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Nine (other) ways to assemble a cellar

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Michael Schmidt's cellar

The penultimate contribution to this series on collecting on a budget. Some tips on wine storage next month. A slightly shorter version is published by the Financial Times. Above, the cellar of our former German specialist Michael Schmidt, who is keen to point out that, although he lives in Germany, in the bottom right-hand corner is 'a case of IPA, Timothy Taylor's Landlord. No German beer in my cellar!'

Over the past few months I’ve enjoyed outlining ways of assembling a wine collection without breaking the bank, a series that began in response to a suggestion from a reader. See our guide to the articles so far published in this series. But these articles have all had a geographical theme and not everyone starts their cellar deciding to concentrate on a region. There are many other ways in to becoming a collector and here are some of the more obvious.

Wines to drink fairly soon

When assembling my specific recommendations, I was assuming nascent collectors would want to keep their wines for at least four years and often more but if you are either decidedly senior or congenitally impatient you may wish to assemble bottles to enjoy even sooner than that. If so, my advice would be to avoid famous bordeaux – in fact avoid any wine designed to age over the long term, which probably means avoiding the other big Bs, Barolo and Brunello, and go for their earlier-maturing siblings such as Langhe Nebbiolo and Rosso di Montalcino respectively. They are specifically made to provide near-term pleasure – as are the so-called second wines of Bordeaux, blends put together by the smartest châteaux that are mellower than their flagship grand vin. Favourites include Alter Ego from Château Palmer and La Dame de Montrose from Château Montrose. Or you could go for the third wine of first growth Château Latour, Pauillac de Château Latour, but the 2020 vintage of Château Meyney itself would be much cheaper, and drinkable from about 2027.

Wines for a forthcoming wedding

Although the Champenois like to give the impression that their wines should be drunk as soon as they are released, many non-vintage champagnes, generally the cheapest in any producer’s range, improve considerably with a few years in a good cellar (not in a fridge). And prices are so much lower at the cellar door than in the UK. So I’d recommend that anyone living in England or Wales who has a big party in mind drives over to the Champagne region to lay in stocks at least a year ahead, possibly more. Adults are allowed to import nine litres a person into the UK duty free, so don’t go alone. Duty per bottle of sparkling wine was reduced to £2.67 last August so you would almost certainly save money even if you pay duty on some of your load.

English sparkling wine with its higher acidity mellows even more markedly with time in bottle.

Lower-alcohol wines

Head for Mosel Riesling and Loire whites, both of which have excellent ageing potential but can be extremely complex and expressive – not to mention varied. Hunter Valley Semillon is a dry white Australian classic that’s often only 11% alcohol and demands ageing. Reds and whites from the historic Colares region on the Portuguese coast tend to be low alcohol, too.

White wines only

In addition to the wine types mentioned immediately above, add any Riesling. Sweet or, increasingly, bone-dry, Rieslings can evolve for decades and are some of the wine world’s best buys. If it has to be Chardonnay, then the Mâconnais south of the hallowed, and expensive, Côte d’Or is of increasing interest. Names to look for: St-Véran, Viré-Clessé and anything with Mâcon or Pouilly in its name (apart from Pouilly-Fumé, which is a Loire Sauvignon Blanc). The Loire’s other white wine grape, Chenin Blanc, also makes beautifully ageworthy wines, but the key to choosing white wines worth ageing is to ensure they have notable acidity.

Pink wines

Seriously expensive rosés are currently proliferating but the only half-affordable one I’d recommend cellaring is Domaine Tempier’s from Bandol. See also Greece below.

Red wines only

See earlier instalments of this series. In very general terms, Bordeaux benefits most from ageing in bottle.

Wines under £15/$20 worth cellaring

I have been asked by my editor to suggest wines in this tiny category. The least expensive red bordeaux might just squeeze in. In the UK, Haynes Hanson & Clark have a good selection, of which I’d most enthusiastically recommend Château Galot La Chapelle 2020 Castillon (£13.25, 14.5%), which should give pleasure over the next five years. From the same retailer, Château Roc de Cazade, Vieilles Vignes 2021 Bordeaux (£11.65, 13.5%) is leaner but may appeal to long-standing claret lovers on a budget. 

The Wine Society’s pricing is generally user-friendly and their Château Pey La Tour Réserve du Château 2019 Bordeaux Supérieur (£11.95, 14.5%) is a thoroughly modern red that could be cellared for up to five years.

Muscadet is another underpriced category of wine, and in this case one that can be surprisingly rewarding when aged in bottle. (The Muscadet grape, Melon de Bourgogne, is a close relative of the Burgundy grape varieties Chardonnay and Pinot Noir.) Majestic’s Domaine de la Tourmaline 2023 Muscadet de Sèvre-et-Maine Sur Lie (£11.29 or £9.99 if six mixed bottles are bought, 13%) is a steal, though some stores may still have the 2022, which I have not tasted.

Sweet wines

If you like sweet wines, you are, most unfortunately, in a minority. But the associated advantage of this is that they are currently undervalued and if, like Sauternes, they came by their sweetness via the concentrating botrytis fungus known as noble rot, they will last almost forever. I will be most disappointed if I don’t live to see a revival of this difficult-to-make category.

Exotica

There are all sorts of reasons for building up a non-classic wine collection. One is to save money. There is no secondary market for a host of off-piste wines and few of them have cult status so they tend to be relatively affordable, the more esoteric the better.

Another reason is a passion for quirkiness. Robert Slotover, for instance, combines representing classical musicians all over Europe with combing wine shops for wines made from obscure grape varieties.

A more common interest, as suggested by the questions I’m most often asked, is in up-and-coming sources of wine. I have been citing Portugal and Greece for some years and used to suggest Portuguese reds and Greek whites, but now each country makes fine wine of both colours. Greek rosé can also be delicious and one or two such as Thymiopoulos’s lightly oaked Rosé de Xinomavro with just 12.5% alcohol (£13.50 The Wine Society, in stock from 21 September) can even age well. And there’s now a wine revolution in Cyprus.

Since my recent trip there, I’d have to add Türkiye as a wine-growing country to watch. And Domaine Bargylus continues to produce incredibly good wine from the hinterland of Syria’s main port Latakia. I was blown away by the Bargylus 2017 white (£26.50 J N Wine in Northern Ireland, £30 Highbury Vintners, 14%) recently. 

Uruguay and, at elevation, Mexico and Bolivia are now producing some wines of real interest, although they can be difficult to track down.

And then there is the vastness of Eastern Europe, whose potential is now being realised. I will be reporting in more detail on this at the end of the month. But two countries I didn’t manage to cover at the recent tasting in London of some of the riches in this part of the world are Czechia and Slovakia, each of which have been in a ferment of vinous innovation. 

There is so much to enjoy!

Members of JancisRobinson.com have access to tasting notes, scores and suggested drinking dates in our tasting notes database. For international stockists, see Wine-Searcher.com.

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