ヴォルカニック・ワイン・アワード | The Jancis Robinson Story (ポッドキャスト) | 🎁 年間メンバーシップとギフトプランが30%OFF

The vines still creep on Santorini

Friday 22 August 2003 • 4 分で読めます

A few years ago the world of wine was alerted to the catastrophe about to befall the beautiful Greek island of Santorini. Tourism was triumphing over viticulture. Land that should be upholding the island's ancient vine-growing tradition was being sold off for hotels and villas. Mass-market tourism would soon wipe out the indigenous Assyrtiko vine almost as soon as it had demonstrated that it could produce world-class dry whites.

Back from my first visit to the island, I am not so sure that Santorini's wine industry is in danger of collapse. Indeed it looked pretty vibrant to me. There were signs advertising wineries, winery visits and wine museums everywhere, and all the smartest hotels seemed to make much of their wine connections.

It probably helped too that the vineyards are quite exceptionally green and healthy this year, thanks to an unusually wet winter and spring. Normally by July the vines are starting to yellow and dry out. Since vines are still by far the dominant crop on the island – even if considerably less than the 48,000 hectares (120,000 acres) or three-fifths of the entire island area that was devoted to supplying imperial Russia with sweet wine in the mid-19th century – this makes a huge difference.

On the pale flakes of pumice and sand that are what passes for soil on the volcanic island of Santorini, vines, never ravaged by the pestilential phylloxera and therefore ungrafted, creep along the ground rather than grow vertically, and are trained circularly into low basket shapes (so that uprooted vineyards provide relics sold in tourist shops to adorn the conservatories of northern Europe).

By now the harvest on this hot, southern Cycladean island will be in full swing and the small but growing number of wine producers will be vying with each other for who can pay best prices to the canny local growers – all of whom deliver their grapes by donkey, but to increasingly modern wineries fitted with stainless steel and temperature control.

Last year and the year before, crops were so small (for climatic rather than socio-economic reasons) that yields of eight hectolitres per hectare, one-sixth the average in Bordeaux's smartest vineyards, were common and prices rose to 420 drachma per kilo. This year a relatively bountiful yield of two or even three times this is expected and prices will be paid in the euros that prevail in the island's tavernas and hotels.

Only one wine producer on the island, Sigalas, owns any substantial area of vines. Paris Sigalas took over his family winery off the road from the capital, Fira, to the north of the island in 1991 and specialises in organically grown grapes. I did not know this when tasting his 2002, transfixed by an apricot sun sinking into the Aegean, the island's nightly entertainment. But this wine did stand out from every other one I tried on the island for its extreme raciness and nerve. All of the good dry white wines of Santorini have a certain citrus and mineral quality – even the better examples poured by the metal jug in the most basic tavernas. But this particular one had something extra about it, the sort of extract without alcohol you might find in a great wine from the Saar in the upper Mosel. (And in my tasting book there are few compliments greater than that.)

Haridimos Hatzidakis, ex-winemaker of the big, most touristically attuned winery Boutari, goes one better. He cultivates his five acres of vines biodynamically (there cannot be much call for fungicides in this climate, after all). His tiny winery really is in a cave. He describes it as just out of the hilltop village of Pyrgos 'in our way to the monastery of Pr. Helias' [sic]. I would describe it as on the way to the extremely important eastern Mediterranean listening station on top of Santorini's highest peak.

He, like most winemakers here, there and everywhere, is experimenting with oak-aging these delicate whites (not entirely laudably in my view) and also with grape varieties other than the noble Assyrtiko. Aidani adds particularly floral notes to the steelier, crisper Assyrtiko while in his hands the island's best-known (ie, not very well known at all) red wine grape Mavrotragano produces a rather Beaujolais-like light, fruity, slightly tart red.

His British importer organised a trip to Greece for British wine writers which included a visit to Santorini earlier in the year. This led to much enthusiasm for a wine written up as 'Lauropivn', usefully illustrating the complications of transcribing labels written in the Greek alphabet.

The coop Santo Wines makes the lion's share of the island's wine (and probably most of what is poured in tavernas) and Boutari is also well distributed. The most actively exported dry white Santorini is probably Thalassitis from the innovative Gaia winery. Gaia's owners ship in winemaking equipment from their other winery in Nemea each year because their harvests are always more than a month apart. Thanks to the recent meanness of Nature, they have yet to use their spanking new winery, built in 1999, at anything like full capacity. Pride and joy is their vinegar store, in which they are oak-aging something to be released in a few years' time to give the best balsamicos of Modena a run for their money.

Some of the Santorini's most distinctive wine is its very sweet vissanto, the name imported from – or was it to? – Venice which controlled the island in the 13th century. This can be delicious but is perhaps an even more specialised taste than that bracingly marine and mineral dry white.

UK – Gaia Thalassitis 2002 is £9.59 from larger Oddbins stores. Hatzidakis' wines are imported by Eclectic Wines (tel 020 8941 9222, web www.eclecticwines.com.

US – Sigalas 2002 is available at $12.78 from Viscount Wines & Liquor, Hudson Valley, NY – a steal. See WineSearcher for more examples.

この記事は有料会員限定です。登録すると続きをお読みいただけます。

Celebrating 25 years of building the world’s most trusted wine community

In honour of our anniversary, enjoy 25% off all annual and gift memberships for a limited time.

Use code HOLIDAY25 to join our community of wine experts and enthusiasts. Valid through 1 January.

スタンダード会員
$135
/year
年間購読
ワイン愛好家向け
  • 285,329件のワインレビュー および 15,804本の記事 読み放題
  • The Oxford Companion to Wine および 世界のワイン図鑑 (The World Atlas of Wine)
プレミアム会員
$249
/year
 
本格的な愛好家向け
  • 285,329件のワインレビュー および 15,804本の記事 読み放題
  • The Oxford Companion to Wine および 世界のワイン図鑑 (The World Atlas of Wine)
  • 最新のワイン・レビュー と記事に先行アクセス(一般公開の48時間前より)
プロフェッショナル
$299
/year
ワイン業界関係者(個人)向け 
  • 285,329件のワインレビュー および 15,804本の記事 読み放題
  • The Oxford Companion to Wine および 世界のワイン図鑑 (The World Atlas of Wine)
  • 最新のワイン・レビュー と記事に先行アクセス(一般公開の48時間前より)
  • 最大25件のワインレビューおよびスコアを商業利用可能(マーケティング用)
ビジネスプラン
$399
/year
法人購読
  • 285,329件のワインレビュー および 15,804本の記事 読み放題
  • The Oxford Companion to Wine および 世界のワイン図鑑 (The World Atlas of Wine)
  • 最新のワイン・レビュー と記事に先行アクセス(一般公開の48時間前より)
  • 最大250件のワインレビューおよびスコアを商業利用可能(マーケティング用)
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
で購入
ニュースレター登録

編集部から、最新のワインニュースやトレンドを毎週メールでお届けします。

プライバシーポリシーおよび利用規約が適用されます。

More Free for all

RBJR01_Richard Brendon_Jancis Robinson Collection_glassware with cheese
無料で読める記事 What do you get the wine lover who already has everything? Membership of JancisRobinson.com of course! (And especially now, when...
Red wines at The Morris by Cat Fennell
無料で読める記事 A wide range of delicious reds for drinking and sharing over the holidays. A very much shorter version of this...
JancisRobinson.com team 15 Nov 2025 in London
無料で読める記事 Instead of my usual monthly diary, here’s a look back over the last quarter- (and half-) century. Jancis’s diary will...
Skye Gyngell
無料で読める記事 Nick pays tribute to two notable forces in British food, curtailed far too early. Skye Gyngell is pictured above. To...

More from JancisRobinson.com

Poon's dining room in Somerset House
ニックのレストラン巡り A daughter revives memories of her parents’ much-loved Chinese restaurants. The surname Poon has long associations with the world of...
Front cover of the Radio Times magazine featuring Jancis Robinson
現地詳報 The fifth of a new seven-part podcast series giving the definitive story of Jancis’s life and career so far. For...
Karl and Alex Fritsch in winery; photo by Julius_Hirtzberger.jpg
今週のワイン A rare Austrian variety revived and worthy of a place at the table. From €13.15, £20.10, $24.19. It was pouring...
Windfall vineyard Oregon
テイスティング記事 The fine sparkling-wine producers of Oregon are getting organised. Above, Lytle-Barnett’s Windfall vineyard in the Eola-Amity Hills, Oregon (credit: Lester...
Mercouri peacock
テイスティング記事 More than 120 Greek wines tasted in the Peloponnese and in London. This peacock in the grounds of Mercouri estate...
Wine Snobbery book cover
書籍レビュー A scathing take on the wine industry that reminds us to keep asking questions – about wine, and about everything...
bidding during the 2025 Hospices de Beaune wine auction
現地詳報 A look back – and forward – at the world’s oldest wine charity auction, from a former bidder. On Sunday...
hen among ripe grapes in the Helichrysum vineyard
テイスティング記事 The wines Brunello producers are most proud of from the 2021 vintage, assessed. See also Walter’s overview of the vintage...
JancisRobinson.comニュースレター
最新のワインニュースやトレンドを毎週メールでお届けします。
JancisRobinson.comでは、ニュースレターを無料配信しています。ワインに関する最新情報をいち早くお届けします。
なお、ご登録いただいた個人情報は、ニュースレターの配信以外の目的で利用したり、第三者に提供したりすることはありません。プライバシーポリシーおよび利用規約が適用されます.