Great wines are generally characterized by their capacity to age for
a long time...
-- Ribereau-Gayon et al. |
I have always
been fascinated by the stories of elders, of times likely richer
in imagination than in reality, of days that have been changed irretrievably.
I
gravitated to wine partly because it paints a rich picture
for today, but mostly because it has an immortal aspect that
can live long after activities of the day can be remembered.
I do not rightfully
know if ageability is important to me because great wines
age a long time or if I pronounce a wine great because it will
age a long time. Aging seems to confuse people. We're often
asked if such-and-such a wine will age well, when to drink
it, when it would "go bad." Most
know we should hold the wine so it can improve, but how long
is too long? Many of us, me included, have a great image of
climbing treacherous
stairs down into a cobwebby, damp cellar, retrieving a bottle
that you cradle in your arm like a first-born child. And proudly
presenting
it to friends close enough to thank you genuinely, and old enough
to remember the events surrounding a vintage that is two wars,
ten presidents
and a marriage ago -- a wine from simpler times, that is now
more complex, less hard-edged, gentler and infinitely long-lasting.
Like us, we'd
like to think.
In great vintages, varietals from a cool
climate age the best. This
is not to say they stay the same. It is to say the quality improves
or maintains despite the changes they naturally undergo. To expect
a luscious, full-fruited, bright young wine to maintain those characteristics
over twenty years is unrealistic. In great wines brightness and fruit
do subside, but are replaced by additional complexities and flavors
that depend less on the fruit aspect and more on floral, spice, forest
and earth aspects.
If we equate good wine with jamminess or citrus
or plummy fruit, wines cease to be interesting except in new
releases. If we wait patiently for delicate aromatics and sensual textures,
if
we learn to value different levels of brown, spicy woods-on-a-winter-day
flavors and waves of complex layers, we see a new world of
wine, with greater dimensionality. Of
course, it costs time and therefore money to age wines, some varietals
more than others: Bordeaux varietals to resolve initial roughness of
tannin and grape extractives, Burgundy varietals less so, to add finesse.
Industry strides technologically aim at reducing aging time, looking
to modified fermentation practices, micro-oxidation, ripeness, new
climates and other changes to speed wines to the table.
At Chehalem we may be obtuse, but we're
going in the other direction.We
want to retain Pinot noir's naturally early drinkability, but strive
to extend vigorous, complex life as long as possible.With Pinot noir
we are looking for a wine that will retain its primary fruit for 5-7
years; moving to secondary aromatics of earth and spice or what the
Burgundians call sous bois or forest floor -- along the lines of mushroom,
earth, humus -- an ultimate complexity that, with remaining fruit and
barrel aspects, make aged Pinot noir the most revered of wine experiences.
Improvements in aging do not require
that we reinvent our wines. Instead,
we look to respect the key factors in ageability and make wines that
play to them. A wine for aging must above all be balanced, from the
start. Healthy, mature fruit must be fermented to extract well but
not coarsely, aged in enough, but not too much French oak to complex
and soften tannins, and finished with handling befitting a delicate
wine. Great Chardonnay is made similarly, with exceptional fruit pedigree
of clone and site and care taken to balance dimensions of the wine.
Particularly, great wines must have a spherical, three-dimensional
balance of acidity, fruit intensity, tannin, alcohol and barrel vectors.
The degree of balance determines ageability.
The character of Pinot noir
as it
ages depends on chemical changes that are apparent
in wine color
and texture. |
Young, purple colors change to redder garnet
hues in the first three or four years as fruit and raw tannins combine,
the beginning
of a progression of polymerization that gives supple, complex
and transparent wines in the mid-term, and eventually ends in heavy
compounds dropping
out as sediment in old and faded wines.
White wines, without appreciable tannin, depend
greatly on a balance of fruit, acidity, alcohol and barrel for
ageability. Cool climes excel in providing these balances.
We see aging as a moderately steep ascent over a couple years, followed
by an extended plateau at its innate quality level, during which it
continues to transform qualities as we described above. It ends with
a gradual decline during which fruit decline and pigment-tannin precipitation
hollows out the wine.
The curves shown in the illustration above are
our subjective estimates of ageability for selected Chehalem wines.
The descriptions from a vertical
tasting of all Chehalem Pinot noirs and selected
whites, should give our sense of our wines' futures.
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