The name game
Appellations aren't so terroirble after all
Uncorked by Thor Iverson
Quick Quiz: What's the difference between Montrachet, Chevalier-Montrachet,
Puligny-Montrachet, Chassagne-Montrachet, Bâtard-Montrachet,
Criots-Bâtard-Montrachet, and Bienvenues-Bâtard-Montrachet? Do you
know? Do you care? Have your eyes glazed over just reading this paragraph?
Those are all the names of appellations in Burgundy -- specifically,
the vineyards that produce the world's finest
chardonnay-based wines. As I
mentioned in this column a while ago
(February 20), most European wines are
named after places rather than grapes -- for instance, a Hermitage is a wine
made from syrah grapes in the northern Rhône Valley, while a Pomerol is a
merlot-dominated blend from a small area east of the Gironde River in
Bordeaux.
But appellations are more than place names for wines; they're also an educated
guess about what type of wine will come from those appellations. Wine regions
like Italy, Germany, and Burgundy have so many names for so many microscopic
little places that even wine experts lose track. In Italy, it seems as though
every grape yields a different kind of wine with its own appellation. In
Germany and Burgundy, only a few grapes are used to make most quality wine, so
the hundreds of appellations in each region must mean something else.
In Burgundy, for example, the only visible difference between any two wines of
the same color is the appellation on the label. And when those names are
similar, as in the first paragraph of this column, it can get confusing. Yet
the difference in the taste of wines with different appellations can be
profound. So what do those geographical delimiters signify? An unshakable faith
in the validity of terroir.
Ah, you knew I'd be coming back to that, didn't you? Well, here's the scoop:
the French (and the Italians, Germans,
Spaniards, Portuguese, Austrians, etc.)
believe so strongly in terroir -- the idea that grapes manifest the
qualities of the place where they're grown -- that their entire system of
appellations is based on it. French cartographers didn't just randomly scribble
down the border that divides Bâtard-Montrachet from
Bienvenues-Bâtard-Montrachet. The division is based on a wealth of
climatological, geographical, and soil data (supported by a lot of
tasting)
that suggests that the wines from the former are different from the wines from
the latter. All this for two small vineyards
that are not visually distinguishable.
There are also hierarchies within appellations that highlight the top
vineyards of the region. Every area does this differently; in Burgundy, for
instance, premier cru (first growth) denotes a vineyard with
outstanding terroir and a history of producing superior wines. Even
better is grand cru (great growth), applied only to those
vineyards known to produce the absolute top wines of Burgundy. The designations
are, with a few inevitable exceptions, highly accurate, but the demand for the
top wines drives their price
into the stratosphere.
That's not to suggest that appellations are perfect. Political considerations
have occasionally led to the redefinition of borders; no surprise there, given
that a wine from Bâtard-Montrachet costs
at least twice as much as a wine
from Chassagne-Montrachet, which surrounds half of it. And appellations
continue to change with historical experience. Sometimes this is to the wine
drinker's benefit, other times it is not: St.-Joseph and Crozes-Hermitage in
the Rhône have lousy reputations largely because of the careless
expansion of their borders.
Appellations also codify terroir by enforcing strict regulations
governing technique, alcohol level, permitted grape varieties, and a host of
other oenological details. This seems confusing, but once you sort it all out,
it's actually quite helpful in learning what to expect from a Valpolicella,
Carmignano, or Soave. On the other hand, tying a winemaker's hands in this way
discourages experimentation. For instance, Zind-Humbrecht (an outstanding
Alsatian
producer) can grow chardonnay in its grand cru vineyards -- and
does -- but cannot legally mention the appellation on the bottle, because
chardonnay is not an "allowed" grape under Alsace's appellation laws.
I'll put my cards on the table: I'm a terroirist. I believe wine should
reflect the place it's from, and winemaking that strips wine of that character
is a pathetic excuse for winemaking. I believe when winemakers ignore their
land and create vinous monuments to technique alone, we lose what is essential,
magical, and true about wine. A wine should do more than reveal a
winemaker's ability; it should express the culture, the spirit of the people,
the soul of the local cuisine. A world where
all wines are the same is a world
with only one job, only one meal, only one song.
So the next time someone tries to compare their Napa Valley chardonnay to
white Burgundy, or some $50 Chilean limited-release cuvée to red
Bordeaux (or vice-versa), tell them to go back to their assembly line. The wine may be tasty
and technically sound, but it's devoid of soul. Real winemakers want
only one thing: to produce the best wine their land, their grapes, and their
technique can make. Everything else is marketing.
Since many of the wines I'm talking about are expensive and hard to find, I'm
not making any specific recommendations this week. However, I'd strongly
suggest attending some of the tastings and dinners hosted by wine-savvy
restaurants and retailers like Uva (1418 Comm Ave, 617-566-5670) or,
farther afield, Big Y (Northampton, Massachusetts, 1-800-474-BIGY),
where single-vineyard
and neighboring-appellation wines appear regularly. If
you'd rather experiment at home, find a highly knowledgeable retailer with a
good selection of German wine (tell him or her that you're interested in
tasting wines from individual vineyards). Also, look for white Burgundies
from Verget, Chassagne-Montrachets from Jean-Noël Gagnard,
and Chablis from the various producers named Dauvissat, none of which
should force you into a second mortgage.
Thor Iverson can be reached at wine@phx.com.
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