Some tasty 2003s

SFJoe

Joe Dougherty
As I travelled in France recently, I tried an unusual variety and intensity of wines. Old ones, young ones, wine in restaurants, wine in cellars. Some great stuff, some bleh stuff, quite a mix. But I had three wines from the suspect 2003 vintage that illuminated different ways of dealing with an extreme vintage that I found pretty interesting and I thought Id share.

I missed most of the tasting at Thevenet in Macon because I had to take a conference call out in my frozen car. I did run the heat for 3 minutes before we started, but the diesel Volvo was too noisy to let it idle during my call, so it gradually got colder and colder. Anyhow, the call was a success, and the tasting passed me by. But we then gathered for dinner at the ambitious restaurant in the Maconnais. I tried to be nicethe Thevenets had brought a magnum of their wine, but it was corked. In a peculiar tribal ritual that I didnt really understand, the magnum nonetheless circulated and was poured into the 20 waiting glasses, which were then collected and taken away. A headscratcher for the tourist. Anyhow, I was given the list, and in an effort at comity and compromise went for the one wine from the Thevenet that they hadthe 2003. Mmmmm, chardonnay from 2003, what could be more my sort of thing? So picture my surprise when the wine was fresh and had some decent acid and no extreme flavors. You could actually drink the stuff, and I dont really groove on chardonnay from almost anywhere so much, and definitely not in hot vintages. You could even call it tasty. So there.

The fascinating takeaway was that they picked the grapes on the south side of the vines 3 weeks ahead of the north side of the vines in 2003, preserving freshness against the heat and taking some load off the vines. Somewhat amazing, but also the sign of a vigneron who spends a lot of time in the vineyard.

Luca Roagna made a Barbaresco in 2003, naturally enough. I think it is coming into the market, and definitely made it to the Valaire tasting that I will describe in more detail if I ever get time. Anyhow, the wine reflects real ripeness and it is in no way high in acid, but it has ripe tannin and clean flavors, unlike many Piemontese wines of the vintage. Another wine I had not expected to enjoy but could nonetheless imagine drinking.

Two winemaking lessons from this wine. Luca said that the alcohol had gotten very high very early in Barbaresco as elsewhere in Europe, but that he didnt like the quality of tannins or flavors in the grape (also as so often elsewhere). Rather than harvesting in a panic, he waited weeks, into October, into an ordinary timeframe for nebbiolo, and the phenolics and aromatics caught up with the sugars. Now, there was still plenty of sugar at harvest, no surprise. The amazing thing was that the alcohol was at a pretty reasonable level that I have in my notes when I get to them. Luca pointed out that he lost 2 degrees of potential alcohol during fermentation, mostly from evaporation out of open-topped fermenters, but perhaps a bit from native yeast. But he made the excellent point that people who used things like rotofermenters capture all the alcohol very efficiently, while his open vats let it evaporate in a year like 2003.

The third tasty 2003 from the vintage was the Clos du Bourg 1er Trie from Huet. In truth, we could add Pinons 2003 Moelleux as well. Both these wines show grapes that were well cared for. The acids are not high, but the flavors are ripe and fresh and show a bit of skin extraction. The phenolics compensate for the somewhat lower acids to provide balance and structure. The lesson again being that very hot years can work well for a variety that retains high acid even in heat.

Some pretty and interesting wines.
 
Joe as I mentioned earlier I had a bottle of 03 CRB gamay that was, surprisingly, not completely fucked. Sure it was lacking some freshness and lightness, but it wasn't completely dead. I also had some 03 Brovia a few months back that wasn't so bad.

2003 Rouge Gorge was one of the worst things I've ever had.

(This is Cory, using the Terroir computer)
 
Halfway through the second paragraph I thought you were going to suggest TCA as one of the cures.

Good farming was key in 2003, or so they tell me. Patience on our end as well; I for one judged over-hastily in 2004.
 
originally posted by SFJoe:
Some tasty 2003s

As I travelled in France recently, I tried an unusual variety and intensity of wines. Old ones, young ones, wine in restaurants, wine in cellars. Some great stuff, some bleh stuff, quite a mix. But I had three wines from the suspect 2003 vintage that illuminated different ways of dealing with an extreme vintage that I found pretty interesting and I thought Id share.

I missed most of the tasting at Thevenet in Macon because I had to take a conference call out in my frozen car. I did run the heat for 3 minutes before we started, but the diesel Volvo was too noisy to let it idle during my call, so it gradually got colder and colder. Anyhow, the call was a success, and the tasting passed me by. But we then gathered for dinner at the ambitious restaurant in the Maconnais. I tried to be nicethe Thevenets had brought a magnum of their wine, but it was corked. In a peculiar tribal ritual that I didnt really understand, the magnum nonetheless circulated and was poured into the 20 waiting glasses, which were then collected and taken away. A headscratcher for the tourist. Anyhow, I was given the list, and in an effort at comity and compromise went for the one wine from the Thevenet that they hadthe 2003. Mmmmm, chardonnay from 2003, what could be more my sort of thing? So picture my surprise when the wine was fresh and had some decent acid and no extreme flavors. You could actually drink the stuff, and I dont really groove on chardonnay from almost anywhere so much, and definitely not in hot vintages. You could even call it tasty. So there.

The fascinating takeaway was that they picked the grapes on the south side of the vines 3 weeks ahead of the north side of the vines in 2003, preserving freshness against the heat and taking some load off the vines. Somewhat amazing, but also the sign of a vigneron who spends a lot of time in the vineyard.

Luca Roagna made a Barbaresco in 2003, naturally enough. I think it is coming into the market, and definitely made it to the Valaire tasting that I will describe in more detail if I ever get time. Anyhow, the wine reflects real ripeness and it is in no way high in acid, but it has ripe tannin and clean flavors, unlike many Piemontese wines of the vintage. Another wine I had not expected to enjoy but could nonetheless imagine drinking.

Two winemaking lessons from this wine. Luca said that the alcohol had gotten very high very early in Barbaresco as elsewhere in Europe, but that he didnt like the quality of tannins or flavors in the grape (also as so often elsewhere). Rather than harvesting in a panic, he waited weeks, into October, into an ordinary timeframe for nebbiolo, and the phenolics and aromatics caught up with the sugars. Now, there was still plenty of sugar at harvest, no surprise. The amazing thing was that the alcohol was at a pretty reasonable level that I have in my notes when I get to them. Luca pointed out that he lost 2 degrees of potential alcohol during fermentation, mostly from evaporation out of open-topped fermenters, but perhaps a bit from native yeast. But he made the excellent point that people who used things like rotofermenters capture all the alcohol very efficiently, while his open vats let it evaporate in a year like 2003.

The third tasty 2003 from the vintage was the Clos du Bourg 1er Trie from Huet. In truth, we could add Pinons 2003 Moelleux as well. Both these wines show grapes that were well cared for. The acids are not high, but the flavors are ripe and fresh and show a bit of skin extraction. The phenolics compensate for the somewhat lower acids to provide balance and structure. The lesson again being that very hot years can work well for a variety that retains high acid even in heat.

Some pretty and interesting wines.
a start on the subject.....lot to say....see you.
 
Had an extremely interesting visit with Luca Roagna in November. He arrived saying that he had just drunk an 03 Mascarello Barolo at lunch and it had been open and excellent. He also said that he picks mostly based on seed maturity, something that he claims was essential in 03. The sugar rose so fast that those who picked based on sugar made wines with immature tannins. He claimed that in most years the two maturities roughly coincide in Piedmont, but not in 03.
 
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
I'm still looking for the elusive wine from that vintage unmarked by 2003itis.

Vestini Campagnano Pallagrello Nero.

One might also say Col d'Orcia Brunello (seriously). And Cerbaiona.
 
I had an 03 Vino Nobile di Montepulciano from Il Macchione the other day, balanced, nice ripe tannins. Not super high acidity, but perfectly delicious.
 
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
I'm still looking for the elusive wine from that vintage unmarked by 2003itis.

Why would you want a wine that doesn't speak of its vintage?

Surely there are different ways to express the vintage. Perhaps that is what you meant by -itis.
 
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
I'm still looking for the elusive wine from that vintage unmarked by 2003itis.

Why would you want a wine that doesn't speak of its vintage?

Good point. But I find the vintage characteristics pretty gross, is all. So I tend to avoid them altogether. "Looking" should be used in the sense of general curiosity or nave hopefulness, I suppose. Maybe something that hints of the heat wave but masters balance and avoids pruniness.
 
originally posted by Sharon Bowman: Maybe something that hints of the heat wave but masters balance and avoids pruniness.

Yes. I think that can be done. I know it's not your favorite stuff but there were soem lovely off-dry German rieslings that pulled off such a trick. But then they carry sugar so well.

I was just reacting to the concept that every wine should be screechingly high acid. Surely you wouldn't say that!
 
How did other Jura wines fare in '03? I still stand by the '03 Puffeney Arbois VV as being excellent, but it's the only Jura '03 I've had.
 
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