Awards and citations:


1997: Le Prix du Champagne Lanson Noble Cuvée Award for investigations into Champagne for the Millennium investment scams

2001: Le Prix Champagne Lanson Ivory Award for investdrinks.org

2011: Vindic d'Or MMXI – 'Meilleur blog anti-1855'

2011: Robert M. Parker, Jnr: ‘This blogger...’:

2012: Born Digital Wine Awards: No Pay No Jay – best investigative wine story

2012: International Wine Challenge – Personality of the Year Award




Showing posts with label Layon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Layon. Show all posts

Thursday, 21 February 2019

Is Quarts de Chaume about to become very rare?

Cartographie Chaume et Quarts-de-Chaume sans géols

Green is Chaume 1er Cru and pink is Quarts de Chaume

Two new and wonderfully detailed maps of the Quarts de Chaume
and Coteaux du Layon 1er Cru Chaume
Source: Fédération Viticole Anjou-Saumur 

Cartographie Chaume et Quarts-de-Chaume avec géols
Geological map of Coteaux du Layon 1er Cru Chaume
Clearly indicating how complex the soils are in this small area

2019 is a significant year for Quarts de Chaume – one of the world's greatest expressions of Chenin Blanc. It will be the last vintage that cryoextraction, or cryoselection as some prefer to call it, will be allowed under the décret of November 2011. This transitional arrangement comes to an end in 2019. From 2020 it will hopefully be impossible to make Quarts de Chaume from unripe, green grapes and foist it onto the consumer as the real thing.

However, despite a series of good to excellent vintages there is every prospect that Quarts de Chaume, already a small appellation of 40 hectares, will become increasingly rare. The problem is simple we are not buying and drinking enough sweet wine. Now there is a marked move to making dry Anjou Blanc from the vines of the Quarts de Chaume.

QuartsdeC+hamlets
Hamlet of Chaume and the surrounding Q de C vines 

The arrival of two important new players – Kathleen Van den Berghe and Sigurd Mareels (Château Suronde) and Ivan Massonnat (Domaine Belargus) – has highlighted the problem and the direction that a significant proportion of the production from vines in the Quarts de Chaume will take. Belargus has 10 hectares of vines in Quarts de Chaume and Suronde 5.5 hectares making a total of 15.5 ha or 38.75% of the appellation's total area.   

Surondes
View towards Suronde

Suronde's website clearly sets out their wine producing policy.

'Château de Suronde is the perfect complement to Château de Minière (Bourgueil), with white wines from Chenin Blanc that can be sweet, semi-sweet and dry, both still and sparkling. Château de Suronde will produce mainly dry white wine, and will produce the iconic sweet Quarts de Chaume wines in the best vintages only.'

Only sweet wines that meet the appellation's criteria can be Quarts de Chaume – dry, semi-sweet will be Anjou Blanc, while the sparkling can be either Anjou Mousseux or Crémant de Loire depending on the production methods used.

Ivan Massonnat (Belargus) intends to make 80% dry wines from his 10 hectares. This percentage is likely to be even higher in average to poor vintages. It was Jo Pithon who fortunately persuaded Massonnat to make some Quarts de Chaume in 2018. Pithon pointed out that even though sweet wines are difficult to sell they can remain in a grower's cellar for many years without losing value.

E part of IM QdeC
Part of Belargus's holding in lieux-dit Les Quarts

Suronde and Belargus are not alone. Guy Rochais (Château de Plaisance) is also making  dry wines in the Quarts de Chaume and is amongst those pushing for a superior appellation for the best of Anjou Blanc sec – in this case, perhaps, Anjou Blanc Chaume.

What of Domaine des Baumard's six hectares of Quarts de Chaume? From the 2020 vintage when cryo-extraction is banned making it impossible for the domaine to make some 80 hectolitres of ersatz 'Quarts de Chaume' as they did in the awful 2012 vintage when over 200 mls of rain fell during the crucial month of October.  

Actually it was legally impossible in the 2012 vintage but the INAO chose to turn a blind eye – forget any notion that this organisation stands up for the consumer. In less than ideal vintages will Domaine des Baumard now choose make a proportion of dry white from their six hectares?

My guess is that producers, like Domaines de la Bergerie, Ogereau and others with just a small parcel in the Quarts de Chaume will continue to try to make 100% sweet wine from their parcels unless weather conditions make this impossible.

Stats from InterLoire show that between 2012 and 2016 the maximum area declared as Quarts de Chaume was 35 hectares (2014), while the lowest was 6 hectares in 2012......  Will the area declared reach 35 hectares in the near future?

It is difficult to blame the producers for choosing to reduce their production of sweet wine in favour of dry ones. How can you expect them to go on making wines that in order to be great require tiny yields, with the attendant big risks of late harvest and the additional expense of successive pickings, if they cannot sell them no matter how good these sweet wines are?

This development sets lovers of a sweet wine a challenge. If you want these wines to continue to be made in reasonable quantities you must be prepared to drink more of them. Here I am as guilty as anyone. I love sweet wines, especially those from the Loire with their magical balance of sweetness and acidity. However, when I reflect at the end of the year on the number of bottles of sweet wines that I have drunk – I may only need the fingers of one hand and only rarely more than two!

This lack of consumption is not peculiar to Quarts de Chaume or other Loire sweet wines, Sauternes and other great sweet wines face similar problems in a dry white market. Some would say let market forces rule. If a type of wine is difficult to sell them what's the problem if it disappears.... Although, of course, market forces are necessarily a major influence, if it wasn't for some stubborn and courageous producers some of wine's diversity would have been lost. The wine world would be a a sea of international wine varieties. The marvels of good sherry might well have disappeared. etc. etc. 

It is still possible to enjoy and marvel at sweet Vourvays or those from the Layon from 1947 because a reasonable quantity was made. Will that still be the case for potential great vintages like 2018 and those to come in the future in 70 years time? For the sake of future generations of wine lovers I hope so! 

As wine communicators we need to highlight the qualities of great sweet wine and the different occasions to drink them. It doesn't help that too many in the British wine and hospitality trade and in other countries foolishly and inaccurately describe these magical wines as 'dessert' wines.


JB-QuartsdeChaume_0001

Un Grand Vin du Monde – Quarts de Chaume by Jean Baumard

I don't often agree with Jean Baumard but I do agree with his book's title Quarts de Chaume – Un Grand Vin du Monde (published 2007) – assuming that the wine complies with the décret in force from the 2020 vintage. Unfortunately Quarts de Chaume is facing some testing times and is under a possible threat, which I hope will receive some airtime during the International Chenin Blanc Seminar at the start of July in Angers.

Monday, 11 June 2018

Jo Pithon sells his domaine – Clos des Treilles – to Ivan Massonnat

Isabelle and Jo Pithon @ time of launch of Pithon-Paillé
2009 Salon des Vins de Loire 
Isabelle and Jo are on the right


La Revue du Vin de France reports that Jo Pithon has sold his domaine, which includes the steep sided Clos des Treilles overlooking the River Layon to 46-year-old Ivan Massonnat, a financier who is understood to be devoted fan of Chenin Blanc. 

Jo rescued and replanted the Clos, which is on the north bank of the Layon in the commune of Beaulieu-sur-Layon, with Chenin Blanc and made a number of very fine vintages of dry Chenin from this special site. 

In addition to acquiring Jo and Isabelle's domaine LARVF reports that Massonat has acquired a total of 10 hectares of Quarts de Chaume, which makes him the appellation's largest owner with some 25% of the appellation. This is includes the 0.22 hectares of Quarts de Chaume held by Jo Pithon with the rest bought by Massonnat from Pascal Laffourcade.  

LARVF reports that Massonnat is now looking for someone to run his new domaine for him. 

It is good news that Jo Pithon has sold his domaine, which will allow Jo to retire, and will mean that both the Clos des Treilles will continue and that there is the potential for some very good Quarts de Chaume to be made. 

Read the rest of the LARVF report here.  

 Les Treilles from south bank of Layon

Friday, 23 February 2018

The retiring Jo Pithon to sell his famous Coteau des Treilles


Views of Les Treilles from the
south side of the Layon 

According to a report in La Revue du Vin de France Jo and Isabelle Pithon have put their business Pithon-Paillé up for sale as they are now retiring. This includes the famous Les Treilles (7ha) the steep south facing slopes overlooking the Layon that the Pithon rescued after it had been abandoned in the 1960s. Naturally the revived Coteau is planted with Chenin Blanc.

 'Le domaine Pithon-Paillé, joyau du Layon, est à vendre. À l’heure de prendre sa retraite, Jo Pithon présente sereinement ce qu’il appelle "l’œuvre de sa vie" : le coteau des Treilles.


"Un mec qui calcule, il ne fait pas ça." Racheter 7 hectares de coteaux en friches depuis 40 ans. Prendre cinq ans pour venir à bout des ronces et replanter 3 hectares de chenin. "On a pris un peu de risques", résume Jo Pithon, de sa voix rocailleuse.

"Quand je travaillais sur les Bonnes Blanches, je voyais ces coteaux qui me paraissaient fabuleux", se souvient le vigneron.

Read the rest of the article published by La Revue du Vin de France.  

Earlier posts on Jim's Loire about Les Treilles:

Some views from the Layon inc Les Treilles: early April 2007

http://jimsloire.blogspot.co.uk/2008/11/views-of-layon.html

Les Treilles Vertical 2013-2005: Pithon-Paille@Salon des Vins de Loire 2014 http://jimsloire.blogspot.co.uk/2014/03/les-treilles-vertical-2013-2005-pithon.html

Wednesday, 3 August 2016

2005 Loire vintage in the Layon, Anjou – some photos from that October

 Pickers' vehicles in the Layon 

 Looking west along the Layon towards Château Soucherie 
from Pierre Bise 

In October Nigel Wilkinson (RSJ Restaurant) I spent a week or more in the Loire seeing how the 2005 vintage was coming. Because of the ideal conditions during the autumn of 2005, the vignerons were very relaxed during the harvest. They were able to choose exactly the moment when to pick. I suspect that the 2016 harvest is unlikely to be as relaxed – still it is some way off so we will have to see.  

Ripening Chenin Blanc at Château Pierre Bise
(above and below)


A steep slope overlooking the River Layon 


Cabernet Sauvignon – if I remember rightly

Claude Papin (Château Pierre Bise)
making a point

Looking westward along the Layon 
Château de Breuil on extreme left

Nigel Wilkinson with Vincent Ogereau 
in a parcel of Vincent's vines in 
Saint-Lambert-du-Lattay 

Cabernet Sauvignon – Côte de la Houssaye
(Domaine Ogereau)
above and below 


 In Les Bonnes Blanches 
ripening Chenin Blanc destined for Coteaux du Layon
above and below   


Vincent Ogereau checking on progress of his Chenin 

Tuesday, 14 October 2014

2014 Loire: close-ups of Chenin in Layon


Here are some close-ups of grapes in the Layon in the east of the commune of Rablay-sur-Layon. They were taken last Friday. They show noble rot developing, although it may not all be completely noble. Whether it remains that way will depend upon the weather.   





















Thursday, 10 July 2014

2014 Translayon: photos from this year's event

One of Aurélien Layon's photos





'MERCI!!!!
Merci aux 125 cavaliers et aux 140 marcheurs qui ont participé du jeudi 5 juin au dimanche 8 juin à la 4ème édition de la Grande Descente du Layon organisée dans le cadre de la Translayon!! 

Merci à vous pour votre bonne humeur, votre convivialité et l’intérêt que vous avez montré pour notre région, ses artisans, ses produits, le patrimoine architectural et paysager!

Malgré les petits aléas de tout événement de cette dimension (22 associations partenaires, 250 bénévoles, entre 190 et 230 participants chaque jour), vous avez toujours chaleureusement participé aux animations proposées et votre bonne humeur contagieuse nous a tous conforté ici, dans le Loire Layon, dans la qualité d'accueil que nous pouvons proposer autour des Coteaux du Layon, de la Loire, du tourisme itinérant et de la convivialité!!'


 

Friday, 10 January 2014

Rablay-sur-Layon – February 2013: flooding

Sign on the bridge over the Layon

With widespread flooding in the parts of the UK, it seems timely to post these photos of flooding in the Layon at Rablay-sur-Layon in late January/early February 2013. 

 The swollen Layon, which burst its banks

Looking eastwards


Looking westwards along the Layon 

Doctor Kissack recording the action