LEFT BANK BDX Flashcards
Graves + Medoc
What six red grape varieties are allowed in the Bordeaux AOP? Which 3 dominate and to what extent?
Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Petit Verdot, Malbec, Carmenere.
Merlot, Cab Sauv, and Cab Franc dominate - constituting 99% of red vineyard
What white grapes are allowed under the basic Bordeaux AOP?
Semillon, Sauvignon Blanc, Sauvignon Gris, Muscadelle, Ugni Blanc, Merlot Blanc, Colombard
__________ and ___________ are the parents of Cabernet Sauvignon.
Sauvignon Blanc x Cabernet Franc
Merlot and Carmenere share what parent grape?
Cabernet Franc
Merlot and Malbec are half-siblings, linked by what parent grape?
Magdalene Noire de Charentes
Which two grapes are considered outliers in that they are the only 2 grapes not related to the rest of the Bordeaux Family?
Muscadelle
Petit Verdot
What is the difference between Sauvignon Blanc and Sauvignon Gris?
Sauvignon Gris is a grey-skinned, earlier ripening mutation. It is listed as a separate variety on the cahiers des charges but is genetically identical. It is especially popular in Graves.
What 3 regional appellations cover the entire area of Bordeaux?
Bordeaux AOP
Bordeaux Supérieur AOP
Cremant de Bordeaux AOP
What styles of wine can be produced under the basic Bordeaux AOP?
White - dry, off-dry, and medium-sweet
Rose and Clairet
Red
What styles of wine can be produced under the Bordeaux Superieur AOP? How does this AOP differ from the basic Bordeaux AOP?
The Supérieur AOP only allows red and medium-sweet white wine styles - requiring longer elevage before release, minimum vine density is slightly higher, yields are lower, potential alcohol required is slightly higher. Basically, a BDX AOP wine in France sells for 6euro of less; BDX Superieur sells for 6 to 15euro.
What IGP covers Bordeaux? What other departments does this IGP cover?
Atlantique IGP
Spans 5 departments: Gironde, Dordogne, Charente and Charente-Maritime, and the western part of the Lot-et-Garonne
What was the name of the first establishment to occupy modern day Bordeaux? When was it founded and by what tribe?
Burdigala
Est. in the 3rd century BC by a Celtic tribe
What was the first Bordeaux wine to be sold as a brand? When was the first mention of this recorded?
Around 1660, Haut Brion appears in King Charles II’s cellar notes. In 1663, Samuel Pepys praises a Ho Bryen that hath a most good and particular taste.
What group of people are at the root of modern day Bordeaux wine styles and how?
The Dutch became Bordeaux’s most important direct consumers in the early 1600s - they demanded full bodied, deeply colored reds and sweet white wines. They re-introduced the German technique of burning sulfur candles in barrels prior to aging wine.
They also drained the swamps via jalles, but we know about this already.
What was the Pontac’s Head?
A fashionable eating house in London; opened by Arnaud de Pontac III for the exclusive purpose of selling his wine, Haut Brion, at a premium.
In the 18th century, what 4 properties fell under the ownership of Alexander de Gasq?
The 3 Leovilles - Leoville Las Cases, Leoville Poyferre, Leoville Barton and Chateau Palmer
Nicolas Alexander de Segur presided over what 3 now very important estates in the early 1700s?
Chateau Latour
Chateau Lafite
Chateau Calon
When and how did Malbec arrive in Bordeaux?
Malbec arrived in 1730, when a Cahors native bought Chateau de Pressac
What were the 3 big diseases to arrive in Bordeaux in the late 19th century?
Phylloxera
Oidium
Peronospera
When did Oidium arrive in Bordeaux and what effect did it have on the vineyards?
Oidium, aka powdery mildew, arrived first in the sweet wine vineyards along the Garonne and then spread to the Medoc. It crippled yields - 1854 BDX saw its lowest harvest since the late 1700s
When did phylloxera arrive in Bordeaux and what effect did it have on the vineyard area?
- The biggest, already successful Chateau could afford the extensive replanting. A number of less wealthy planted hybrids - in 2011 the 4th most planted grape was still Villard Noir!!! Others simply ceased to exist and a lack of stock was made up with negociant purchases from elsewhere.
What disease arrived in 1880s Bordeaux, after the spread of phylloxera and oidium? What was the cure?
Peronospora, aka downy mildew
The defense was a copper-sulfate mixture (1888)
What 3 years post-WW2 are considered all time greats for Bordeaux?
1945, 1947, and 1949
What does the term “sur souches” refer to in the world of Bordeaux wines?
The negociant process of buying wines based on the previous vintage price, agreed upon prior to harvest
What was the first Bordeaux estate to begin estate bottling and when? When did estate bottling become compulsory for classed estates in the Medoc?
Mouton-Rothschild, 1924
1972
What warm, dry years were considered the best of the 1980s for Bordeaux?
1982, 1988, 1989, 1990