Tuesday 21 April 2015

Oldest Ruinart Champagne Unearthed in Alsace

1929 was a "quality, abundant harvest".

© Champagne Ruinart | 1929 was a "quality, abundant harvest".
Ransacked by the Nazis, Ruinart had no pre-World War II bottles – until now.
A cache of Great Depression-era bottles of Ruinart has been discovered in a private cellar in Alsace, making them the Champagne house's oldest-known bottles in existence.
The house’s chef de cave Frédéric Panaïotis traveled from Champagne to Alsace after receiving a message from a wine professional that he had two cases in his cellar.

The find is extra special for 
Ruinart, as its cellars were ransacked during World War II making it one of the few great producers with no library of wines. "We have nothing pre-1945," Panaïotis said. "So it's nice to have these.""Late last year he called me and said he had two 24 bottles of 1929 Champagne Ruinart, so I was naturally pretty interested,"  Panaïotis told Wine Searcher.
The two dozen bottles are in good condition, with labels and foil intact, and high levels of wine in the bottle, he added.
"Some of them are in magnificent shape, full and clear and with gas. I don't need to get them verified – I know they are good. They haven't been moved since the 1930s."
Ruinart, which is part of LVMH and a sister company to Krug, Moët & Chandon and Dom Pérignon, is the oldest Champagne house, founded in 1729; thus, the unearthed bottles dated from the company's bicentenary year.
Following the 1929 harvest, a report by the grower-run publication La Champagne Viticole, reported that it had been "an abundant, quality harvest" and would go down in the history books as a great year. More than 80 years later, Champagne expert Richard Juhlin noted that it was "a very good vintage that has been forgotten next to 1928", which is regarded by many as vintage of the century.
The 1929 bottles are not the oldest Champagne in existence. Moët has bottles dating from the 1800s and, in 2010, a trove of 220-year-old Champagne from the house that became Veuve Clicquot was discovered in a shipwreck in the Baltic.
Panaïotis said he would open the bottles for the 300th anniversary of Ruinart – in 2029.

Monday 20 April 2015

Screw cap or Cork?


Australian wines have challenged the views of leading wine experts at Italy’s biggest annual wine fair, Vinitaly in Verona this week.
Australian wine writer and presenter Tyson Stelzer, who was named International Wine & Spirit Communicator of the Year 2015 at a gala dinner to open the fair, presented five mature flagship Australian red wines under both cork and screw cap in a blind tasting.
In a surprise twist (perhaps not to us), a panel of international wine professionals voted the screw-capped wines ahead of the corks.
“The result was ground-breaking for Italy, where screw caps remain controversial and until recently have been prohibited on the country’s top wines,” Stelzer said.
He says the tasting was significant for Australia, whose global reputation as a fine wine producer relies upon overcoming the misconception that screw caps are inferior.
Venice sommelier Annie Martin-Stefannato admitted “we will have to change our mindset”.

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