The Jancis Robinson Story | Mission Blind Tasting | Wine writing competition

Greek promise

• 4 min read
Image

A version of this article is published by the Financial Times. See also my recent Greek tasting notes (plus some tasting notes on Bulgaria, Georgia, Slovenia and Hungary). 

In 2005 Greece’s first Master of Wine Konstantinos Lazarakis wrote a book called The Wines of Greece. He freely admits now that it was a bit of a chore. ‘I was struggling to get enough interesting facts in.’ In the second edition, published last year, he wrote, ‘The quality of the wines has changed dramatically. In the previous book the heroes were obvious; now I am running out of superlatives.’

I can only agree. I am often asked to identify up-and-coming wine regions or countries. Financial crises apart, Greece ticks all the right boxes. A wide range of well-differentiated and acclimatised indigenous grape varieties? Tick. Geographically expressive wines? Tick. Relatively modest alcohol levels? Tick.

Lazarakis doesn’t tackle the question of pricing but, on the basis of a recent tasting organised by a pre-eminent British importer of Greek wines, Eclectic Wines, I would also add another tick: that Greek wines don’t seem to be overpriced. In fact some of them seem extremely good value.

It must be so disheartening for the many Greek wine producers who have worked so hard to revolutionise the quality and range available to find that even some wine professionals think that Greece produces nothing more exciting than retsina whose turpentine taste may mask a multitude of winemaking sins. Even retsina has been revolutionised. Producers such as Aoton, Kechris, Mylonas and Tertramythos have shown that if you dramatically shrink the yields of Savatiano, the Attica grape variety most commonly responsible for retsina, you can produce a wine of real quality and delicacy.

Eclectic showed a 2017 Tetramythos Retsina Natur, fermented in amphora and made with minimal additions of sulphur. The background notes assured us that ‘charismatic winemaker Panagiotis Papagiannopoulos is known as the Frank Zappa of Greek wine’. He’s not nearly as hairy as Zappa, but he’s certainly inventive.

All over the world, trend-conscious winemakers are desperately seeking out makers of amphorae and other clay-pot alternatives to oak for fermenting and/or ageing wine. Coaxing some producers out of retirement, encouraging the training of younger craftspeople. But if any nation of wine producers should be using these ancient vessels, it is surely the Greeks.

The Eclectic tasting was partly an excuse for a tasting of old vintages made by the very first producer they worked with, Haridimos Hatzidakis of Santorini, a hugely talented but troubled winemaker who took his own life just before the 2017 harvest. Hatzidakis’ last wine, Skitali 2016, is a marvel, aged for 12 months on its lees and every bit as impressive as a top grand cru white burgundy. I’d say it’s worth every penny of its price tag of about £47 at UK stockists Theatre of Wine, The Wine Society, Duncan Murray, Noble Rot, Quality Wines and Wine & Greene.

Wine & Greene and Theatre of Wine also stock another outstanding dry white from this beautiful volcanic island, Karamolegos 34 (2017, £31.50). Santorini’s most characteristic wine, the wonderfully nervy, long-lived white made from the local Assyrtiko grape, has done far more than its fair share to put modern Greek wine on the map. (Mary Pateras of Eclectic Wines' picture above right is of volcanic Santorini's caldera, cliffs on which settlements perch.)

The South Australian wine producer Peter Barry of Jim Barry was so impressed by the wines he tasted while on holiday on Santorini that he was prepared to drag Assyrtiko cuttings through the long-winded Australian plant-quarantine process, and finally produced his first Clare Valley Assyrtiko in 2014. Others who have planted it outside Greece include the hugely respected Eben Sadie of South Africa, Alois Lageder of Alto Adige and Mustafa Camlica of Turkey, according to Greece’s second MW Yiannis Karakasis.

Although, along with Aidani and Athiri, it is just one of three prominent and characterful white wine grapes grown on Santorini, Assyrtiko’s qualities are so obvious that it has now been planted in many other Greek wine regions.

Assyrtiko was the first Greek grape variety to establish a national and international reputation. The leafy dry white wine grape Malagousia has a claim to have been the second. But there is now a profusion of light-, pink- and dark-skinned grapes that can offer flavours and characters encountered nowhere else (until they pop up in foreign vineyards). See below.

In the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, ambitious Greek producers were inclined to favour wines made of the well-travelled international varieties, or blends of them with indigenous ones, but today they are much more confident about serving up an all-Greek wine.

It may have been the unexpectedly sleek dry whites that first drew international attention to the modern Greek wine revolution (inspired in part, according to Lazarakis, by the desperate need to export in financially straitened times), but now we can choose from some truly thrilling Greek reds.

Thymiopoulos could claim to have transformed our perceptions of Naoussa in western Macedonia, the most important Greek wine appellation. Instead of being dense and a bit rough in youth, Thymiopoulos’s reds are haunting, fresh and ageworthy. Parallels with Barolo are not far fetched. Earth and Sky (2016, £21 The Wine Society), known as Ghi Kai Ouranos in Greece, is their top bottling, from the family’s oldest vines, but the much less expensive Jeunes Vignes red (2016, £10.95 The Wine Society) and the surprisingly long-lived Rosé de Xynomavro (2017, also £10.95 The Wine Society) are highly recommended too.

The Moraitis family on the island of Paros in the Cyclades is another example of over-achieving wine producers. I particularly enjoyed their Malagousia, the ‘rediscovered’ indigenous white wine grape whose wines seem to taste of green leaves – in a good way.

Then there is Yiannis Economou, who trained in Alba and has worked at Château Margaux and at Scavino in Piemonte but returned to his native Crete to make the most extraordinary local expressions that are available in such limited quantities that his London retailer Theatre of Wine is usually out of stock. Yields are so low, oak so old, ageing so protracted that Lazarakis describes this producer as ‘one of the best and most underestimated winemakers in Greece…the Greek equivalent of Lopez de Heredia’ (a reference to Rioja’s hugely admired arch-traditionalist).

But there are just so many great wine producers in Greece now, virtually all fully conversant with the wines of the rest of the world, and inspired to make thoroughly Greek wines that can match them for quality if not character. As Lazarakis notes, ‘One thing is for sure: the most complex and interesting Greek wines are still to come.’

UK RETAILERS OF GREEK WINE

Bedales of Borough
Maltby & Greek
Southern Wine Roads
Theatre of Wine
Vincognito
Whole Food Market
Wine & Greene
The Wine Society

GRAPES TO LOOK OUT FOR

PALE-SKINNED

Aidani
Assyrtiko
Athiri
Dafni
Kydonitsa
Malagousia
Monemvasia
Plyto
Robola
Thrapsathiri
Vidiano

PINK-SKINNED

Moscophilero
Roditis

DARK-SKINNED

Agiorgitiko
Kotisfali
Liatiko
Mavrotragano
Xinomavro

选择方案
会员
$135
/year
每年节省超过15%
适合葡萄酒爱好者
  • 存取 296,233 条葡萄酒点评 & 16,120 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • Access askJancis, our AI wine assistant
核心会员
$249
/year
 
适合收藏家

Everything in “Member”, plus:

  • Early access to the latest wine reviews, 48 hours in advance
  • Early access to the latest articles, 48 hours in advance
专业版
$299
/year
供个人葡萄酒专业人士使用
  • 存取 296,233 条葡萄酒点评 & 16,120 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • Access askJancis, our AI wine assistant
  • 提前 48 小时获取最新葡萄酒点评与文章
  • 可将最多 25 条葡萄酒点评与评分 用于市场宣传(商业用途)
商务版
$399
/year
供葡萄酒行业企业使用

Everything in “Professional”, plus:

  • 可将最多 250 条葡萄酒点评与评分 用于市场宣传(商业用途)
  • Access to submit wines for review
  • Offer memberships to your employees and manage them from a single place
  • API access available for an additional fee
Pay with
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
Join our newsletter

Get the latest from Jancis and her team of leading wine experts.

By subscribing you agree with our Privacy Policy and provide consent to receive updates from our company.

More Free for all

Opus One winery
Free for all 首个跨大西洋合资企业作品一号 (Opus One) 涉及20世纪葡萄酒界的标志性人物。本文的一个版本发表于《金融时报》(Financial...
Old Vine Registry new seal 100+ years two versions
Free for all 突发新闻!老藤登记处 (The Old Vine Registry) 正在打破记录、突破障碍并开辟新天地。现在,老藤登记处标识正式推出。...
Ronan Sayburn MS, Sarah Abbott MW and Hannah Tovey at Icons tastings 2026
Free for all 从世界各地挑选 27 款霞多丽 (Chardonnay) "标志性"酒款,呈献给 18 位认证品鉴师……本文的一个版本发表于金融时报 。另见...
WWC26 post-submission graphic
Free for all 绝妙的搭配——有如此多的选择!JR 团队向所有人致以诚挚的感谢。 今年的 葡萄酒写作大赛打破了所有记录,收到了超过 400 份参赛作品...

More from JancisRobinson.com

rosé picnic by Tamlyn Currin
Tasting articles 25种在炎热中保持清爽的方式。 上周欧洲经历了有记录以来最严重的6月热浪;本周,美国东海岸各城市将打破高温记录。在这种炎热中喝什么?水...
Constantino Ramos
Wines of the week 一款由前化学家以精确态度和葡萄藤语者灵魂酿造的绿酒 (Vinho Verde) 白葡萄酒。售价 23 美元起,22 英镑起。上图为拉莫斯...
Opus 1979-2000 tasting 19 May 2026
Tasting articles 一场垂直品鉴将詹西斯 (Jancis) 带回这款标志性加州红葡萄酒开创性的起点。在伦敦帕尔摩尔街 67 号 (67 Pall Mall...
Tony Bish in Tronçais forest
Don't quote me 遮蔽葡萄藤并提供酒桶的森林风土与葡萄园及其葡萄酒相互关联。上图为托尼·比什 (Tony Bish) 在 法国中部的特龙赛 (Tronçais...
Ch de Pennautier, Cabardès
Don't quote me 这个月逐渐演变成一个充满取消和药物治疗的月份。 一些年长的读者可能还记得已故的罗宾·克尼克 (Robin Kernick),他是科尼与巴罗...
Rudd Mt. Veeder Estate
Tasting articles 这一流行白葡萄品种的浓郁演绎。上图为拉德酒庄 (Rudd) 的维德山庄园 (Mt Veeder Estate) (© Rudd)。...
Symington 2024 vintage ports
Tasting articles 年份波特酒的卓越年份。难怪每家波特酒庄都在发布一款或多款此类波特酒,这是七年来的首次全面宣布。上图为辛明顿家族酒业 (Symington...
Brit Nat tasting 2026 by Em Drake
Tasting articles 英伦摇滚靠边站;英国天然气泡酒 (Brít-Nat) 带着开瓶盖的争议和前卫态度来了。 亨利 (Henry) 写道 在即将成为传奇的...
Wine inspiration delivered directly to your inbox, weekly
Our weekly newsletter is free for all
By subscribing you're confirming that you agree with our Terms and Conditions.