Welcome to much, but not all, of the 2019 vintage in Burgundy, especially for the reds. Even a d'Angerville Volnay 1er Cru I tried was jammy and overripe.originally posted by BJ:
Vacation wine: 2019 M Juillot Bourgogne rougeWell made wine, but weird - I typically like Juillot's traditionalism, but I would never guess this as a pinot - blind I would have guessed a superripe Beaujolais or even a Cotes du Rhone. I guess climate change is apace.
Exactly. I know people who thought that 2003 was the greatest thing since 1947 (they had also been super-enthusiastic about 1990, a vintage that I always had mixed feelings about). OTOH, my ideal vintage, 1993, put many, many people off (but guess what, it now brings huge prices at auctions).originally posted by Rahsaan:
I guess it depends on preferences. And careful selection, of course...
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Welcome to much, but not all, of the 2019 vintage in Burgundy, especially for the reds.
Bourgogne the region. Although I could probably say the same for many other parts of France -- when in shops in Paris and I've pointed out a very good St-Jo producer's 2018 at 15% stated alcohol and in another shop a very good Sancerre producer's 2019 rouge (I may be off by a vintage -- my memory isn't as good as it used to be) at 14.5%, the response in the shops was, well many others had alcohols that high but put lower numbers on the labels. What-about-ism isn't just for the US.originally posted by BJ:
Claude, when you mention 2017 reds, do you mean here Bourgogne or French reds generally?
My vintage knowledge is pretty time warped and I haven't kept up.
originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Bourgogne the region. Although I could probably say the same for many other parts of France -- when in shops in Paris and I've pointed out a very good St-Jo producer's 2018 at 15% stated alcohol and in another shop a very good Sancerre producer's 2019 rouge (I may be off by a vintage -- my memory isn't as good as it used to be) at 14.5%, the response in the shops was, well many others had alcohols that high but put lower numbers on the labels. What-about-ism isn't just for the US.originally posted by BJ:
Claude, when you mention 2017 reds, do you mean here Bourgogne or French reds generally?
My vintage knowledge is pretty time warped and I haven't kept up.
2021 is very promising from what I've tasted for those who like freshness and moderate alcohol, but quantities are minute. Also, look to Savoie and Jura where some producers are even coming in at less than 11% (not all are successful, but enough are to perhaps cause others to rethink).
Altitude, picking earlier, or both?originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Also, look to Savoie and Jura where some producers are even coming in at less than 11% (not all are successful, but enough are to perhaps cause others to rethink).
Altitude, picking earlier, or both?originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Also, look to Savoie and Jura where some producers are even coming in at less than 11% (not all are successful, but enough are to perhaps cause others to rethink).
These, for the most part, were wines purchased in France.originally posted by robert ames:
to muddy the waters, during the time of the tRump tariffs there were wines that were labelled 14.5% just to beat the tariff, as the tariff was for wines labelled 14% and lower. one distributor told me he had seen beaujolais nouveau labelled 14.5%
I would guess altitude, but I'm not that tuned in to the situation there.originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
Altitude, picking earlier, or both?originally posted by Claude Kolm:
Also, look to Savoie and Jura where some producers are even coming in at less than 11% (not all are successful, but enough are to perhaps cause others to rethink).