Claude Kolm
Claude Kolm
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
The boards are culpable [for the 2009 Beaujolais frenzy]. . . . If 2010 is another banner year, anyway, Beaujolais may go the way of Burgundy for the long-term.
I'm afraid that Bordeaux, not Burgundy may be the way they go. As attractive as many (certainly, not all) 2009 Beaujolais are, there is something atypical -- justifying the French term anne exceptionnelle. But there is a low acid, easy accessibility to them that reminds me of the way 1982 clarets tasted when they first arrived here. Appreciative as I am of the wines of 2009, as one who has been buying Beaujolais wines with passion for over 30 years (including the wines of Jules Chauvet), I hope 2009 remains an anne exceptionnelle and the producers don't consciously try to reproduce it; that is, I hope 2009 doesn't become just another anne de norme, leaving those of us who like the traditional acidity and minerality to abandon them (for the Cte Roannaise and Touraine, I guess).
The boards are culpable [for the 2009 Beaujolais frenzy]. . . . If 2010 is another banner year, anyway, Beaujolais may go the way of Burgundy for the long-term.
I'm afraid that Bordeaux, not Burgundy may be the way they go. As attractive as many (certainly, not all) 2009 Beaujolais are, there is something atypical -- justifying the French term anne exceptionnelle. But there is a low acid, easy accessibility to them that reminds me of the way 1982 clarets tasted when they first arrived here. Appreciative as I am of the wines of 2009, as one who has been buying Beaujolais wines with passion for over 30 years (including the wines of Jules Chauvet), I hope 2009 remains an anne exceptionnelle and the producers don't consciously try to reproduce it; that is, I hope 2009 doesn't become just another anne de norme, leaving those of us who like the traditional acidity and minerality to abandon them (for the Cte Roannaise and Touraine, I guess).