First Thoughts on the 2011 Bordeaux Vintage
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One of the oldest properties in the Médoc:
Château d’Issan in Margaux
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General Comment on the Region and Its Wines
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The wines being produced in Bordeaux today would
shake the collector or, indeed, merchant of thirty
years ago to his or her core. The sheer quantity of
good wine being produced is, of course,
unprecedented; quality is being found in those dusty
corners of the region where hitherto self-respecting
aficionados would barely deign to glance. And the
style of wine emanating from Bordeaux has changed
radically. It’s this last point that I would
like tio dwell on momentarily.
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The conversation I had with my host at Château
La Mission Haut Brion during my tasting of the 2011
wines was telling. Monsieur’s point was that,
even compared to great classic vintages of the recent
past (and here he mentioned 1989 and 1990 as
examples), the wines produced in Bordeaux of late are
leviathans.
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The reasons for this are several. A reduction in
yields has led to wines of greater concentration. I
was advised that La Mission produced over eighty
hectolitres per hectare in the 1980s., compared to
forty-five today. Then there’s canopy
management. Leaves are trimmed from the vines at such
a time as to maximise the ripening effect of the sun:
another activity that has the potential to
concentrate the end wine.
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And, of course, there’s the change in climate
we’ve been experiencing. Recent vintages have
been marked by drought and a lack of water tends to
lead to smaller grapes with thicker skins. (I was
amazed to discover that many of the wines produced in
Bordeaux in 2011 have the highest ever IPT levels,
that measure of total phenolic content, including
tannin. And this is after 2009 and 2010, the two
previous record holders! Drought, once again, is the
cuplrit.)
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If we can cast our minds back to the 1980s and a time
when the influence of Robert Parker was, as yet,
barely felt, one of the main failings of red Bordeaux
wine was a lack of concentration. And one of the main
things that Parker’s influence caused was a
drive towards wines of greater density. This was
entirely apt for a time when perhaps two vintages in
a decade produced fruit of ideal ripeness. Now, I am
not so sure. To go on striving for greater and
greater concentration in a world in which it is easy
enough to achieve such concentration is asking for
trouble, risking the production of wines that are
super-sized parodies of themselves.
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Looking more like the sign for a Sri Lankan tea
plantation, the indication is an easy one to miss
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Applying the Above to 2011
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As already mentioned, in one sense the wines of 2011
are, like their immediate forebears, parodic. Caused
by a long period of drought, tannin levels were
potentially extremely high. Yet everything else about
these wines – at least the better wines of the
vintage – is controlled and unexagerated.
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I was struck by the sheer loveliness of the wines of
La Mission and Haut Brion, that they appeared
über-elegant when compared to some other wines
I’d been tasting. And with questioning, I found
out why. Cuvaison was a full four or five days
shorter than normal. That is, the total time spent
during fermentation and maceration was reduced. The
best expression of the 2011 vintage is gained through
gentle treatment of the fruit, not via maximum
extraction.
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And right then, I wondered whether this isn’t
what we’re coming to in Bordeaux and elsewhere.
That obsession with concentration that is a legacy of
the past should now, perhaps, be put aside and the
vintages be allowed to talk to us with more natural
voice. Do I want wine to impress me? Or do I want to
enjoy the experience of drinking it? I understand
that the two questions are not necessarily mutually
exclusive, but my keywords for the wines I want at my
table remain: elegant; subtle; appetising;
refreshing; complex; beautiful. Reading them, it
seems as though those words have more relevance to
the wines of yesteryear than those of today.
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Château Lagrange, St Julien
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And How Are the 2011 Bordeaux Wines?
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Well, I have to say that I was as surprised as the
next man. There are a great many superb wines this
vintage.
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In style, the red wines are fresh, very pure, crisp
and, in many cases, endearingly floral. They have
great length and I often found the most refreshing
tannin.
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They are smaller wines, generally speaking, than
those produced in 2010 and they are less ripe than
the 2009s. They are considerably lower in alcohol
than those vintages. Yet they are delicious and, yes,
beautiful.
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The dry whites are, by-and-large, extremely good. The
best are complex, highly mineral and well
concentrated; concentrated in all the best ways.
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The sweet white wines have great potential. The best
are loaded with botrytis, have great density and
excellent minerality. A few are loose, like lime-y
kapok, but the best are really very exciting indeed.
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