom and sushi was fast food... back when fancy restaurants were always French... Michael Batterberry and his wife, Ariane, were working to celebrate and elevate the status of American chefs and international cuisine. Julie Mautner, Food Arts' former executive editor, looks at the life and legacy of her late mentor, affectionately known as The Bat.