A Tale of Two Countries

Oswaldo Costa

Oswaldo Costa
Last night we drank polar opposites, a Brazilian Cabernet Franc with 11.4% alcohol and an Argentine Malbec with 14.4%. About as different as the bossa nova and the tango. Both were unbalanced in opposite ways, underripe and overripe, but with distinct personalities. Towards the end I blended them into a glass and the result was, well, balanced, but kind of bland. Perhaps because it lacked any identity.

The Cab Franc is made by a winery owned by descendants of Italian immigrants and comes in a Chianti bottle. It has been made uninterruptedly for over 20 years, a rarity in these parts. In 2002, as is common in the winegrowing regions of the Brazilian south, there was too much rain and not enough sunshine, so the grapes were picked less than optimally mature.

2002 Don Giovanni Cabernet Franc Pinto Bandeira 11.4%
Brett dominates the nose, but were tolerant chez nous. Mouth is better, with medium body, tangy acidity and a salty finish. Fruit is pleasant, but dominated by the acidity. Comes into something resembling balance with fatty cheeses. A traditionally made wine, honest and unpretentious, made angular and scrawny by the difficult vintage.

2004 Altos las Hormigas Malbec Reserva Via Hormigas Mendoza 14.4%
Rich nose of blackberries, tar and olives. Overly ripe and sweet, revealing extra notes of coffee and chocolate, with a touch of alcohol burn where more acidity should be. Oak is well integrated but tannins are way too smooth.
 
originally posted by Nicolas Mestre:
Don't you get two harvests per year in Brazil?

In traditional winemaking regions, just one (inverted, of course).

Maybe you're thinking of vineyards recently developed by multinational wineries in the very arid and dry Brazilian northeast, where there are no winters, so they are able to get two and half crops per year by using a hormone (specially developed by BASF) to synchronize vine cycles (otherwise they wouldn't know when to give fruit because there are no cues from nature). Wines made from these grapes are cheap and actually not terrible, but who knows what effect the accumulation of this hormone in people's systems (if it accumulates) might have (maybe we'd all hibernate for a season).
 
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