Tag: winemakers

  • 10 Argentine Winemaker’s to Watch

    10 Argentine Winemaker’s to Watch

    Written for the Drinks Business, February 2015

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    Argentina has long been known for its lush, ripe Malbec, and thereā€™s no doubt that those wines are still in full swing. However there is a tide of change in the style of not just Malbec, and the new generation of winemakers are at the helm of this emerging direction. Moving away from the continental climate of the flat lands, winemakers and agronomists are seeking higher altitude micro climates in the Andes and new varieties are surfacing (including a new wave of whites). Here are some of the winemakers that are blazing a new trail in Argentina:

    Matias MicheliniMatias Michelini (Passionate Wines, Super Uco)

    Perhaps the most radical of Argentinaā€™s winemakers, Matias Michelini was fondly known as ā€˜the green Micheliniā€™ for many years and his colourful winemaking still makes him the compelling anti-hero of the Argentine wine scene. Pioneering a lean style of wine with often electric acidity, Michelini has been at the forefront of Uco Valley winemaking and in particular Gualtallaryā€™s development over the last decade.

    Although still consulting to larger projects including Sophenia and Zorzal, it is in his own experimental passion project – Passionate Wines – where he is making waves. A firm believer in biodynamic viticulture, Passionate Wines very much start in the vineyard and almost invariably end in concrete. The ever-growing collection includes an exuberantly aromatic, bone-dry orange wine (Torrontes Brutal), a 40-day co-ferment of Malbec and Cabernet Franc from 8 harvests (Demente), and a Pinot Noir fermented in a large, refurbished oak vat that in a previous life was a dog house. ā€œI take lots of risks when I make wine, and I lose all the time, but it is all part of the game – it is an exquisite exercise. I want to make wines without rules, and without limits.ā€

    Perhaps the only winemaker in the country that has a problem with Argentinaā€™s regulatory board for having too little alcohol in his wines (whereas his neighbours struggle to keep below 15%), Micheliniā€™s belief is that the best balance and expression of the Uco Valleyā€™s mountain wines is through earlier harvests and zero correction in the winery. With minimal intervention and non-mechanised, artisan techniques (his young children are often deployed to crush grapes), Michelini strips away all the smoke from the winemaking process and shows us that the true magic is in the vineyard. Rule-breaking, opinion-splitting and making some of the most original wines to come out of Argentina, Michelini is one to keep your eye on.

     

    Sebastian zuccardiSebastian Zuccardi (Zuccardi)

    A leading winemaker of the new generation, Sebastian Zuccardi is the tireless Head Winemaker for his winery Bodega Zuccardi and sister winery Santa Julia. Despite managing a team of 7 winemakers and producing over 16 million litres between brands, Zuccardi Jnr has his eye firmly on the details. As one of the forerunners of the micro terroir studies in the Uco Valley and pushing through the GI regions, the new family winery in Altamira has been specially designed to vinify small vineyard lots with 17 amphorae and 62 concrete vats custom designed for the purpose.

    One of the most important features in the winery for Zuccardi is the experimentation and research lab where his young team of winemakers and international interns test out new concepts. ā€œIt is the kindergarten of the winery,ā€ says Zuccardi, who started the lab over 7 years ago. ā€œIt is here where we came up with all of the ideas for the new winery.ā€ Zuccardiā€™s experiments have led to a sparkling red Bonarda (a variety he champions for Argentina), and unusual varieties such as Ancellota and Caladoc. While he dabbles in different varieties, Zuccardiā€™s vision for the future is not about variety, but place. ā€œThe challenge of my generation is to work in geographic identification. To talk about the Uco Valley is too big, the future of Argentina is in the villagesā€¦ Malbec is not the important thing, the most important thing is the place, and Malbec is the vehicle to express our region. Burgundy took 800 years, but maybe we will take less.ā€

    Zuccardi is indeed well on his way, and his top wines show an elegant and stylish interpretation of Mendozaā€™s future. With Zuccardiā€™s visionary winery opening in less than 6 months, and a new Finca range about to be launched, there is plenty more to see from Sebastian Zuccardi yet. At only 34 years old, he is at the top of his game and not slowing down.

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  • 10 winemakers to watch in Chile

    10 winemakers to watch in Chile

    Screen Shot 2014-09-11 at 16.19.43For The Drinks Business, September 2014 edition
    Read the full feature: Chilea Winemakers to Watch DB Sep 14

    CHILE IS well-known for the concentration of its wine production, allowing the country to make consistent wine at competitive prices. But emerging is a new wave of boutique projects and new styles from the full length and breath of the country, resulting in original blends from little- known places.

    The source of such novelty is a broad range of personalities, all of whom are driven by a desire to celebrate Chileā€™s vinous diversity. Over the following pages is a selection of 10 winemakers to watch, each chosen for their creative and critically-acclaimed approach.

     

     

    Marcelo RetamalMARCELO RETAMAL

    Retamal is not new, but even after 20 years filling bottles he is still at the forefront of Chileā€™s wine innovations. Retamal became head winemaker of De Martino winery straight after university in 1996 and since then has made wines in over 350 vineyards in Chile, executed a 12 year terroir hunt across the span of the country, and made a huge U-turn in winemaking techniques that sparked a new trend in Chile.

    ā€œMy problem started in 2007, because the owner and I didnā€™t like our winesā€, he explains, commenting on how flying winemakers and international buyers had swayed Chile into a ripe and oaky style from the early noughties. ā€œThey were correct, with softness, high alcohol and lots of oak. But we wanted to create a wine with more drinkability, more fruit and not much oak or alcohol… so we started to work very strongly in this direction. More than new things, it is rediscovering the old ways.ā€

    His return to ā€œold waysā€ include using only native yeast, no added enzymes or tartaric acid, earlier harvests, aging in old Chilean earthenware jars, and zero new oak. It is not just his winemaking that sets him apart. His commitment to finding new viticulture areas and rediscovering others keeps him on the cusp…

    Read more Chilea Winemakers to Watch DB Sep 14

     

    Andrea LeonANDREA LEON

    When a young winemaker is given their own personal line at a Michel Rolland winery, you know that they are doing something right. Andrea LeoĢn has worked for Lapostolle (the family behind Grand Marnier) since 2004, winemaking with their high profile consultant Rolland in the biodynamic Apalta winery. However when her own personal style began to diverge from Rollandā€™s, Lapostolle gave LeoĢn the freedom to develop her own range, which is now one of the most interesting collections in Chile. LeoĢn produces an adventurous terroir series of seven Syrahs from around Chile, three CarmeneĢ€res, and a few less common varieties including Muscat, Petit Verdot, Mourvedre, Carignan and Grenache.

    Her exploration in Syrah is on trend with what is becoming one of Chileā€™s most promising varieties, and LeoĢn shows the potential of this versatile variety from coastal and mountainous regions of Elqui, Casablanca, San Antonio, Cachapoal and Colchagua…

    Read more Chilea Winemakers to Watch DB Sep 14

    Photo by Matt Wilson

    f massoc closeFRANCĢ§OIS MASSOC

    FrancĢ§ois Massoc came back to Chile to make a wine that showed Chile was more than just ā€œgood valueā€. After years studying in France and, curiously, winemaking in an Israeli monastery, Massoc returned home to make wine with his best friends: terroir expert Pedro Parra and Louis-Michel Liger-Belair of Vosne- RomaneĢe fame. ā€œWe are not making money with Aristos. It is very expensive to produce, but we want to prove that in Chile you can make a world class wine,ā€ he says. The fact that their top wine is a Chardonnay, the solitary white in Chileā€™s over Ā£40 club, also proves that Chile is not just a one-trick Cabernet pony, although they do also make an acclaimed Cabernet and are also working on a Pinot Noir.

     

    While the small Aristos project is redefining Chileā€™s premium category, other Massoc projects reinforce his game- changing status. At Calyptra, he makes one of the few high-end Sauvignon Blancs that doesnā€™t come from the coast, but instead from the Andes and aged in custom-made barrels (Massoc was a cooper before a winemaker). His other project with Parra, Clos des Fous ā€“ madmenā€™s vineyard ā€“ is another venture to show that Chile doesnā€™t need to play by the same old rules…

    Read more Chilea Winemakers to Watch DB Sep 14

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