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All planting statistics are courtesy of the CIVB.
Château Lafite
There are two schools of thought regarding assemblage in Bordeaux. One side prefers to create the final blend early in the year after harvest, in time for the April en primeur tasting. (A chief criticism lobbed at the annual tasting is that scores are awarded to barrel selections, not complete wines.) The opposing perspective would prefer to blend just before bottling, in order to isolate and observe the maturation of separate components for as long as possible. Bottling typically occurs in April, preceded by fining and/or filtration. Some winemakers prefer one or the other; some bottle without either. Bordeaux, a creature of habit, is finished with a cork, although the closure is not mandated by AOC law.
Pomerol.
Thanks for the update, Skyler!
Interestingly, the 2019 edition of the Liv-Ex classification demotes La Mission Haut-Brion to the 2nd tier rather than listing it among the first growths as it had for the previous 2 editions. The document reads “In previous years, Mission Haut Brion has also qualified in the top tier, however, this year the wine narrowly missed out: its average trade price of £2,622 was just short of the qualifying £2,877 price.”
Good catch! Thanks, Alex.
I believe there is a little mix-up in the wording on Haut-Benauge for Bordeaux AOP and Entre-duex-Mers AOP. Bordeaux AOP Haut-Benauge is for off-dry wines (6-50g/L) whereas in Entre-Deux-Mers AOP is for blanc sec. The working above seems to have this flip-flopped.
We'll be publishing a three-part Italian expert guide over the coming months.The first of these is slated for release in October.
Are there any topic like this one talk about Italian wine?