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Can Carignan(e) ever be great?
13 Oct 2004 by JR
Is the Carignan grape - known as Carignane in the US and so widely planted in southern France that
for ages it was the most widely planted red wine grape in the world -
good, bad, ugly or great? I have been consistently critical of the poor
old Carignan vine over the years, which is why, I suspect, the
organiser of the first known international celebratory Carignan tasting
last summer was so keen for me to attend.
Far too many southern
French reds have been spoilt for me by that harsh, green, acrid smell
of over-produced Carignan - and I have been sympathetic to the
authorities' attempts to reduce the amount of Carignan planted in the
Languedoc Roussillon.
For most of the second half of the 20th century, the productive Carignan vine was the single most common vine variety in France. It was the vine of choice to replace the even worse (more vapid, even more productive) Aramon in the vineyards of the Midi, chiefly because of its high yields and good frost resistance. The pieds noirs returning from Algeria
knew how dependable it had been in the heat of North Africa and were
only too happy to plant it in their new-found wine estates in the south
of France. By the end of the1970s there were more than 500,000 acres of this inconveniently late-ripening variety in France
- far, far more than the area devoted to Merlot or Cabernet for
example. Nowadays Cabernet and Merlot reign supreme and Carignan(e) is
only the eighth most planted wine vine in the world, but there are
still nearly 300,000 acres of it, even though it has been overtaken by
the more noble Syrah according to the calculations of Pat Fegan of the
Chicago Wine School, the only man I know as fascinated by these
statistics as I am.
With 6,000 acres planted, Carignane is still the tenth most planted red wine grape in California, but in France
the real sea change came in the 1990s when, thanks to heavy financial
inducements, southern French growers were encouraged to rip out
Carignan in favour of more fashionable, ‘improving’ varieties or other
crops entirely. I for one can quite see why the appellation authorities
have been steadily reducing the proportion of Carignan allowed in wines
such as Minervois, Corbières, Fitou, Faugères, St Chinian and
Coteaux du Languedoc in favour of gentler, fruitier grapes such as
Syrah, Grenache, Mourvèdre and Cinsault.
And yet, and yet. There
are wines made almost exclusively from Carignan that are very
impressive. Some of the most obvious are grown not in France but over the Spanish border on the distinctive brown schists of Priorat in Catalonia.
After all, as its name suggests, Carignan is presumably Spanish in origin, from around the town of Carineña due west of Priorat in the province of Aragon, whose rulers at one time conquered much of the Mediterranean. Cariñena is still grown in northern Spain with some seriously old vines still clinging to the precipitous slopes of Priorat. Wines such as Cims de Porrera, Vall Llach and the new Clos Manyetes from René Barbier depend almost exclusively on them.
This
summer’s Carignan Renaissance event was held in an old wine cellar
transformed into hip lighting manufacturer (sic transit…) just outside
Beziers, organised by John Bojanowski, an American married to a
Frenchwoman who makes Clos du Gravillas wines in St Jean de Minervois.
He had been clever enough to realise that there is now a body of wine
producers, many of them young and including Nicole Bojanowski, who are
staking a substantial part of their future on the viability of
Carignan. Hence the existence of www.carignans.com and this gathering of tasters from Spain, Paris, Japan, England and all over southern France.
We tasted 24 Carignans blind from the Languedoc, Roussillon, Priorat, South Africa and California (examples from Coturri, Fritz, Mazzocco, Pellegrini and Wild Hog). The grape is barely known in Australia and South America but it was a shame we did not taste some of the voluptuous examples of Carignano del Sulcis made in southern Sardinia. The wines were mainly 2001s and, as usual, we came to almost as many conclusions as there were tasters.
For what it's worth, these are mine:
*Seriously
old Carignan vines can produce concentrated, characterful wine if
yields are not too high and the terroir is interesting. Many of my
favourite wines came from Priorat where all these conditions apply -
although these are not gentle wines. They are as tough as the terrain
and tasting them can literally be like sucking a stone - truly
terroir-driven wines.
*But this is dependent on the existence of ancient Carignan vines in the right place - just as, for example, some not-especially-promising sites in Contra Costa and Barossa Valley
are currently able to produce remarkable reds simply because of the age
of their ancient vines. In neither case does this prove the superiority
of the combination of place and variety above all else. I cannot
honestly see the point of planting young Carignan anywhere - although I
know Paul Draper of Ridge is a great fan of its inclusion in field
blends with old Zinfandel vines, and the pope of Languedoc Carignan,
Sylvain Fadat of Domaine d'Aupilhac in Montpeyroux, is keen to keep
Carignan as a blending ingredient in his Coteaux du Languedoc for its
usefully high acidity and is even planting a little. In Montner in
Roussillon, young Marjorie Gallet of Roc des Anges is so devoted to the
Carignan plants that constitute 60 per cent of the vines she bought a
few years ago that she is also planting more of it.
*Then there
is the question of oak. Fadat, who has a particularly gentle hand as a
winemaker, is adamant that Carignan and too much new oak are not a
pretty combination. I agree with him and found one or two wines,
including Roc des Anges ‘1903’ 2001 and Wild Hog 2001 Sonoma Carignane,
just overwhelmed by the oak.
But this was hardly an impartial group. It was a bit like discussing the existence of God at a prayer meeting. The discussion tended to revolve around the lack of decent planting material and which rootstock suits Carignan best rather than around the essential quality of Carignan as a varietal, which was taken by most of the gathering as a given.
My main criticism of Carignan at its least successful is its combination of high acidity and green, unripe flavours. And I'm afraid I found that characteristic
in quite a number of this supposed crème de la crème of the Carignan
firmament (which for obvious reasons ignored the great underswell of
the French wine lake which is made up of a tide of sour Carignan).
Among non-European wines the Fairview Pegleg Carignan 2002 from South Africa, the second vintage of a wine I had already admired, acquitted itself well. It was the favourite of Perpignan's
resident wine writer Michel Smith who considered himself vindicated
when told that the landscape of Pedeberg granite in Paarl where it is
grown looks just like Corbières in southern France (something I cannot help doubting).
I am also sure that California
can field more impressive Carignanes than the examples mustered by Tom
Bojanowski - though as I know from experience, it is by no means easy
to import non-French wines into France.
The Mazzocco 1999, Pellegrini 2002 and Coturri 2002 did not score
highly with me although the Fritz Colombini Vineyard 2001 from
Mendocino was impressively sophisticated on the palate, even if marred
by my old friends, offputtingly green notes on the nose.
For me
the finest French Carignans managed to avoid this characteristic -
presumably because the grapes ripened fully either because 2001 was
such a good vintage in the south of France and/or because of the age of
the vines and/or because of the terroir and/or because yields were low
enough (though Sylvain Fadat says 40 hectolitres per hectare is quite
low enough). His Le Carignan 2001 from Domaine d'Aupilhac was certainly
a model of restraint, the wine from the first flight I set on one side
for all subsequent wines to be measured against. And my very favourite
wine of all came from the Fitou village of Paziols, from Domaine Bertrand Bergé's Les Mégalithes 2001 which was refined, sophisticated and appetising.
But perhaps this is to miss the point of Carignan. Perhaps it is meant to be a cussed brute, like the rocks that litter the Languedoc landscape? If so, let others wallow in it.
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