Helen’s blog

Thoughts and tastings from Helen Savage, wine writer.

Archive for the ‘Wines – here and there’ Category

Cabernet Sauvignon

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

I’m not surprised that even in the Médoc, Cabernet Sauvignon often plays second fiddle to Merlot. Its wine can be a a bit of a mouthful – and not a terribly pleasant one.  Very few wineries risk releasing a pure Cab Sav.  Robert Mondavi Reserve ‘Cabernet Sauvignon’ 2007, for example,  includes 16% Syrah, 4% Cabernet Franc, 2% Petite Sirah and 1% Sangiovese. The finished blend is not bad at all – but it’s a blend.

To underline the difference between Cab Sav on its own and in a blend, I invited members of class last night to dose a 100% Chilean Cab Sav with a bit of Cabernet Franc. Not everyone preferred the result – but most of us did. It was lighter, fresher, less astringent and rather more fruity.

I also served  a pure Cab Sav from South Africa, new into Marks an Spencer: Sterhuis 2006 from Stellenbosch. It’s a huge wine with masses of herby, spicy black fruit, but also very high acidity, and as Mr Parker would say so inelegantly, ‘gobs’ of tannin. It’s impressive, but 25% Merlot of Cabernet Franc, or maybe Tempranillo would do wonders for it. Thank goodness South African growers are increasingly keen on blends. In this case it might make sense.

An alternative would be to leave the Sterhuis alone for a decade. It is  a shame that too many top South African reds are drunk before they’ve had a chance to develop in the bottle.  Cabernet Sauvignon needs time. Although wine making techniques have changed, even in Bordeaux, since the days when a claret was not deemed worth attention until it was at least ten years old, some Cabernets need be tamed for a decade or more. One such is L’Adagio des Eyssards, a rare 100% Cab Sav from Bergerac.  I bought half a dozen in about 2000 a year or so after bottling (it was aged 12 months in new barriques).  I was very disappointed with it – every time I tried it over the last few years, it was dull and tough as old boots. Not yesterday. At last it has entered the swan phase: sweetly ripe, still powerfully tannic, but long, spicy and satisfying. I wish I’d been more patient.

Flower and Fruit days

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

I’m still trying to get my head around ‘When Wines Tastes best: A biodynamic calendar for wine drinkers‘ (Maria and Mathias Thun). This specifies root, leaf (bad) days from fruit and flower (good) days – based on the moon’s passage through the zodiac and the association of each constellation with the ancient four ‘elements’ of earth, air, fire and water. Mad? Maybe – but major supermarkets have deliberately chosen fruit and flower days for their press tastings …

Last Friday after a particularly successful little tasting of Grenache-based wines, I asked the thirty participants which category of day they thought it was. All but two (who weren’t sure) felt that it must be a fruit or flower day. It was a root day – presumably good only for ginger beer or poteen. Yesterday I thought that Viniportugal’s mini tasting in Newcastle led by Tiago Alves de Sousa, a very gifted young winemaker from the Douro, was a great success despite a dark, gloomy day and the stink of coal smoke around Jesmond Dene House. The wines showed very well indeed, especially his own spectacular Abandonado. It was leaf day. Should I have stayed at home and  stuck to tea?

Seriously (if this is worth taking seriously at all – and I really feel that biodynamic wines are far too good to be treated as a joke), how can one set up a reasonably sensible, empirical test to test whether ot not the Biodynamic Calendar has any affect at all on how we perceive wine? At the moment, I’m inclined to think that it’s baseless hogwash, but I hope that the incidence of a fruit day on Thursday bodes well for the Terroirs et Signatures tasting of Burgundy wines at Lord’s on Thursday. Watch this space.