Tag Archive 'Chardonnay'

Dec 03 2012

South African Chardonnay a Blue-Print for Excellence

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 Having smuggled the Chardonnay vine-cuttings into the country with which the industry was founded, we Jouberts have always been partial to South Africa’s interpretation of the royal Burgundian white. From the smoky sweet clunkers of the 80’s, the high-alcoholic 90’s and the experiments with malolactic fermentation in the early 2000’s, the advent of South African Chardonnay has been well-documented and discussed during family gatherings. Not to mention consumed. In fact, all the grand-children of Fritz Joubert, the mule who clandestinely carted the cuttings from the Clos des Mouches to Robertson, were Christened with a thumb-print of Louis-Jadot Meursault on the forehead.

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Oct 18 2012

Wood-less and Fancy-free in the Chardonnay World

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Want limestone in your soil? Get termites.

On the local front, the general consensus appears to be that Chardonnay needs wood-maturation to attain optimal expression and depth. Woodless Chardonnays are not given much serious thought in competitions or discussions, largely the result of the label ΓÇ£un-woodedΓÇ¥ seeming to imply something is amiss or that the bottle contains juice deemed not good enough for barrel nor a serious audience.

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Oct 09 2012

It Was a Veritas Good Year

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We were all tuxed-up, man. For this was Veritas, South African’s premier part of the wine events schedule. So a tuxedo was donned for the most important show of the year.

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Oct 06 2012

Chardonnay Report Gets Top Marks

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The Top 10

 

Despite the calls to duty asking us to embrace Chenin Blanc as the National South African White Grape and the reactionary colourful spats generated by the Sauvignon Blanc fraternity, there is only one real South African white wine worth taking to an international gun-fight, and he be Chardonnay.

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Jul 15 2012

South African Wine-makers with French Souls

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Like the rich, the French are different. In what way? Well, going into detail cannot be done before proper broadband comes to South Africa as the reasoning is bound to be expansive.

Wine, for example, is one area in which the French are different from other nations.

Still the greatest wine country on earth. Has been and always will be. Blah.Blah. Agreed.

In the spirit of Bastille Day celebrations, thus, IΓÇÖd like to take a look at five South African winemakers who to my mind have ΓÇô knowingly or otherwise ΓÇô been infected with French genes of vinous brilliance. Doubting Thomases can taste it in their wines.

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May 06 2012

Raving about a Craving

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Barton Fink - "I heard a cork call my name...."

So I get this craving, and I must have it. Feel the stirring. The brooding expectation. The sense of ΓÇ£what am I going to do if I donΓÇÖt get itΓÇ¥?

Drive down to the dodgy part of town to satisfy the desire. Park in darkness. Enter the subtly neon-lit building in one of Cape TownΓÇÖs side-streets. They are waiting. And yes, there is the object of my want. In front of me. To be had for a few bucks.

The place is DVD Nouveau, the movie Barton Fink. An all-time favourite, the kind of film that calls to be viewed periodically.

It is made by the Coen brothers, Joel and Ethan. Tells the story of an anal pseudo-intellectual playwright whose pretentious writings stir the attentions of Hollywood. Pretty soon this stuck-up pseudo has sold his soul, exchanging the intellectual zone of Broadway for the cheap commercialism of Hollywood.

Pretty much like Tim James leaving the Mail & Guardian for a wine gig with the Daily Sun.

Anyway, got the movie. And heading off to Casa Emilio for cinematic satisfaction, a spot of thirst gets me to stop at Vino Pronto, a cute little wine shop in the Gardens. Despite the shelves of aforementioned Casa groaning with freebies, I decide to drop some cash on the wine industry. Help them pay for their WIETA audits, methinks.

Believe in fate? The zone? In Pronto Wine Shop?

Right there, before me. On the Chardonnay shelf: Crystallum Chardonnay.

Yup, thatΓÇÖs the vino connected to one Peter-Allan Finlayson, a winemaker who has always reminded me of someone who has just stepped out of a Coen Brother movie. Trendy. Cool. Dishevelled in a cultivated manner. Most of all, self-effacing and humorous. Like the Coens, it must also be said that the dudeΓÇÖs bit of an artist.

 Crystallum’s set of Pinot Noirs has built-up a pretty solid reputation since the release of the 2008 vintage thanks to the superb quality of the wines made from Hemel-en-Aarde fruit, with some Elgin stuff thrown into the Peter Max wine. The other number is, of course, the pants-wetting brilliant Cuvée Cinema.

This was, however, my maiden venture in to the realm of Crystallum Chardonnay 2009 which, incidentally carries the name of “The Agnes” who was Peter-Allan’s great-grandmother.

 

Peter-Allan Finlayson, great-grandson of the famous Agnes.

Having dropped just over R150 on Crystallum The Agnes Chardonnay from Peter-Allan Finlayson I headed off for a date with Barton Fink.

Look, if Barton Fink the writer ever did kick back to talk about wine, he could have told one helluva story about this. Problem is, it would be long and boring and aimed at sparking off a riot by page 23.

But IΓÇÖll just stick to the fact that this is one helluva wine.

Made from three vineyards – two Hemel-en-Aarde way and one out towards Greyton Γò¼├┤Γö£├ºΓö£Γöñ there is a lot going on here in terms of expression. The first is a perfumed decadence and the second a trance-inducing broadness. No lean mineral linearity of limestone soils. No calculated intricacies of lees management to coax a featured Chardonnay personality from the fruit. The wine just gushes rich beauty and deliciousness and is a fine example of why Chardonnay remains the greatest white grape on the planet. No other variety is able of deploying this level of sensorial seduction on an unsuspecting movie lover just wanting to concentrate on a favourite film.

I had to stop BartonΓÇÖs rantings every now and again with the ΓÇ£pauseΓÇ¥ button, enabling me to get to grips with the wine.

Was that a hint of Meursault-like hot buttered popcorn on the Crystallum? Yes. Montrachet potpourri? Indeed. O look, a bit of Santenay pebbles. Beaune waxiness? Is true, my bru.

Completing the myriad flavours is aforementioned heady perfume. If more wines smelt like this beautiful aromatic number IΓÇÖd understand why wine-buffs are forever sticking their schnozzes into the glass.

The other is the palate weight. Like a fine silk kimono, it lies lightly, lies softly. Feels fine.

Just to be sure, I went back to Pronto the next day for another two bottles of Crystallum. And was assured that, yes, nostalgia can indeed be what it used to be.

On a factual basis, the wine is wooded, 2nd fill French. Nine months on the lees. Minimal stirring, shaking and prodding.

Less is more, dude, less is more. No matter how big the craving.

 

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Jan 03 2012

Making the News in 2012

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LetΓò¼├┤Γö£├ºΓö£├╗s delve into 2012. What are the predictions for this yearΓò¼├┤Γö£├ºΓö£├╗s vinous calendar? Here are four. Readers are invited to add a fifth. The best entry will receive a bottle from WineGoggle’s private cellar. Continue Reading »

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Oct 08 2011

These Good Wine in Them Ther’ Eggs

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Went to Paarl to check-out some guyΓò¼├┤Γö£├ºΓö£├╗s eggs. Guy goes by the name of Arco. Laarman. Makes wine at Glen Carlou. One of the best EstateΓò¼├┤Γö£├ºΓö£├╗s in the Paarl area. SA, too. Dig the Pinot Noir. Grand Classique Bordeaux blend. And, excuse me, the Chardonnay. Continue Reading »

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Aug 03 2011

SA Wines go on Show in Burgundy

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Heading out to Beaune, France in September, my Frog Mates have asked me to present a tasting in Pommard. I love doing tastings in Burgundy. Most would think it is all quiet, serious, scientific and critically French.

Not on your auntΓÇÖs bidet.

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May 12 2011

You’re Toast, and not Complaining

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South African masterpiece.

What do Marvin Shanken and Johann Rupert have in common? Besides having – as publisher of Wine Spectator and owner of LΓò¼├┤Γö£├ºΓö£├╗Ormarins respectively – a bit of influence on the wine world, that is.

Well believe it or not, but both have a bit of a culinary soft-spot for the South African Γò¼├┤Γö£├ºΓö£Γöñ and truly South African Γò¼├┤Γö£├ºΓö£Γöñ item known as a braaibroodjie. Continue Reading »

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