Rating:
7,
Maturity:
After the floods of 2002, 2003 was a
complete contrast, with temperatures soaring to 40 degrees and over in August
and, at the height of the summer, little temperature relief at night. The
danger was of grapes with extremely high sugar levels and a lack of balancing
acidity and phenological ripeness. Quality-driven producers who were careful in
the vineyards and tempered in the wineries have produced wines which are richly
approachable, with attractive ripe tannins and perfect balance. In the north,
Syrah was harvested early, most of the fruit having been brought in by
the end of the first week in September. In the South, the Grenache
flourished and, together with the late-ripening Mourvèdre, was able, for
the gifted and patient winemakers, to hold on until later in September, a month
which brought respite in the form of gentle rain. Those who waited have not
produced fruit bombs; on the contrary their wines have achieved excellent
equilibrium. They are generally voluptuous and rich in style , but sufficiently
well-balanced to join the first rank. Some compare 2003 to the excellent 1990; others 1998. In general in
antithesis to 1999 and 2001, these wines are
sensual rather than intellectual and made to be relished and enjoyed. The
greatest surprise has been the quality of some of the whites, intuitively
candidates for stress and over-heating, but, in the excellent examples that we
have selected, marked by confidence, freshness and a savoir faire which signals
a complete generic reappraisal.
© BB&R Limited, 2006
2003 Rhone
Berry Bros & Rudd,
3 St James St, London, SW1A 1EG
Tel: 0870 900 4300
orders@bbr.com www.bbr.com