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Variety of Grapes
In order to appreciate wine, it's essential to understand the
characteristics different grapes offer and how those
characteristics should be expressed in wines. Cabernet
Sauvignon, Merlot and Zinfandel are all red grapes, but as wines
their personalities are quite different. Even when grown in
different appellations and vinified using different techniques,
a varietal wine always displays certain qualities, which are
inherent in the grape's personality. Muscat should always be
spicy, Sauvignon Blanc a touch herbal. Zinfandel is zesty, with
pepper and wild berry flavors. Cabernet Sauvignon is marked by
plum, currant and black cherry flavors and firm tannins.
Understanding what a grape should be as a wine is fundamental,
and knowing what a grape can achieve at its greatest is the
essence of fine-wine appreciation.
In Europe, the finest wines are known primarily by geographic
appellation (although this is changing; witness the occasional
French and Italian varietals). Elsewhere, however--as in
America, Australia, South Africa and New Zealand--most wines are
labeled by their varietal names; even, sometimes, by grape
combinations (Cabernet-Shiraz, for example). To a large extent,
this is because in the United States, the process of sorting out
which grapes grow best in which appellations is ongoing and
Americans were first introduced to fine wine by varietal name.
In Europe, with a longer history for matching grape types to
soil and climate, the research is more conclusive: Chardonnay
and Pinot Noir, for instance, are the major grapes of Burgundy.
Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Malbec and Petite
Verdot are the red grapes of Bordeaux. Syrah dominates northern
Rhône reds. Barolo and Barbaresco are both made of Nebbiolo, but
the different appellations produce different styles of wine. In
Tuscany, Sangiovese provides the backbone of Chianti. A
different clone of Sangiovese is used for Brunello di Montalcino.
As a result, Europeans are used to wines with regional names.
In time, the New World's appellation system may well evolve into
one more like Europe's. Already California appellations such as
Carneros and Santa Maria Valley are becoming synonymous with
Chardonnay and Pinot Noir, Oregon's Willamette Valley is known
for Pinot Noir and Australia's Hunter Valley for Shiraz; back in
California, Rutherford, Oakville and the Stags Leap District are
all associated with Cabernet-based red table wines. Wineries
with vested financial interests in these appellations and the
marketing clout to emphasize the distinctive features of the
wines grown in these areas will determine how the appellation
system evolves and whether specific wine styles emerge. The
appellations themselves will also determine which grapes excel
and deserve special recognition.
Following are descriptions of the most commonly used Vitis
vinifera grapes. American wine is also made from native
Vitis labrusca, especially the Concord grape:
BARBERA (Red) [bar-BEHR-uh]
Most successful in Italy's Piedmont region, where it makes such
wines as Barbera d'Asti, Barbera di Monferato and Barbera di
Alba. Its wines are characterized by a high level of acidity
(meaning brightness and crispness), deep ruby color and full
body, with low tannin levels; flavors are berrylike. However,
plantings have declined sharply in the United States. A few
wineries still produce it as a varietal wine, but those numbers
too are dwindling. Its main attribute as a blending wine is its
ability to maintain a naturally high acidity even in hot
climates. The wine has more potential than is currently realized
and may stage a modest comeback as Italian-style wines gain
popularity.
BRUNELLO (Red) [broo-NEHL-oh]
This strain of Sangiovese is the only grape permitted for
Brunello di Montalcino, the rare, costly Tuscan red that at its
best is loaded with luscious black and red fruits and chewy
tannins.
CABERNET FRANC (Red) [cab-er-NAY FRANK]
Increasingly popular as both stand-alone varietal and blending
grape, Cabernet Franc is used primarily for blending in
Bordeaux, although it can rise to great heights in quality, as
seen in the grand wine Cheval-Blanc. In France's Loire Valley
it's also made into a lighter wine called Chinon. It is well
established in Italy, particularly the northeast, where it is
sometimes called Cabernet Frank or Bordo. California has grown
it for more than 30 years, and Argentina, Long Island,
Washington state and New Zealand is picking it up.
As a varietal wine, it usually benefits from small amounts of
Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot, and can be as intense and
full-bodied as either of those wines. But it often strays away
from currant and berry notes into stalky green flavors that
become more pronounced with age. Given its newness in the United
States, Cabernet Franc may just need time to get more attention
and rise in quality.
Much blended with Cabernet Sauvignon, it may be a Cabernet
Sauvignon mutation adapted to cooler, damper conditions.
Typically light- to medium-bodied wine with more immediate fruit
than Cabernet Sauvignon and some of the herbaceous odors evident
in unripe Cabernet Sauvignon.
CABERNET SAUVIGNON (Red) [cab-er-NAY SO-vin-yon]
The undisputed king of red wines, Cabernet is a remarkably
steady and consistent performer throughout much of the state.
While it grows well in many appellations, in specific
appellations it is capable of rendering wines of uncommon depth,
richness, concentration and longevity. Bordeaux has used the
grape since the 18th century, always blending it with Cabernet
Franc, Merlot and sometimes a soupçon of Petite Verdot. The
Bordeaux model is built around not only the desire to craft
complex wines, but also the need to ensure that different grape
varieties ripen at different intervals or to give a wine color,
tannin or backbone.
Elsewhere in the world--and it is found almost everywhere in the
world--Cabernet Sauvignon is as likely to be bottled on its own
as in a blend. It mixes with Sangiovese in Tuscany, Syrah in
Australia and Provence, and Merlot and Cabernet Franc in South
Africa, but flies solo in some of Italy's super-Tuscans. In the
United States., it's unlikely any region will surpass Napa
Valley's high-quality Cabernets and Cabernet blends. Through
most of the grape's history in California (which dates to the
1800s), the best Cabernets have been 100 percent Cabernet. Since
the late 1970s, many vintners have turned to the Bordeaux model
and blended smaller portions of Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Malbec
and Petite Verdot into their Cabernets. The case for blending is
still under review, but clearly there are successes. On the
other hand, many U.S. producers are shifting back to higher
percentages of Cabernet, having found that blending doesn't add
complexity and that Cabernet on its own has a stronger
character.
At its best, unblended Cabernet produces wines of great
intensity and depth of flavor. Its classic flavors are currant,
plum, black cherry and spice. It can also be marked by herb,
olive, mint, tobacco, cedar and anise, and ripe, jammy notes. In
warmer areas, it can be supple and elegant; in cooler areas, it
can be marked by pronounced vegetal, bell pepper, oregano and
tar flavors (a late ripener, it can't always be relied on in
cool areas, which is why Germany, for example, has never
succumbed to the lure). It can also be very tannic if that is a
feature of the desired style. The best Cabernets start out dark
purple-ruby in color, with firm acidity, a full body, great
intensity, concentrated flavors and firm tannins.
Cabernet has an affinity for oak and usually spends 15 to 30
months in new or used French or American barrels, a process
that, when properly executed imparts a woody, toasty cedar or
vanilla flavor to the wine while slowly oxidizing it and
softening the tannins. Microclimates are a major factor in the
weight and intensity of the Cabernets. Winemakers also influence
the style as they can extract high levels of tannin and heavily
oak their wines.
CARIGNAN (Red) [karin-YAN]
Also known as Carignane (California), Cirnano (Italy). Once a
major blending grape for jug wines, Carignan's popularity has
diminished, and plantings have dropped from 25,111 acres in 1980
to 8,883 in 1994. It still appears in some blends, and old
vineyards are sought after for the intensity of their grapes.
But the likelihood is that other grapes with even more intensity
and flavor will replace it in the future.
CARMENERE (Red) [car-men-YEHR]
Also known as Grande Vidure, this grape was once widely planted
in Bordeaux, but is now associated primarily with Chile.
Carmenere, along with Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon, was
imported to Chile around 1850. According to Chilean vintners,
Carmenere has been mislabeled for so long that many growers and
the Chilean government now consider it Merlot.
CHARBONO (Red) [SHAR-bono]
Found mainly in California (and possibly actually Dolcetto),
this grape has dwindled in acreage. Its stature as a wine was
supported mainly by Inglenook-Napa Valley, which bottled a
Charbono on a regular basis. Occasionally it made for
interesting drinking and it aged well. But more often it was
lean and tannic, a better story than bottle of wine. A few
wineries still produce it, but none with any success.
CHARDONNAY (White) [shar-dun-NAY]
As Cabernet Sauvignon is the king of reds, so is Chardonnay the
king of white wines, for it makes consistently excellent, rich
and complex whites. This is an amazingly versatile grape that
grows well in a variety of locations throughout the world. In
Burgundy, it is used for the exquisite whites, such as
Montrachet, Meursault and Pouilly-Fuissè, and true Chablis; in
Champagne it turns into Blanc de Blancs. Among the many other
countries that have caught Chardonnay fever, Australia is
especially strong.
Chardonnay was introduced to California in the 1930s but didn't
become popular until the 1970s. Areas such as Anderson Valley,
Carneros, Monterey, Russian River, Santa Barbara and Santa Maria
Valley, all closer to cooler maritime influences, are now
producing wines far superior to those made a decade ago.Though
there is a Mâconnais village called Chardonnay, no one agrees on
the grape's origin--it may even be Middle Eastern.
When well made, Chardonnay offers bold, ripe, rich and intense
fruit flavors of apple, fig, melon, pear, peach, pineapple,
lemon and grapefruit, along with spice, honey, butter,
butterscotch and hazelnut flavors. Winemakers build more
complexity into this easy-to-manipulate wine using common
vinification techniques: barrel fermentation, sur lie aging
during which the wine is left on its natural sediment, and
malolactic fermentation (a process which converts tart malic
acid to softer lactic acid). No other white table wine benefits
as much from oak aging or barrel fermentation. Chardonnay grapes
have a fairly neutral flavor, and because they are usually
crushed or pressed and not fermented with their skins the way
red wines are, whatever flavors emerge from the grape are
extracted almost instantly after crushing. Red wines that soak
with their skins for days or weeks through fermentation extract
their flavors quite differently.
Because Chardonnay is also a prolific producer that can easily
yield 4 to 5 tons of high-quality grapes per acre, it is a cash
cow for producers in every country where it's grown. Many
American and Australian Chardonnays are very showy, well oaked
and appealing on release, but they lack the richness, depth and
concentration to age and have in fact evolved rather quickly,
often losing their intensity and concentration within a year or
two. Many vintners, having studied and recognized this, are now
sharply reducing crop yields, holding tonnage down to 2 to 3
tons per acre in the belief that this will lead to greater
concentration. The only downside to this strategy is that lower
crop loads lead to significantly less wine to sell, therefore
higher prices as well.
Chardonnay's popularity has also led to a huge market of
ordinary wines, so there's a broad range of quality to choose
from in this varietal. There are a substantial number of
domestic Chardonnays, which can range from simple and off dry to
more complex and sophisticated. The producer's name on the wine,
and often its price, are indicators of the level of quality.
CHENIN BLANC (White) [SHEN'N BLAHNK]
This native of the Loire valley has two personalities: at home
it's the basis of such famous, long-lived whites as Vouvray and
Anjou, Quarts de Chaume and Saumer, but on other soils it
becomes just a very good blending grape. It is South Africa's
most-planted grape, though there is called Steen, and both there
and in California it is currently used primarily as a blending
grape for generic table wines. Chenin Blanc should perform
better in California, and someday it may. It can yield a
pleasant enough wine, with subtle melon, peach, spice and citrus
notes. The great Loire whites vary from dry and fresh to sweet,
depending on the vintage and the producer. In South Africa,
Chenin Blanc is even used for fortified wines and spirits.
DOLCETTO (Red) [dole-CHET-to]
Almost exclusive to northwest Piedmont, this produces soft,
round, fruity wines fragrant with licorice and almonds that
should be drunk within about three years. It's used as a safety
net for producers of Nebbiolo and Barbera wines, which take much
longer to age. There are seven DOCs: Acqui, Alba, Asti, Dinao
d'Alba, Dogliani, Langhe Monregalesi and Ovada.
FUMÉ BLANC (White) [FOO-may BLAHNK]
See Sauvignon Blanc
GAMAY (Red) [ga-MAY]
Beaujolais makes its famous, fruity reds exclusively from one of
the many Gamays available, the Gamay Noir à Jus Blanc. Low in
alcohol and relatively high in acidity, the wines are meant to
be drunk soon after bottling; the ultimate example of this is
Beaujolais Nouveau, whipped onto shelves everywhere almost
overnight. It is also grown in the Loire, but makes no
remarkable wines. The Swiss grow it widely, for blending with
Pinot Noir; they often chaptalize the wines.
California, meanwhile, grows a variety called Gamay Beaujolais,
a high-yield clone of Pinot Noir that makes undistinguished
wines in most places where it's grown. In the United States the
grape is used primarily for blending, and acreage is declining,
as those serious about Pinot Noir are using superior clones and
planting in cooler areas.
GEWÜRZTRAMINER (White) [geh-VERTS-trah-mee-ner]
Gewürztraminer can yield magnificent wines, as is best
demonstrated in Alsace, France, where it is made in to a variety
of styles from dry to off-dry to sweet. The grape needs a cool
climate that allows it to get ripe. It's a temperamental grape
to grow and vinify, as its potent spiciness can be overbearing
when unchecked. At its best, it produces a floral and refreshing
wine with crisp acidity that pairs well with spicy dishes. When
left for late harvest, it's uncommonly rich and complex, a
tremendous dessert wine. It is also popular in Eastern Europe,
New Zealand and the Pacific Northwest.
GRENACHE (Red) [greh-NAHSH]
Drought- and heat-resistant, it yields a fruity, spicy,
medium-bodied wine with supple tannins. The second most widely
planted grape in the world, Grenache is widespread in the
southern Rhône. It is blended to produce Châteauneuf-du-Pape
(although there are some pure varietals) and used on its own for
the rosès of Tavel and Lirac; it is also used in France's sweet
Banyuls wine. Important in Spain, where it's known as Garnacha
Tinta, it is especially noteworthy in Rioja and Priorato.
Grenache used to be popular in Australia, but has now been
surpassed by Syrah; a few Barossa Valley producers are making
wines similar to Châteauneuf-du-Pape. In California it's a
workhorse-blending grape, though occasionally an old vineyard is
found and its grapes made into a varietal wine, which at its
best can be good. It may make a comeback as enthusiasts of Rhône
style seek cooler areas and an appropriate blending grape.
Also,Grenache Blanc, known in Spain as Garnacha Blanca, which is
bottled in the Southern Rhône. It's used for blending in
France's Rousillon and the Languedoc, and in various Spanish
whites, including Rioja.
GRÜNER VELTLINER (White) [GROO-ner VELT-linner]
The most widely planted grape in Austria, it can be found to a
lesser extent in some other parts of Eastern Europe. It achieves
its qualitative pinnacle in the Wachau, Kremstal and Kamptal
regions along the Danube River west of Vienna. Gruner, as it's
called for short, shows distinct white pepper, tobacco, lentil
and citrus flavors and aromas, along with high acidity, making
it an excellent partner for food. Gruner is singularly unique in
its flavor profile, and though it rarely has the finesse and
breeding of the best Austrian Rieslings (though it can come
close when grown on granite soils), it is similar in body and
texture.
MALBEC (Red) [MAHL-beck]
Once important in Bordeaux and the Loire in various blends, this
not-very-hardy grape has been steadily replaced by Merlot and
the two Cabernets. However, Argentina is markedly successful
with this varietal. In the United States Malbec is a blending
grape only, and an insignificant one at that, but a few wineries
use it, the most obvious reason being that it's considered part
of the Bordeaux-blend recipe.
MARSANNE (White) [mahr-SANN]
Popular in the Rhône (along with Grenache Blanc, Roussanne and
Viognier). Australia, especially in Victoria, has some of the
world's oldest vineyards. At its best, Marsanne can be a
full-bodied, moderately intense wine with spice, pear and citrus
notes.
MERLOT (Red) [mur-LO]
Merlot is the red-wine success of the 1990s: its popularity has
soared along with its acreage, and it seems wine lovers can't
drink enough of it. It dominates Bordeaux, except for the Médoc
and Graves. Though it is mainly used for the Bordeaux blend, it
can stand-alone. In St.-Emilion and Pomerol, especially, it
produces noteworthy wines, culminating in Château Pétrus. In
Italy it's everywhere, though most of the Merlot is light,
unremarkable stuff. But Ornellaia and Fattoria de Ama are strong
exceptions to that rule. Despite its popularity, its quality
ranges only from good to very good most of the time, though
there are a few stellar producers found around the world.
Several styles have emerged. One is a Cabernet-style Merlot,
which includes a high percentage (up to 25 percent) of Cabernet,
similar currant and cherry flavors and firm tannins. A second
style is less reliant on Cabernet, softer, more supple,
medium-weight, less tannic and features more herb, cherry and
chocolate flavors. A third style is a very light and simple
wine; this type's sales are fueling Merlot's overall growth.
Like Cabernet, Merlot can benefit from some blending, as
Cabernet can give it backbone, color and tannic strength. It
also marries well with oak. Merlot is relatively new in
California, dating to the early 1970s, and is a difficult grape
to grow, as it sets and ripens unevenly. Many critics believe
Washington State has a slight quality edge with this wine. By
the year 2000, vintners should have a better idea of which areas
are best suited to this grape variety. As a wine, Merlot's aging
potential is fair to good. It may be softer with age, but often
the fruit flavors fade and the herbal flavors dominate.
There is also an unrelated Merlot Blanc.
MOURVEDRE (Red) [more-VAY-druh]
As long as the weather is warm, Mourvèdre likes a wide variety
of soils. It's popular across the south of France, especially in
Provence and the Côtes-du-Rhône, and is often used in
Châteauneuf-du-Pape; Languedoc makes it as a varietal. Spain
uses it in many areas, including Valencia. In the United States
it's a minor factor now, pursued by a few wineries that
specialize in Rhône-style wines. The wine can be pleasing, with
medium-weight, spicy cherry and berry flavors and moderate
tannins. It ages well.
MUSCAT (White) [MUSS-kat]
Known as Muscat, Muscat Blanc and Muscat Canelli, it is marked
by strong spice and floral notes and can be used in blending,
its primary function in California. Moscato in Italy, Moscatel
in Iberia: This grape can turn into anything from the
low-alcohol, sweet and frothy Asti Spumante and Muscat de
Canelli to bone-dry wines like Muscat d'Alsace. It also produces
fortified wine such as Beaumes de Venise.
NEBBIOLO (Red) [NEH-bee-oh-low]
The great grape of Northern Italy, which excels there in Barolo
and Barbaresco, strong, ageable wines. Mainly unsuccessful
elsewhere, Nebbiolo also now has a small foothold in California.
So far the wines are light and uncomplicated, bearing no
resemblance to the Italian types.
PETITE SIRAH (Red) [peh-TEET sih-RAH]]
Known for its dark hue and firm tannins, Petite Sirah has often
been used as a blending wine to provide color and structure,
particularly to Zinfandel. On its own, Petite Sirah can also
make intense, peppery, age worthy wines, but few experts consider
it as complex as Syrah itself.
There has been much confusion over the years about Petite
Sirah's origins. For a long time, the grape was thought to be
completely unrelated to Syrah, despite its name. Petite Sirah
was believed to actually be Durif, a minor red grape variety
first grown in southern France in the late 1800s. However,
recent DNA research shows Petite Sirah and Syrah are related
after all. A study done at the University of California at Davis
determined not only that 90 percent of the Petite Sirah found in
California is indeed Durif, but also that Durif is a cross
between Peloursin and Syrah.
Just to make things more confusing, in France, growers refer to
different variants of Syrah as Petite and Grosse, which has to
do with the yield of the vines.
PINOT BLANC (White) [PEE-no BLAHNK]
Often referred to as a poor man's Chardonnay because of its
similar flavor and texture profile, Pinot Blanc is used in
Champagne, Burgundy, Alsace, Germany, Italy and California and
can make a terrific wine. When well made, it is intense,
concentrated and complex, with ripe pear, spice, citrus and
honey notes. Can age, but is best early on while its fruit
shines through.
PINOT GRIS or PINOT GRIGIO (White) [PEE-no GREE or GREE-zho]
Known as Pinot Grigio in Italy, where it is mainly found in the
northeast, producing quite a lot of undistinguished dry white
wine and Collio's excellent whites. As Pinot Gris, it used to be
grown in Burgundy and the Loire, though it has been supplanted,
but it comes into its own in Alsace--where it's known as Tokay.
Southern Germany plants it as Ruländer. When good, this varietal
is soft, gently perfumed and has more color than most whites.
PINOT NOIR (Red) [PEE-no NWA]
Pinot Noir, the great grape of Burgundy, is a touchy variety.
The best examples offer the classic black cherry, spice,
raspberry and currant flavors, and an aroma that can resemble
wilted roses, along with earth, tar, herb and cola notes. It can
also be rather ordinary, light, simple, herbal, vegetal and
occasionally weedy. It can even be downright funky, with pungent
barnyard aromas. In fact, Pinot Noir is the most fickle of all
grapes to grow: It reacts strongly to environmental changes such
as heat and cold spells, and is notoriously fussy to work with
once picked, since its thin skins are easily bruised and broken,
setting the juice free. Even after fermentation, Pinot Noir can
hide its weaknesses and strengths, making it a most difficult
wine to evaluate out of barrel. In the bottle, too, it is often
a chameleon, showing poorly one day, brilliantly the next.
The emphasis on cooler climates coincides with more rigorous
clonal selection, eliminating those clones suited for sparkling
wine, which have even thinner skins. These days there is also a
greater understanding of and appreciation for different styles
of Pinot Noir wine, even if there is less agreement about those
styles--should it be rich, concentrated and loaded with flavor,
or a wine of elegance, finesse and delicacy? Or can it, in
classic Pinot Noir sense, be both? Even varietal character
remains subject to debate. Pinot Noir can certainly be tannic,
especially when it is fermented with some of its stems, a
practice that many vintners around the world believe contributes
to the wine's backbone and longevity. Pinot Noir can also be
long-lived, but predicting with any precision which wines or
vintages will age is often the ultimate challenge in
forecasting.
Pinot Noir is the classic grape of Burgundy and also of
Champagne, where it is pressed immediately after picking in
order to yield white juice. It is just about the only red grown
in Alsace. In California, it excelled in the late 1980s and
early 1990s and seems poised for further progress. Once
producers stopped vinifying it as if it were Cabernet, planted
vineyards in cooler climates and paid closer attention to
tonnage, quality increased substantially. It's fair to say that
California and Oregon have a legitimate claim to producing
world-class Pinot Noir.
RIESLING (White) [REES-ling]
One of the world's greatest white wine grapes, the Riesling
vine's hardy wood makes it extremely resistant to frost. The
variety excels in cooler climates, where its tendency to ripen
slowly makes it an excellent source for sweet wines made from
grapes attacked by the noble rot Botrytis cinerea, which withers
the grapes' skin and concentrates their natural sugar levels.
Riesling is best known for producing the wines of Germany's
Mosel-Saar-Ruwer, Pfalz, Rheinhessen and Rheingau wines, but it
also achieves brilliance in Alsace and Austria. While the sweet
German Beerenauslese and Trockenbeerenauslese wines, along with
Alsace's famed Selection de Grains Nobles, are often celebrated
for their high sugar levels and ability to age almost endlessly,
they are rare and expensive.
More commonly, Riesling produces dry or just off-dry versions.
Its high acidity and distinctive floral, citrus, peach and
mineral accents have won dry Riesling many fans. The variety
pairs well with food and has an uncanny knack for transmitting
the elements of its vineyard source (what the French call
terroir).
The wines from Germany's Mosel region are perhaps the purest
expression of the grape, offering lime, pie crust, apple, slate
and honeysuckle characteristics on a light-bodied and racy
frame. Germany's Rheinhessen, Rheingau and Pfalz regions
produces wines of similar characteristics, but with increasing
body and spice.
In Alsace, Riesling is most often made in a dry style,
full-bodied, with a distinct petrol aroma. In Austria, Riesling
plays second fiddle to Gruner Veltliner in terms of quantity,
but when grown on favored sites it offers wines with great focus
and clarity allied to the grape's typically racy frame.
In other regions, Riesling struggles to maintain its share of
vineyard plantings, but it can be found (often under synonyms
such as White Riesling, Rhine Riesling or Johannisberg Riesling)
in California, Oregon, Washington, New York's Finger Lakes
region, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, South America and
Canada.
SANGIOVESE (Red) [san-geeo-VEHS-eh]
Sangiovese is best known for providing the backbone for many
superb Italian red wines from Chianti and Brunello di Montalcino,
as well as the so-called super-Tuscan blends. Sangiovese is
distinctive for its supple texture and medium-to full-bodied
spice, raspberry, cherry and anise flavors. When blended with a
grape such as Cabernet Sauvignon, Sangiovese gives the resulting
wine a smoother texture and lightens up the tannins.
It is somewhat surprising that Sangiovese wasn't more popular in
California given the strong role Italian immigrants have played
in the state's winemaking heritage, but now the grape appears to
have a bright future in the state, both as a stand-alone
varietals wine and for use in blends with Cabernet Sauvignon,
Merlot and maybe even Zinfandel. Expect sweeping stylistic
changes as winemakers learn more about how the grape performs in
different locales as well as how it marries with different
grapes. Worth watching.
SAUVIGNON BLANC (White) [SO-vin-yon BLAHNK]
Another white with a notable aroma, this one "grassy" or
"musky." The pure varietal is found mainly in the Loire, at
Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé, As part of a blend, the grape is all
over Bordeaux, in Pessac-Léognan, Graves and the Médoc whites;
it also shows up in Sauternes. New Zealand has had striking
success with Sauvignon Blanc, producing its own perfumed, fruity
style that spread across North America and then back to France.
In the United States, Robert Mondavi rescued the varietal in the
1970s by labeling it Fumé Blanc, and he and others have enjoyed
success with it. The key to success seems to be in taming its
overt varietal intensity, which at its extreme leads to pungent
grassy, vegetal and herbaceous flavors. Many winemakers treat it
like in a sort of poor man's Chardonnay, employing barrel
fermentation, sur lie aging and malolactic fermentation. But its
popularity comes as well from the fact that it is a prodigious
producer and a highly profitable wine to make. It can be crisp
and refreshing, matches well with foods, costs less to produce
and grow than Chardonnay and sells for less. It also gets less
respect from vintners than perhaps it should. Its popularity
ebbs and flows, at times appearing to challenge Chardonnay and
at other times appearing to be a cash-flow afterthought. But
even at its best, it does not achieve the kind of richness,
depth or complexity Chardonnay does and in the end that alone
may be the defining difference.
Sauvignon Blanc grows well in a variety of appellations. It
marries well with oak and Sèmillon, and many vintners are adding
a touch of Chardonnay for extra body. The wine drinks best in
its youth, but sometimes will benefit from short-term cellaring.
As a late-harvest wine, it's often fantastic, capable of
yielding amazingly complex and richly flavored wines.
SÉMILLON (White) [SEM-ih-yon]
On its own or in a blend, this white can age. With Sauvignon
Blanc, its traditional partner, this is the foundation of
Sauternes and most of the great dry whites found in Graves and
Pessac-Léognan; these are rich, honeyed wines,. Sémillon is one
of the grapes susceptible to Botrytis cinerea. Australia's
Hunter Valley uses it solo to make a full-bodied white that used
to be known as Hunger Riesling, Chablis or White Burgundy. In
South Africa it used to be so prevalent that it was just called
"wine grape," but it has declined drastically in importance
there.
In the United States, Sémillon enjoys modest success as a
varietal wine in California and Washington, but it continues to
lose ground in acreage in California. It can make a wonderful
late-harvest wine, and those wineries that focus on it can make
well balanced wines with complex fig, pear, tobacco and honey
notes. When blended into Sauvignon Blanc, it adds body, flavor
and texture. When Sauvignon Blanc is added to Sémillon, the
latter gains grassy herbal notes. It can also be found blended
with Chardonnay, more to fill out the volume of wine than to add
anything to the package.
SYRAH or SHIRAZ (Red) [sih-RAH or shih-RAHZ]
Hermitage and Côte-Rôtie in France, Penfolds Grange in
Australia--the epitome of Syrah is a majestic red that can age
for half a century. The grape seems to grow well in a number of
areas and is capable of rendering rich, complex and distinctive
wines, with pronounced pepper, spice, black cherry, tar, leather
and roasted nut flavors, a smooth, supple texture and smooth
tannins. In southern France it finds its way into various
blends, as in Châteauneuf-du-Pape and Languedoc-Roussillon.
Known as Shiraz in Australia, it was long used for
bread-and-butter blends, but an increasing number of
high-quality bottlings are being made, especially from old vines
in the Barossa Valley.
In the United States., Syrah's rise in quality is most
impressive. It appears to have the early-drinking appeal of
Pinot Noir and Zinfandel and few of the eccentricities of
Merlot, and may well prove far easier to grow and vinify than
any other red wines aside from Cabernet.
TEMPRANILLO (Red) [temp-rah-NEE-yo]
Spain's major contribution to red wine, Tempranillo is
indigenous to the country and is rarely grown elsewhere. It is
the dominant grape in the red wines from Rioja and Ribera del
Duero, two of Spain's most important wine regions.
In Rioja, Tempranillo is often blended with Garnacha, Mazuelo
and a few other minor grapes. When made in a traditional style,
Tempranillo can be garnet-hued, with flavors of tea, brown sugar
and vanilla. When made in a more modern style, it can display
aromas and flavors redolent of plums, tobacco and cassis, along
with very dark color and substantial tannins. Whatever the
style, Riojas tend to be medium-bodied wines, offering more
acidity than tannin.
In Ribera del Duero, wines are also divided along traditional
and modern styles, and show similarities to Rioja. The more
modern styled Riberas, however, can be quite powerful, offering
a density and tannic structure similar to that of Cabernet
Sauvignon.
Tempranillo is known variously throughout Spain as Cencibel,
Tinto del Pais, Tinto Fino, Ull de Llebre and Ojo. It's also
grown along the Douro River in Portugal under the monikers Tinta
Roriz (used in the making of Port) and Tinta Aragonez.
TREBBIANO or UGNI BLANC (White) [treh-bee-AH-no or OO-nee
BLAHNK]
This is Trebbiano in Italy andUgni Blancin France. It is
tremendously prolific; low in alcohol but high in acidity, it is
found in almost any basic white Italian wine. It is so ingrained
in Italian winemaking that it is actually a sanctioned
ingredient of the blend used for (red) Chianti and Vino Nobile
di Montepulciano. Most current Tuscan producers do not add it to
their wines, however The French, who also often call this grape
St.-Émilion, used it for Cognac and Armagnac brandy; Ugni Blanc
grapevines outnumbered Chardonnay by five to one in France
during the '80s.
VIOGNIER (White) [vee-oh-NYAY]
Viognier, the rare white grape of France's
Rhône Valley, is one of the most difficult grapes to grow, But
fans of the floral, spicy white wine are thrilled by its
prospects in the south of France and the new world. So far most
of the Viogners produced in the United States are rather
one-dimensional, with abundance of spiciness but less complexity
than they should have. Still, there are a few bright spots.
It is used in Condrieu's rare whites and sometimes blended with
reds in the Northern Rhône. There is also a variety of bottling
available from southern France, most of them somewhat light.
ZINFANDEL (Red) [ZIHN-fan-dell]
The origins of this tremendously versatile and popular grape are
not known for certain, although it is thought to have come from
Southern Italy as a cousin of Primitivo. It is the most widely
planted red grape in California (though Australia has also
played around with the grape). Much of it is vinified into white
Zinfandel, a blush-colored, slightly sweet wine. Real Zinfandel,
the red wine, is the quintessential California wine. It has been
used for blending with other grapes, including Cabernet
Sauvignon and Petite Syrah. It has been made in a claret style,
with berry and cherry flavors, mild tannins and pretty oak
shadings. It has been made into a full-bodied, ultra ripe,
intensely flavored and firmly tannic wine designed to age. And
it has been made into late-harvest and Port-style wines that
feature very ripe, raisin flavors, alcohol above 15 percent and
chewy tannins.
Zinfandel's popularity among consumers fluctuates. In the 1990s
Zinfandel is enjoying another groundswell of popularity, as
winemakers took renewed interest, focusing on higher-quality
vineyards in areas well suited to Zinfandel. Styles aimed more
for the mainstream and less for extremes, emphasizing the
grape's zesty, spicy pepper, raspberry, cherry, wild berry and
plum flavors, and its complex range of tar, earth and leather
notes. Zinfandel lends itself to blending.
Zinfandel is a challenging grape to grow: its berry size varies
significantly within a bunch, which leads to uneven ripening.
Because of that, Zinfandel often needs to hang on the vine
longer to ripen as many berries as possible. Closer attention to
viticulture and an appreciation for older vines, which tend to
produce smaller crops of uniformly higher quality, account for
better-balanced wines.
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