Here's an overview of what formed this promising vintage. See
purple pages for detailed tasting
notes. I'm delighted, in a way, to report that British wine
lovers have, off their own bat, already gone for these wines in
a big way. Readers elsewhere stand a better chance of getting their
hands on the most sought-after grands crus, though prices in dollars
will be scary.
A list of UK merchants making special burgundy 2002 offers follows
this article.
'Flavour of the month' is an appalling cliche but the uniquely seductive
flavours of red and white burgundy could truly be said to have been
those most widely and appreciatively savoured by wine lovers in
London this January.
More British wine merchants than ever before have been driving over
to Beaune and Nuits-St-Georges to collect samples of the heavily-touted
2002 vintage to set before their customers in the hope of juicy
orders. And the signs are that more and more wine lovers all over
the world are becoming hooked on these wines which, in contrast
to Bordeaux's famously tightly-buttoned, immaculately-suited produce,
can be everything from flirtatious kittens to richly decadent essences,
but always with a certain peasant earthiness. If I were writing
for a style magazine, I would doubtless find some sociological parallel
here (our increased interest in spirituality and/or ecology perhaps)
but, you will be relieved to read, I will stick to the wines themselves.
They are extremely promising on the whole, and the vintage has been
talked up to such an extent that growers and merchants are reporting
unprecedented demand for 2002s - even though there are some producers,
particularly in the Côte de Nuits, who maintain that their
2001s are superior. And there is no shortage of wine trade wisdom
declaring that in 10 years' time we will all be singing the praises
of the more angular, but arguably more expressive, earlier vintage
in much the same way as the delicious 1991s were initially overlooked.
If demand is high for the 2002s partly because more and more palates
are discovering what particular pleasures can be had from burgundy,
it is also because wine lovers did not spend heavily on the last
big en primeur offering, red bordeaux 2002. And thirdly, while no-one
can be absolutely certain about its quality, everyone knows that
the quantity of the 2003 crop in Burgundy is relatively tiny.
Partly because of this last fact, some growers have increased their
prices at the cellar door for their 2002s - particularly for their
top wines which normally have to be allocated in any case. This,
together with currency movements over the last year, mean that the
2002 burgundies cost about 10 per cent more than the 2001s in sterling,
and even more in dollars. I am told that there are still some American
customers for 2002 burgundies, but nothing like the demand one would
expect for such a lauded vintage if the dollar were strong. In fact
many a British merchant reports increased allocations this year
- mainly because of reduced demand from across the Atlantic.
A cynic might say that Burgundian producers would have raised prices
for the 2002 vintage more if they could have relied on the American
market. But that would be unfair on the Burgundians who have over
the years been so much steadier and less avaricious in their pricing
than the Bordelais.
The 2002 growing season started off well, went into decline, then
was miraculously rescued at the last minute - as became evident
from last winter when successive tastings showed the wines in an
increasingly favourable light. But we must remember here that the
last seriously dreary vintage in Burgundy was 1994, so if there
is enthusiasm for 2002 it is certainly not based on a need to find
good news.
The first fairy godmother to smile on Burgundy's 2002s was the coldest
winter in a long time, which allowed the plants time to gather their
strength and killed off all possible bugs so that it was the healthiest
of vines that burst into bud at the beginning of the growing season.
May was not especially warm or sunny but June was, so the all-important
flowering took place rapidly and successfully, safeguarding the
uniformity of ripening on the vine and the quantity of wine produced
- though nowadays just about every vigneron worth his salt thins
at least the leaves and often some bunches during the summer to
concentrate the eventual flavour.
So far, so good, but then August was cloudy if not cool and, though
summer had been very much drier than in the south of France with
its terrible floods, things were looking distinctly doubtful as
late as September 11. A bit of rain in early September, particularly
in southern Burgundy, and low sugar levels made some growers worry
that they might be left with underripe, rotten grapes - the worst
combination of all.
But then, from about September 12, the wind turned round to the
north-east and, as it did in 2001, dried out the vines and delineated
the flavours. Burgundy then enjoyed an uninterrupted week of warm
sunshine which raised sugar levels with remarkable speed. But thanks
to those winds and the less-than-brilliant August there was no risk
of acid levels plummeting to the depths experienced during last
summer's exceptional, and exceptionally long, heatwave in Burgundy.
The sorting tables that have saved many a more variable vintage
in recent years, and the once-routine addition of sugar to bump
up the resulting alcohol of the wines (called chaptalisation), were
hardly needed by good producers in 2002. All in all, the grapes
seemed to have everything: health, good acidity, reasonable crop
levels, full ripeness and, on the basis of most of the wines I have
tasted, attractively ripe natural tannins. This was particularly
true of those Cˆte d'Or producers who waited some time after
a downpour on September 19 (which blighted one or two vineyards
in the far north of the Côte de Nuits with hail) before picking.
Average yields, according to Louis Jadot, were 44.3 hl/ha in the
grands crus, slightly lower than than average for the last five
years, while they were slightly higher than average for the village
wines and premiers crus which were generally over 50 hl/ha.
Of course there are many wines that taste less than harmonious at
this stage - some of them because they are obviously babies that
will eventually unfurl into loveliness, some of them because their
makers made some unwise decisions in the cellar. But overall this
is a delightfully well-balanced, accessible vintage that has been
a pleasure to taste even so young - yet is obviously far from facile.
Next week: Red wines v white and my favourite producers.
Specific UK Burgundy 2002 offers
The following UK merchants are making en primeur offers of 2002
burgundies and some of them have already sold out of their allocations
of the grandest, rarest wines.
A&B Vintners of Brenchley, Kent
John Armit Wines of London W11
Averys of Bristol
Berry Bros & Rudd of London W1
Bibendum Wines of London NW1
Connollys of Birmingham
Corney & Barrow of London E1 (whites only)
Domaine Direct of London
N1
Farr Vintners of London Sw1
Gauntleys of Nottingham
Goedhuis of London SW8
H&H Bancroft of London SE1
Handford Wines of London W11 amd SW7
Haynes Hanson & Clark of London SW1
Hicks & Don of Westbury, Wilts
Justerini & Brooks of
London SW1
Lay & Wheeler of Colchester
Laytons of London N1
Lea & Sandeman of London
OW Loeb of London SE1
Montrachet of London SE1
Morris & Verdin of London SE1
Raeburn Fine Wines of
Edinburgh
La Réserve of London
Howard Ripley of London SW18
Robert Rolls of London EC1
Stone, Vine & Sun
of Twyford, Winchester
Uncorked of London EC2
The Vineking
The Wine Society
Noel Young