A vintage celebration
Bordeaux: the festive table classic
With some 650 million bottles produced on average each year, from 57 appellations and vineyards stretching 100km along its rivers, the vast Bordeaux wine region is not easy to pigeonhole when choosing vintages for best current drinking.
Consumer taste for young or older vintages, budgets (modest or prestige brands) and appellation variation all need to be considered. A fine vintage in St-Emilion on the Right Bank, for example, may not be as exciting in the Médoc on the Left.
And while young Bordeaux can be delicious, the holidays are a special occasion. And bottle-maturation makes Bordeaux special: not only to soften tannins, but also to elicit intriguing tertiary aromas and flavours. From prestige St-Emilion grand cru classé to a more humble Médoc cru bourgeois, wine will benefit from ageing in the bottle.
But because holiday feasts have such robust flavours – gravy, cranberry and roast potatoes, puddings and stuffing – vintages made too delicate by their advancing years should be avoided. Your holiday wine needs some tannic backbone and
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