
For specific wine recommendations, see purple pages.
The single event that conferred international respectability on
California wine was a wine tasting in Paris in 1976 at which well-versed
French oenophiles, at that stage inexperienced in these matters,
gave higher marks to some California wines than to their own most
revered burgundies and bordeaux.
One enterprising Chilean wine producer, Eduardo Chadwick of Viña
Errázuriz, has managed to organise a similar evolutionary
milestone for the Chilean wine industry - or at least for his
own wines.
In Berlin last month, 36 respected European wine tasters, including
Steven Spurrier who organised the Paris event in 1976, were presented
with 16 (very young) top Cabernets from Chile, Bordeaux and Italy
and managed to award the top two places to Viñedo Chadwick
2000 and the Mondavi joint venture Seña 2000, both made
by Errázuriz, ahead of Châteaux Lafite, Latour and
Margaux from both 2000 and 2001 vintages.
(Bordeaux
enthusiasts may be interested to know that the two best-performing
French wines were Lafite 2000 and then Margaux 2001. General wine
enthusiasts may be interested to know that I have subsequently
tasted the Viñedo Chadwick 2000 and found it
well made but very sweet and heady.)
I suspect that if non-Errázuriz wines had been included,
notably the joint venture between Concha y Toro and Mouton- Rothschild
Almaviva, Chile might have performed even better at what will
doubtless come to be known in the history of Chilean wine as 'the
Berlin tasting' - which could hardly have happened at a better
time.
Chileans have doubled their total vineyard area since 1995 and
have one of the world's more dramatic imbalances between production
and domestic consumption of wine. Furthermore, only 55 per cent
of wine exported from Chile leaves the country in anything as
smart as a bottle. To survive, the wine industry really, really
needs to export, to polish its image, and to shrink the proportion
of wine shipped in bulk.
Since Britain is only just behind the US as Chile's most important
market for wine, and has the most obvious potential for growth,
Chileans are finally making a serious generic investment in the
UK. It is no coincidence that the man chosen as UK Director of
Wines of Chile spent the last 13 years helping to drive the Australian
wine juggernaut to number one position in Britain.
One of the first things he did was convince the Chileans to hold
a serious wine judging along the lines of Australia's famous wine
shows. Accordingly I found myself with eight fellow judges, only
three of them Chilean, in Santiago at the end of last year, trawling
through hundreds of entries from almost all commercially significant
bodegas, in the first-ever Wines of Chile Awards.
I must confess that I approached the task expecting to be thoroughly
bored by a succession of identically uninspiring Merlots and Cabernets,
Chile having earned itself a reputation as provider of reliable
but hardly exciting bargain reds. The organisers of the Awards
tactfully spared us any wine retailing at under £4.99 however
- in fact entries were strictly limited to those retailing in
the UK at between £4.99 and £15 (no Viñedo
Chadwick or Almaviva then), and each class was split into two
price categories, under £7 and £7-15.
When we got down to it, however, we judges were pleasantly surprised
by the variety of styles and flavours available. These were my
main conclusions.
- Chile's strongest suit is the quality and vivacity of her Cabernet
Sauvignon, all bursting with vibrant life and fruit,
the sort of wines that should send a tremor down many a spine
in Bordeaux.
- Over-oaking or poor quality oak is a common
problem. We often preferred wines in the cheaper category of reds,
for example, which seemed to have been made from much the same
fruit as those in the more expensive category but had not been
smothered by aggressive oak tannins or the green notes of oak
that has not been properly seasoned. This was especially true
of Cabernets and Syrahs.
- I was told by my fellow judges that Merlot
was by far the most disappointing category and that the few wines
that showed any spark tasted as though they were not Merlot at
all but the more aromatic, angular old Bordeaux grape Carmenère
which was for long mistaken for Merlot in Chile. Since so few
of the flights I was called on to judge were Merlots, I cannot
comment on this but it would certainly fit with my general experience
that Chilean Merlot suffers particularly from over- production
and can lack the structure and refreshment factor of Chilean Cabernet.
- There were far more Syrahs than I was expecting,
32 in all, of
which
a very creditable two won a gold medal, both of them
in the cheaper category.
- Red blends constituted another promising if
extremely diverse category - in fact the Wine of the Show, VOE's
Coyam 2001, turned out to be a blend of Carmenère with
Merlot, Syrah and Cabernet.
- This winning wine, which I saw on the wine list of the Century
Club on Shaftesbury Avenue in London for just £21.50 recently,
is also organic. Chileans must be mad not to
be making more of this potential trump card. They enjoy an ideal
climate for viticulture with little rain, few fungal diseases
but ample (for the moment) irrigation water from the Andes and
usefully cool nights. New Zealand may play the green card but
Chile should really use it.
- Chile is making increasing quantities of a wine style that barely
exists anywhere else in the world - affordable and appetising
Pinot Noir - and not just from the relatively cool Casablanca
Valley. Wines from Leyda, San Antonio, Chimbarongo and Rancagua
also showed promise.
- Slowly, slowly, Chile is offering us wider choice
than just Cabernet, Merlot, Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc. We
tasted convincing examples of Viognier, Riesling, Malbec, a Carignan
better than most in the Languedoc and a Zinfandel better than
the California average.
- Although the Chilean wine industry has in the past tended to
be dominated by a handful of families dominant in other areas
of commerce in Chile, there is now a rash of new investment, new
names and even new wine regions. Of these, particularly
impressive were the brand new Tabalí in fog-cooled Limarí,
hundreds of kilometres north of Santiago, a joint venture between
San Pedro of Chile and Guillermo Luksic which managed to win two
out of the 11 available trophies with its Chardonnay Reserve 2003
and Reserve Shiraz 2002. Another fine newcomer is Chocalán
founded by the Toro family more famous for crystal in Chile in
the coastal range 65 km west of Santiago near Melipilla. Their
baby
Bordeaux blend Viña Chocalán 2003 made by a Chilean
who has also worked in St-Emilion, managed to wrest the Cabernet
trophy from scores of long-established bodegas. Ventisquero, founded
only in 1998 by businessman Gonzalo Vial, is another newcomer
to have walked off with a trophy, for its Yali Sauvignon Blanc
Reserve 2003 from Casablanca Valley in this case.
- White wines still lag some way behind reds
in Chile. They will presumably start to catch up significantly
as newer plantings from cooler areas such as Bío-Bío
and San Antonio come on stream but white wines are in general
less forgiving of Chile's besetting sin, yields that are too high,
often because of over-enthusiastic irrigation. This is particularly
true of wines made from bought-in grapes, i.e. the vast majority.
- The forward-looking big companies such as Concha y Toro have
been laying plans to depend less and less on bought-in grapes,
with the result that grape prices in Chile have
been falling significantly. The quality gap between Chile's best
and her everyday wines is likely to widen over the next few years
- but as a supplier of serious wine, and serious value in the
£5-10 bracket, she clearly should not be ignored.
For specific recommended wines, see purple pages.



