Jeff Grossman
Jeff Grossman
Excerpted from a professional reviewer (on Vinous): My standard question to each producer that I visited this past summer was always to ask what distinguishes a Chinon from a Bourgueil or Saumur-Champigny. To date, I have not received a suitable reponse nor been truly able to elucidate one for myself. Instead, the three basic types of soil typically found here—and in the other appellations—are rather easy to identify: sandy gravel, clay with silex and chalky loam. They and the signature of the winemaker are the telltale signs that I look for in a blind tasting. Otherwise, distinguishing between the appellations is essentially impossible, even for the winemakers themselves. As Yannick Amirault told me, “either I recognize the style of one my colleagues or I haven't a clue.”
Can you tell the AOC apart?
Can you tell the AOC apart?