Who’d be a Winemaker

Q & A ON THE COSTA BLANCA!

Q: In a recent Cork Talk article, I posed the question “Who’d be a Winemaker?”

A: Jody, would!

An interesting (worrying?) aspect of the Internet is that press stories written at a certain time are electronically archived and can remain available for ever! However, as I’ve never written anything dodgy, this doesn’t worry me. In fact there have been times when it has worked to my advantage!

Several years ago I received an e-mail from Marimar Torres, sister of Miguel Torres (perhaps Spain’s leading wine figure) who runs the Californian arm of this wine-making dynasty. Somehow, Marimar had come across an article I’d written a few years previously, comparing the top Californian Torres wines with those of her brother in Spain. (You probably have read said article in one of your many Cork Talk Scrapbook Volumes!).

Her much valued effusive e-mail thanks were followed up with a more tangible thank you – a bottle each of her magnificent Chardonnay and Pinot Noir. The following year, the same, plus a signed copy of her published cookbook The Catalan Country Kitchen, to which I often refer to this day. Most generous, and most appreciated!

Over the years there have been other advantages of having my articles magically saved for eternity, including this year when I received an e-mail from Jody, a very successful Biochemist Businesswoman, who had been recommended to visit Peter Arnold’s bucolic bodega in Jalón, following her and her British husband, John’s purchase of a property on the Costa Blanca.

Many readers will know of Peter’s super wines and their lamentable loss, owing to Peter and family being forced to leave Spain after years of the Spanish paper-chase re official documentation for their produce. A sad and wholly avoidable story, indeed, and, allegedly, a worry for ex-pats who become more successful than their Spanish neighbours in the same business!

Jody and John didn’t know about this, until, like Marimar Torres above, they found an  archived Cork Talk article on the matter. You see, apart from wanting to taste Peter’s range of wines, they also wanted to ask his advice about making wine, for domestic consumption, here in Spain.

Eventually Jody, John and I met (typically, at a wine related event – read below for another similar event* soon!) and I was able to put them onto an alternative source of advice – Sue and Roger, of the beautiful Casa Rural, Finca Rustica, Benissa. Again, if you search your Scrapbook(!) you’ll find articles I’ve written about this lovely spot in the  mountains above Benissa, including two fine wine tastings there, at which were presented a couple of the wines that Sue and roger had made. Sue and Roger have been there, done it and know the successes and pitfalls!

Jody is a world renowned expert (www.limoce.com) on the environmental impact of the search for, and supply of, natural resources buried underground, and often under water too. John is captain of a ship which is involved in cross-ocean communication. They met when Jody was attached to the ship assessing environmental issues – a conflict of interests? Well, it doesn’t seem so as they are now together, and when not travelling internationally (which they do a lot!) they are looking to establish a vineyard at their property.

It’s a fascinating project and Cork Talk readers will be able to follow their progress.

They very kindly invited me to a BBQ at their house recently, also present were Sue and Roger – armed with a couple of their Vino de Pinos wines. Now, there’s  no conflict of interest either between Sue and Roger, who’ve been together for donkey’s years, living in various exotic locations all over the world. But, there is competition – whose rows of vines at Finca Rustica make the best wines?

Guess who was in the unenviable position of having to judge?

Before lunch, and following a lovely, elegant Reserva Cava charmingly named ‘Stars’, which enjoys a coupage of Xarel-lo, Macabeo and Parellada, we were presented with, in the Blue Corner a bottle of Sue’s lightly pressed Tempranillo 2013 red wine; and in the Red Corner, Roger’s Merlot 2014. Game on!

As both contestants would agree, the early wines of the Vino de Pinos range perhaps needed a little tweaking. Now, several years since I tasted the first, I can honestly say that we can consider them duly tweaked! But, which was to be crowned Champ – the Tempranillo or the Merlot?

Sue’s Tempranillo had a sulphur odour on opening. Sulphur is an essential part of wine-making. It is used to prolong the life of wine, to stop it going bad. If wine is to be stored in barrel, often the barrel is ‘cleaned’ with sulphur burning on what looks like a large match. It’s also added into the wine mix before bottling. It’s a delicate process: too much and its odour can penetrate and never leave the wine; to little, and the wine can spoil.

Sometimes there is a ‘drainy’ sort of smell when opening wine, this is the sulphur – allowing the wine to breathe, by decanting and swirling, will usually make the aroma dissipate. Such was the case with the Tempranillo. Approaching a brick red colour the wine looks bright and clear in the glass. There’s still a fresh acidity with some vegetal, tomato leaf aromas adding complexity to the dark blackberry fruit. Soft tannin makes the wine very approachable and there are hints of liquorice and tar on the finish.

Roger’s Merlot is a different wine, so in fact it wasn’t a like for like comparison (sitting on the fence?!). It’s not quite one year old yet and is as vivacious as you would expect. Enticing quite dark colour promises a good fruit filled mouthful, and you won’t be disappointed (plums and dark cherries). There’s still some tannin to mature and mellow, but this slight grip, gives the wine added impetus. There’s a quite long finish with refreshing acidity which lightens the perhaps 14·5º abv, plus a touch of bitterness as you swallow making the wine food-friendly as well.

Result – draw!

Our hosts then brought out Pazo de Señorans Albariño from DO Rías Baizas whose gentle floral aromas and white peach flavour charmed us all. This was followed by Sierra Cantabria rosado from Rioja, which has followed the current trend of being very pale pink, Provençal-esque in colour.

Gran Reserva Cava!
Gran Reserva Cava!

I could see Sue and roger’s expression pale whiter than the rosado when the first of the hosts’ reds was brought out. Was it fair to compare their wines with Don Miguel Mateu Gran Reserva 2004 from he Cava  bodega above, though this of course under the auspices of DO Empordá? Well, know it wasn’t as this is an outstanding wine, deeply flavoured and complex – but of course we weren’t meant to be comparing, the competition had finished!

Our penultimate wine, from the same stable was the very different Finca Espola 2010 whose Monastrell (unusual for so far north of Valencia), Syrah, Garnacha and Cabernet grow in stony soil which adds a  mineral note to the rich, dark fruit.

Finally, Bellum from Bodegas Señorio de Barahonda, DO Yecla, is an excellent red (Monastrell) dessert wine.

Gorgeous Red Dessert Wine!
Gorgeous Red Dessert Wine!

Jody and John are currently deciding which varieties to plant in their nascent vineyard – Tempranillo has the nod, I believe, with Monstrell and Syrah also being considered. More soon(ish, as it will be four years until their first wine!).

*Please contact me for details of the excellent Classical Music/Fine Wine/ Gourmet Dining event to be held at the Swiss Hotel, Moraira, Friday 2nd October. There are a few places left! colin@colinharknessonwine.com or  call 629 388 159

Following La Gran Cata Chez Nous

Castaño Trip Sept 2015; Hacienda & Ermita visit; Cata Chez Nous 011

Hi Colin and Claire

Andrew and I would like to thank you for the lovely wines and food we were served last Saturday evening.  We had a lovely time and we were  delighted to meet the Toveys.

All the information was interesting, the wines were wonderful and the tapas terrific.  As a teacher of English I hope you appreciate the alliteration!  We certainly appreciated the occasion.

Here’s to many more!

Pamela & Andrew

Domaine de Vinssou

DOMAINE DE VINSSOU

UN CAHORS ARTISAN, PUR MALBEC, PUR PLAISIR!

Occasionally, when visiting wineries, one discovers a gem! It may be a special wine; or a glorious location; a beautiful building; wonderful, passionate and committed people; and  more. Sometimes, one, several or all of these Holy-Grail-style finds are made in the most unlikely places. Once in a while, one has ‘a feeling’ before arrival that one is about to experience something exceptional.

 

Perhaps it’s a sixth sense that we wine-types have? More likely, it’s probably just luck, but it’s definitely true that an atmosphere of anticipation was building in the car as we wound our way around the beautiful, tree and fruit bush lined roads of the countryside near where we were staying recently in the Cahors, Le Lot, France, area.  The fact that our GPS couldn’t locate our destination added to the air of exciting mystery.

 

Located in an area containing an abundance of magnificent Chateaux and truly beautiful architecture, Domaine De Vinssou, Mercues, Le Lot, France, (vinssou.cahors@wanadoo.fr), from the outside, is perhaps the most unprepossessing of all the wineries I have ever visited. Yet, before one even enters the converted byre, which now serves as their tasting room, an undeniable bucolic charm oozes out of the plaster that holds together the ancient stone, old brick, antique timber and modern breeze-block. There’s even a friendly sheepdog, to complete the picture!

 

Inside, the rusticity (which includes the manger where the cows used to eat during bad weather) is complemented by artwork representing, in colour and style, the various stages of fermentation as well as decorated bottles which have been cleverly crafted into light-shades. Like joint owner and winemaker Isabelle, it’s all thoroughly  enchanting!

 

I became a fan of Cahors wine during my two weeks there. Although other varieties are permitted, it’s Malbec that rules the roost here. Once, the ‘black’ Malbec wines of Cahors were more highly praised that those of Bordeaux, with the English buying as many as they could.

 

However, things became (and stayed for a while!) tough for producers when the Hundred Years War started, and when hostilities were ended they didn’t ever reclaim the market share they’d once enjoyed. Plus, at the end of the 20th Century the dreadful wine pest, Phyloxera, decimated all the vineyards and it looked like curtains for Cahors.

 

Indeed, several Vignerons gathered together as many of the young, as yet unplanted and therefore Phyloxera-free vines, and sailed for foreign parts. Guess where? Yes, to Argentina, where Malbec was adopted and over the decades became synonymous with top Argentinian wines!

 

Others stayed home. Another generation of winemakers was born, the Phyloxera problem was defeated (by grafting Malbec on to American rootstock, resistant to the pest) and Cahors wine started again. However, since the hundred Years War, and in the meantime, Bordeaux, Burgundy had become famous and Cahors has never regained the ground it lost. Yet! AOC Cahors wine rocks!

 

And it’s not just me who says so, after just a measly two weeks there! In 2013 Mr. Anthony Rose MW (Master of Wine) was invited to Cahors to taste lots of the famous ‘Black Wine’ – I’ve read his report from the time, and he was indeed impressed. He tasted many wines from different producers, waxing lyrical about several, including – yes, you’ve guessed again, Domaine De Vinssou!

 

I don’t remember the details, but I think Mr. Rose attended a tasting where many producers presented their wines. I’m sure he also visited some of the great Chateaux  whose wines he’d tasted, but I doubt he had the time to visit all the small scale producers. And if he did, I doubt he even found Vinssou. A shame, as I’m certain that like me, he would have been similarly charmed!

 

His notes in 2013 praised the 2009 Falhial, giving it 90 out of 100 points, with the 2010 Falhial coming a very close second, with 89! He also said that he felt both wines were drinking very well but were also ‘vin de guard’, wines to lay down for further development. Now, I’m not putting myself in the place of an MW, but it seemed an ideal opportunity for me to assess the progress of these two wines, following his favourable comments.

 

However, our host, Isabelle, and later, the other half of the team, her husband, who had been out selling the wines (in fact he almost sold out!) on a local market, would have none of that – not just two wines, mon ami, you must try several! Well, it would have been dreadfully rude to resist!

 

There are two Malbec Rosé wines made, though as this is not permitted according to AOC Cahors rules (why do we persist with all these regulations in Europe?!), so these wines must be classed simply as Vin de Table. However, regular readers will know that here in Spain, Vino de la Mesa, can be excellent, it just can’t be labelled a DO wine as it infringes the (archaic?) rules. It’s the same en France.

 

The dry rosé wasn’t chilled – you must take a bottle away with you, Monsieur! The off-dry was perfectly cold and a real treat – it was 30º outside. There’s a certain sweetness, but it’s not a ‘sweet’ wine. You’ll find (and I do urge you to take a trip there!) ripe redcurrant and rich red cherry on the palte, plus a rose-hip nose which follows through as you swallow. Perfect for those who like a rosado aperitif in the   Summer!

 

Domaine de Vinssou also makes a red Vin du Pays du Lot wine. Bottled in Burgundy style bottles it looks impressive. It’s made with Merlot – there’s good fruit, some plum and a light note of damson, with a little minty finish. A wine which again would be refreshing chilled – as an aperitif or to drink later. Some red wines are lovely when chilled!

 

Falhial 2010 (just 12·80€!) is 100% Malbec from vines that have been happily growing around the property for over 50 years. Even though with such age, vines do not produce a lot of grapes, Isabelle still performs a ‘green harvest’ in July, and this after several of the flowers (which in time morph into grapes) were cut off in the Spring!

 

There is very good blackcurrant fruit to the fore – all these wines are fruit driven, it’s the house-style, and I love it! Very dark in colour, opaque in fact, there is some  vegetal fennel on the nose as well as a flash of Violets and a little menthol note. On the long finish the brambly fruit is accompanied by the typical Cahors Malbec liquorice flavour. Fresh acidity and mature tannin, along with 14·5% abv will ensure that the wine lasts at least another five years.

 

Now here’s a surprise(?) for you – this wine, nor any of the others, including the aged 1999 we tried later, is not aged in oak. All the Vinssou wines are made and aged in the traditional way – in lined, cement tanks of at least 40 years of age! Therefore what you have with these wines is a pure, unadulterated expression of the fruit, Malbec, and nothing else!

 

Falhial 2009 has developed well, as Anthony Rose, predicted, and as Isabelle tells me that her wines are happy to age for more than 10 years, I’m sure there is plenty of life left yet. It’s still fresh, and yet elegant too. Serve this wine with dinner and your guests will be most impressed. The fruit is still to the fore – well it would be, here, of course. There’s a little more liquorice with a faint whiff of tar, but the finish is all fruity elegance.

 

Our final two wines were older vintages of the same wine, under different labels.  The 2004, with limited stocks was lighter in colour, naturally after eleven years in bottle! Elegance for sure, yet still the characteristic fruit delivery, a slight dark red rose fragrance, and a more pronounced liquorice flavoured finish. After time in the glass, a curious, and enchanting faint raison aroma, with memmories of Christmas Cake appeared!

 

The 1999, practically sold out, is less powerful, though still alive with less pronounced fruit flavours, and exuding grace and elegance!

 

Contact Colin: colin@colinharknessonwine.com Twitter @colinonwine and Facebook

O. Fournier Wines & Opportunities!

Please note photographs will hopefully be included soon!

 

FANCY OWNING YOUR OWN VINEYARD?

THE O. FOURNIER GROUP OFFERS VINEYARDS IN ARGENTINA!

 

It was by a rather circuitous route that I first learned of the wines, and furthermore, the opportunities, offered by the O. Fournier Group. As a regular guest broadcaster on the SCOFFQUAFF Programme on Channel Radio, UK, I was followed, one week, by Señor José Manuel Ortega Gil-Fournier, one of the founders of the Group.

 

E-mail addresses were exchanged and websites viewed. The more I learned about the Group, the more excited I became – had I the where-with-all to be part of this exciting project, I’d certainly be interested! I wonder if any readers may be similarly inspired?

 

To paraphrase the Group’s own words, theirs is an admirable objective – to produce wines of undoubted quality, both in the Southern Hemisphere and in the North, respectively in Argentina and Chile; and Spain, Ribera del Duero, to be precise; and to sell those wines, worldwide.

 

With a budget of 8 million, 4 million of which has already been spent, it’s an ambitious project! The Group owns vineyards in all three countries, but it’s in Argentina where the prospects look particularly interesting. There are 84 vineyard plots owned by the Group and although lots have already been sold, there are still vineyards for sale. Some of these plots also include permission for a villa to be built on the land, surrounded by the vines that will produce the grapes to make the owners’   own wines!

 

These wines, made by the Group’s expert winemakers and staff, can either be sold via the Group, using all their contacts and the already established international markets; or there is also the option of owners producing their own label wines and developing their own markets. Both options are designed to cover costs and make a profit!

 

Of course, there’s a lot to it and the best way to find out all you need to know is by visiting www.ofournier.com, clicking on the ofwinepartners.com icon.

 

Señor Ortega kindly sent me some wines, examples from all three areas of production, and I’m impressed with what I’ve tasted – I’d like to taste more!

 

The Urban range of wines, which embraces the three countries and both Hemispheres, is designed to represent modern winemaking techniques with a view to delivering a fruit driven product which is easily accessible for those whose lives are in the fast lane, but which include some depth of flavour too. All of the four wines have been aged in oak for just three months, including the white Chardonnay, therefore enfranchising those who like the upfront fruit flavours but also require a little complexity.

 

Strangely enough I tasted the first, an Argentinian Malbec from the Mendoza Region, whilst in France, in Cahors, to be precise, the original home of the Malbec Grape Variety! Taking coal to Newcastle!

 

The vineyards of the area now known as DO Cahors were decimated by the invasion of Philoxera, the devilish pest that ruined the European wine trade at the time, as the 20th Century was about to arrive. Some growers who had the where-with-all and the courage escaped with some of their healthy vines, emigrating to Argentina, and starting, though they didn’t know it, what has become a fantastic success story – Argentinean Malbec.

 

Mendoza Valley is where much of the Malbec is grown, to wide acclaim –and it’s here where the O. Fourner vineyards are located. The simple label on the bottles, a design common to all the Urban range, describes on the outside, a part of that which the contents give to the taster. And it’s this easy drinking aspect that makes the wine so attractive.

 

Take your time, though, hold the wine on the palate for a while and you’ll also discover a bit more. There is a very faint earthy minerality which contributes to the overall fruity sensation. Blackberries, for me, rather than Blackcurrant, and yet there is a very slight flavour, and yes, feeling, of Cassis on the finish. It’s quite rich, lovely as glass of wine after work, but will taste, and feel, good wine meat dishes and pasta too.

 

I was interested in the Chardonnay from Chile. The Urban Uco Chardonnay vines are grown at well over 1,000 metres above sea level. There’s plenty of sunshine but at that height there is a dramatic drop in temperature at night, during the growing season. The result is a Chardonnay that has tropical fruit on the nose and palate, with noticeable masked banana aromas too, but also a faintly Burgundian elegance with fresh acidity.

 

This wine has also had the benefit of three months in oak, in this case, I suspect, French oak, which may have contributed to the Burgundy reference! I enjoyed this wine as an aperitif but also with cheese and, on the second night (which is also a compliment, for it lasted well, in fact for three days), it was well received with roast chicken!

 

Staying in the Southern Hemisphere and also in Chile, I next tasted the heady (14·5% abv) Urban Maule Red Blend – 50% Cabernet Franc, 30% Merlot and 20% Syrah. A fascinating wine, given that it has the fresh acidity of the above Argentinean Malbec, which was made from grapes grown at great altitude, when this wine comes from a vineyard of only 90 metres above sea level!

 

Again, the three months in barrel have added some depth of flavour as well as enhancing the aroma profile. You’ll find a light touch of coconut and coffee too with a very slight black pepper taste sensation on the palate, but, as with the whole of this range, it’s the accessibility of the fruit that makes this wine stand out! Look for plums, damsons perhaps and a touch of black cherry.

 

Finally, though there are several other ranges of wines made by the group (including yours, one day?!), a wine from much nearer home. Urban Ribera 2011is 100% Tinta del País (aka Tempranillo) and made in DO Ribera del Duero. It’s a tough call but I’d say that this was my equal favourite of those taste, with the Malbec.

 

There are classic strawberries on the nose and palate with some darker fruit notes too. You’ll find some depth in flavour and a certain presence – it also weighs in at 14·5% abv and is a real mouthful of pleasure!

 

So, do you fancy being a part of the O. Fournier experience, becoming a consumer like myself, of a wine-making partner?!

 

Contact Colin: colin@colinharknessonwine.com and through his wine services website www.colinharknessonwine.com , where you can also subscribe to his newsletter (free of charge, of course) and therefore have first-hand and early news of the various wine events he organises, most of which are sold out very quickly! Colin is also on Facebook; Plus you can follow him on Twitter @colinonwine for the latest on the Spanish Wine scene!