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Sancerre, Pouilly-Fume and Muscadet
Lovers of brisk, nervy, dry white wines who feel forced out of their traditional hunting grounds by the growing number of outsized, alarmingly sweet bottlings can, at least for now, find plenty of options in the eastern Loire Valleys Sancerre and Pouilly-Fuméand of course in the bracing Muscadets made at the opposite end of the Loire, on the Atlantic Coast.Sancerre/Pouilly-Fumé. The vast majority of these wines are raised completely in stainless steel, bottled in the spring following the harvest and made for drinking over the subsequent two to three years. Exceptions to this rule are beginning to emerge, however, as more and more producers experiment with barriques and later harvesting. To my palate, results are mixed, with many of these bottlings showing more in common with barrel-raised wines of Burgundy than with traditional Loire whites. As might be expected, these wines arent cheap either.
Two thousand five is being hailed as the greatest vintage for the Loire Valley in years, if not decades, and on paper at least, weather conditions and some technical numbers support this assertion. The potential downside is that ripeness was rampant, as was the case across Europe, with growers in some parts of the Loire reportedly bringing in sauvignon blanc at potential alcohol levels as high as 16%. Does bigger mean better? Maybe it does in the case of 2005; I certainly found the best examples to be pretty convincing. And many Loire insiders grumble that white wines from 2004 in the eastern Loire are marked by dilute or underripe qualities. This was due to a large crop (albeit thinned by conscientious growers) and late-season rainstorms that hit the region hard throughout the harvest. The 04s do indeed frequently show distinctly tart qualities but they also make for delicious and refreshing early drinkingnow and over the next couple of years. Loire Valley aficionados who struggled to find wines to their liking from the hot 2003 vintage have gobbled up many 2004s by now, but numerous bottlings are still in wide distribution, especially later-released cuvées.
In my report on Sancerre and Pouilly-Fumé below, I have also included notes on some other sauvignon blanc wines from the eastern Loire Valley, as the best wines from appellations like Reuilly and Quincy can offer terrific value. (I have also included notes on a few of the top rosé bottlings I found, even though these wines are made from pinot noir.)
Muscadet. By now, its accepted wisdom that 2005 is the best Muscadet vintage in recent memory, eclipsing 2004 and 2002, which awakened the U.S. market to the potential quality of this long-ignored region. While I tasted a number of truly outstanding examples of 2005 this year, I couldnt help feeling that many 2004 bottlings were finer, more precise, more delicate and more vibrantin other words, more classic Muscadet. The best 2005s have size and ripeness, to be sure, but in some cases this comes at the expense of clarity and minerality. Others will no doubt disagree, pointing to the muscularity and depth of so many 2005s. But in Muscadet, sheer concentration and power arent necessarily an improvement.
Muscadets such as most of those profiled here can often age and improve along a timeline not unlike that of village-level white Burgundy and can also share some aromatic, textural and flavor qualities with Chablisbut at much lower prices. Its very rare to pay more than $16 for the best examples and many superb wines retail for $10 and even less, making top Muscadets among the greatest white wine values in the market. Fans of steely, truly dry, mineral-driven wines will find much to love in the two current vintages.
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Producers in this Article
- Alphonse Mellot
- Bernard Laporte
- Celestin-Blondeau
- Chateau de la Fessardiere/Alexis Sauvion
- Chateau de la Ragotiere
- Chateau de Maimbray/Georges Robin
- Chateau de Sancerre
- Chateau Gaillard
- Chateau Les Fromenteaux
- Chereau-Carré
- Claude Branger
- Claude et Florence Thomas-Labaille
- Comte Lafond
- Daniel Chotard
- Daniel Crochet
- De Ladoucette
- Didier Dagueneau
- Domaine A. Cailbourdin
- Domaine André Neveu
- Domaine Daulny
- Domaine de la Borne/Lucien Pauvert
- Domaine de la Moutonniere/Guilbaud Freres
- Domaine de la Quilla
- Domaine de la Rossignole
- Domaine Denis Gaudry
- Domaine de Reuilly (Denis Jamain)
- Domaine des Berthiers/Jean-Claude Dagueneau
- Domaine des Trois Toits/Hubert Rousseau
- Domaine du Tremblay
- Domaine Gérard Boulay
- Domaine Gerard Millet
- Domaine Henry Pelle
- Domaine Herve Seguin
- Domaine Jacques Rouze
- Domaine Langlois-Château
- Domaine Mardon
- Domaine Michel Brock
- Domaine Michel Thomas & Fils
- Domaine Thomas & Fils/Jean Thomas
- Domaine Tinel-Blondelet
- Domaine Trois Freres
- Domaine Vacheron
- Domaine Vincent Delaporte
- Domain Serge Dagueneau et Filles
- Dominique Roger/Domaine du Carrou
- Edmond Vatan
- Fay d’Homme
- Fournier Père et Fils
- Francis Blanchet
- Franck & Jean-Francois Bailly
- François Cotat
- Fruitière
- Gerard Morin
- Haute Févrie/Claude Branger
- Henri Bourgeois
- Henry Natter
- Hippolyte Reverdy
- Jean-Claude Chatelain
- Joseph Balland-Chapuis
- Landron (Domaine de la Louvetrie)
- La Poussie
- La Tour Saint-Martin
- L' Ecu
- Louis Metaireau
- Luc et Jerome Choblet/Domaine Herbauges
- Lucien Crochet
- Marc Deschamps
- Michel Bailly
- Michel Redde
- Michel Thomas
- Pascal Cotat
- Pascal et Nicolas Reverdy
- Pascal Jolivet
- Patient Cottat
- Paul et Jean-Marc Pastou
- Pepière
- Philippe Portier
- Pierre Luneau-Papin (Pierre de La Grange)
- Pierre Riffault
- Regis Minet
- Roger Champault
- Roger Naudet/Domaine des Buissonnes
- Roland Tissier et Fils
- Sauvion
- Serge Batard
- Thierry Merlin-Cherrier