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Pinotphilia and other afflictions

7 Mar 2009 by Jancis Robinson/FT

8 Mar As if to prove my first assertion below, I have had more reaction to this article than to any recent FT article I can remember. For that reason I have added a comments box so that anyone can add their own thoughts. I shall start the ball rolling with a few from my inbox.


People are funny about Pinot Noir. So many of them are so passionate about it that there are special Pinot Noir events all over the world.

The International Pinot Noir Celebration has been held every July in Oregon since 1987 and has spawned a copy in California’s Central Coast. New Zealand has no fewer than two Pinot Noir events, one in the capital Wellington and the other in Central Otago in ski country, vying with each other for how many attendees they can muster and how glorious an array of producers from the mother region, Burgundy, they can lure. Even Australia, which many Europeans might imagine is too hot for such a delicate variety as Pinot Noir, gave birth to the Mornington Peninsula Pinot Noir Celebration in 2003.

And all this before the movie Sideways singlehandedly turned American wine drinkers from Merlot fanciers to Pinotphiles. Since its hero Miles sang the praises of Burgundy’s red wine grape over two cinematic hours, the price of Pinot Noir grapes has rocketed so that American brand owners have been scouring the world in search of reasonable Pinot Noir, or wine that can be so labelled. (It recently came to light that the Languedoc in southern France has been exporting several times more ‘Pinot Noir’ than it grows.)

The inspiration for true lovers of Pinot Noir is of course red burgundy. This delicate, earthy, unpredictable, playful liquid gets under winemakers’ skin to such an extent that all over the world, where the climate is cool enough to allow the early-ripening Pinot Noir grape a chance of hanging on the vine long enough to develop some interesting flavours, people have been experimenting with the red burgundy grape.

Because Pinot Noir is so finicky, the results of these experiments have been much less obviously successful than when happier travellers such as Bordeaux’s Cabernet Sauvignon have been transplanted around the world. In fact, such has been commercial demand for Pinot Noir in the US that all too many wines sold as Pinot Noir there have been simply sweetish and soft rather than exhibiting any of Pinot’s delicacy and tantalisingly wide range of possible aromas: raspberries, strawberries, redcurrants, bitter cherries, violets, mushrooms, coffee (generally from barrels rather than grapes), autumn undergrowth, truffles, well hung game and many more.

A common problem with Pinots made by neophytes was that they were too dark, too heavy, too chewy and too concentrated – too Cabernet-like in fact. But all this is changing rapidly as those in what one might call the world’s Pinot Noir hotspots (cool spots?) – New Zealand, Oregon, and parts of Germany and Australia – have become more proficient.

At the recent Mornington Peninsula Pinot Noir Celebration I asked Frédéric Mugnier of Chambolle-Musigny, on his first-ever visit to Australia, what he thought of the Australian Pinot Noirs he had tasted there.'I was expecting them to be very heavy, dark, jammy wines that would be difficult to drink', he admitted, 'but in fact what I have tasted have been delicious wines, with fluidity, lightness in a positive way, wines that are definitely very enjoyable to drink. I see that winemakers have maybe changed their idea of the style they want to make.' (See my recent tasting notes on Mornington Pinots.)

And the weekend before at Central Otago’s Pinotfest, I had observed the same phenomenon. Four years before when I had attended the same event, I had been impressed by how flatteringly fruity Otago’s Pinot Noirs had been, but had rarely seen much complexity in the wines.The current crop of Central Otago, indeed all Kiwi, Pinots were in general less obviously sweet, more restrained and becoming more complex and subtle. (It may be, incidentally, that the old fruit bomb style has more mass market appeal, but Pinot Noir has a habit of making wine professionals want to produce wines more like Burgundy’s best.) This was likely to happen as the vines, many of them recently planted, become older, drawing on a deeper root system, but I think there has been an evolution in ambition too. (See my tasting notes on Central Otago 2007 Pinot Noirs and NZ Pinots in general.)

A key element in this transformation of Pinot styles, I suspect, has been the dramatic increase in imports of burgundy into both Australia and New Zealand. Close study of the prototype helps enormously to prove that Pinot Noir can be both delicate and absorbing at the same time (or as Paolo De Marchi of Tuscany said to me recently about his notably elegant Chianti Classico, ‘music doesn’t have to be loud to be good’).

My few days in Victoria on the way home from New Zealand exposed me to some of Australia’s finest Pinot Noirs – most of them from Victoria’s cooler corners, although Tasmania can field a few challengers too. The Mornington Peninsula is reliably cooled by Antarctic influence and virtually all the Mornington Pinots (and Chardonnays) I tasted had lovely natural refreshing acidity, and were surprisingly transparent for Australian reds – the polar opposite of Barossa Shiraz, say. I then made my first visit to the producer of some of the finest Australian Pinot Noir I have encountered, Phillip Moraghan at Curly Flat in the Macedon Ranges. At 560m altitude, he claims it is Australia’s coolest viticultural region and I can well believe him. It is barely an hour’s drive north of central Melbourne and hardly an hour from Yarra Valley to the east, where I had seen Pinot Noir grapes picked that morning, yet in the windswept vineyards of Curly Flat, the Pinot grapes were still small, hard and bright green. All over the state of Victoria are pockets of land cool enough to give Pinot Noir a delightfully long growing season and the wines that result seem to be getting better with every vintage.

Of all the world’s wine regions outside Burgundy, Oregon is the one most heavily dependent on Pinot Noir. Being so much cooler and greyer than California provided the initial inspiration for the most influential pioneer, ‘Papa Pinot’ David Lett of Eyrie Vineyards, who died late last year. Here, too, wine styles are in transition, largely as a result of experimentation with new, more burgundian clones of Pinot Noir. The earlier selections came from Switzerland and California. They resulted in slightly more obvious flavours than the new ‘Dijon’ clones but they did seem particularly well adapted to the growing season in Oregon’s Pinot Noir heartland, the Willamette Valley. Because Burgundy is so much cooler than Oregon, its treasured clones of Pinot Noir can ripen a little bit too fast in a warm Willamette summer so there is still some fine tuning in Oregon’s vineyards.

Nevertheless there is a notable contrast between the style of Pinot Noir produced in Oregon and some of the most obvious styles of California Pinot Noir, which, with the exception of wines as subtle as those listed here, can often seem just too potent and sweet to outsiders more used to burgundy, however lauded they may be in their own market. Pinot Noir-making may be yet another field in which Californians are carving their own very distinctive path.

AUSTRALIA
Bass Philip
Bindi
Curly Flat
Eldridge Estate
Epis
Freycinet/Wineglass Bay
Gembrook Hill
Kelvedon Estate
Hurley
Paradigm Hill

CALIFORNIA
Au Bon Climat
Flowers
Hanzell
Littorai
Navarro
Saintsbury
Sanford

NEW ZEALAND
Bell Hill
Felton Road
Greenhough
Julicher
Muddy Water
Neudorf
Palliser
Rippon

OREGON
Domaine Drouhin
Evening Land
Eyrie
Ponzi
WillaKenzie

Comments

Hungarian-born, London-based wine importer Akos Forczek writes: Had I known I would have sent you some Gem samples with his Wairarapa Pinot Noir at 12% alc. Corey Hall learned how to make wine in Chassagne Montrachet and they laughed at him when he showed his wines 8-9 years ago. Also his Chardonnay prompts a lot of people to think of Meursault or Chassagne.

9 Mar 2009 18:00 by Jancis Robinson

Nick Davidson asks why I don't mention Dry River in New Zealand? Because while I am an admirer, and buyer, of Dry River Pinots, I don't think they qualify as 'delicately burgundian', the focus of my article.

9 Mar 2009 17:36 by Jancis Robinson

There are indeed arguably a few Germans and Canadians (or at least a collective mention of them) belonging on a list of the world's best sources for Pinot Noir. Having just returned from presenting over the weekend with six Austrian vintners at the San Luis Obispo World of Pinot Noir, I'd venture the opinion that - even though my own brief for Austrian Pinot Noir might be considered biased - if you asked the Californian vintners and wine lovers as well as other journalists who were present whether these Austrian wines were outclassed in the company of so many of California's and Oregon's best, they would almost unanimously say "no." (Admittedly, with a bit under 1% of Austrian acreage being devoted to Pinot, one could be forgiven for overlooking it simply on the basis of statistics.) And Pinots from Italy's Alto Adige are more than merely promising, I would argue. Simply to pick a striking example, older Pinots from Oskar Andergassen's Klosterhof are among the loveliest and intriguing mature Pinots I have tasted outside of Burgundy. Yet, not only is Andergassen internationally even less well-known than some of his fellow Pinot-growing South Tiroleans like Aurich, Foradori, or Niedrist, he is in a sector (Kaltern) not generally associated with top quality, much less with Pinot. Finally, when it comes to Pinot Noir, the Swiss are worth mentioning in connection with more than just the couple of generally not very well-regarded clones that originated in Wadenswill. In short, I'd add to your excellent survey of world Pinots an emphasis that the best may well be yet to come, and may well come from places few journalists, vintners, or wine lovers today expect.

9 Mar 2009 15:42 by David Schildknecht

Interestingly, you don't mention oak at all in your article. Even in recent years, I've found that from most top Pinot New World producers I've usually enjoyed their 'basic' Pinot cuvée more than their 'reserve' Pinot, usually because the 'reserve' has a higher proportion of new oak use. This has been especially the case with California Pinot.

9 Mar 2009 08:42 by Wink Lorch

This morning Wells Guthrie of Copain Wines in northern California writes: I happened upon an article in the Financial Times about pinot noir and after reading was prompted to contact you. I agree with you completely on the current state of pinot noir in California. I have though recognized many of the faults you mention in my own wines and began righting the ship in 2006. My new wines I think are more in line with a style you and others who admire Burgundy. Since sub 14% alc pinot noir is not in fashion these days, I am doing my best to present my wines to those who beat a different drum and speak to an audience who may find what I'm doing interesting or perhaps like the direction I'm heading.

9 Mar 2009 07:59 by Jancis Robinson

Paul Ross wrote from Canada: Great article. But Canada is also producing some fine Burgundian-style Pinots... Closson Chase, Inniskillin Montague Estate Vineyard Pinot Noir (previously made by Philip Dowell ex-Coldstream Hills), Le Clos Jordanne, Norman Hardie.... Ian Rudd put in a good word for Hamilton Russell Pinots made in their vineyards in the hinterland of Hermanus. Michael Schmidt argued in members' forum that I should have included some of Germany's fine Spaetburgunders - although my listing above is not meant to be a complete guide to delicious Pinots, just a selection of some of the more burgundian styles made outside Burgundy. In that vein, Lisa Shara Hall argued that Cristom and Brick House deserved inclusion in my Oregon selection. I'm afraid that while I am a huge fan of both producers, the wines of theirs I have tasted so far have not struck me as especially burgundian. She assures me I am in for some surprises when I revisit Oregon for this year's IPNC in July.

8 Mar 2009 20:01 by Jancis Robinson

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