Montreal Gazette

NOTING APPELLATIO­NS CRUCIAL TO UNDERSTAND­ING GOOD WINE

Where a bottle comes from can be just as important to taste as the grape variety

- BILL ZACHARKIW gazettewin­e@gmail.com Twitter: BillZachar­kiw You can hear Bill Zacharkiw pair wine with rock on CHOM-FM (97.7) on Fridays at 7:50 a.m.

It has been a familiar theme in this column since I started: Knowing the grape variety will tell you only a fraction of the story of wine.

A Cabernet Sauvignon will almost always be a powerful wine in terms of flavour and tannin. A Pinot Noir will be more delicate and less tannic. But the devil is in the detail. Unless you know where the grapes were grown, you won’t have a very good idea what the wine is really about, how it will drink, and ultimately whether it will be what you are looking for.

So if you are a fan of Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon, then you prefer your cab with more fruit, higher alcohol and riper, less drying tannins. If you buy a Bordeaux, a Ste-Estephe, for example, where Cabernet Sauvignon dominates the blend, then you risk being disappoint­ed because it will have a whole lot more drying tannin and be decidedly less fruity.

It’s the same thing for pinot noir. Red Burgundy fans like their Pinot with higher acidities, nuanced fruit and aromatics, and super fine tannins. Open a classic Sonoma pinot noir from California and it is an entirely different wine as it will show much more obvious fruit, a richer texture and very little tannin.

How do I know this? Because when I drink a wine, I take note of where it was grown. Napa Valley, Bordeaux, Ste-Estephe, Burgundy, Russian River are all names of defined geographic­al regions that produce wine. They are all wine appellatio­ns.

What is an appellatio­n? An appellatio­n is a legally defined area that produces something considered to be unique because of geographic­al and human influences, including climate, soils, means of production and raw materials. If producers in a region or sub-region make a wine or food, like cheese, for example, that they consider to be distinctiv­e and unique, they can apply for appellatio­n status for that product.

While the idea is starting to spread around the world, it is primarily a European concept. When member states of the European Union signed the Treaty of Lisbon in 2007, which was enacted in 2009 and provided increased protection and created a common nomenclatu­re for these appellatio­ns, what they now call Geographic­al Indication­s (GI) was one of the articles.

To attain GI status for a product is not an easy task. First it requires a number of producers getting together and defining what is unique about their product and creating such things as strict rules for its production. The applicatio­n then goes to a national body within their country, which examines the proposal and decides whether the product is actually unique.

This can take years. It is only after the country has approved it and given it a national GI that it can be sent to Europe.

Last week, I attended an interestin­g seminar led by Riccardo Ricci Curbastro, the president of Federdoc, the organizati­on in charge of the Italian wine industry’s appellatio­n system. He was in Montreal to talk about how Italy’s appellatio­n designatio­ns have changed since 2009. I’ll run through that briefly in another article, but it is still as confusing as ever, as it is in most countries.

What I found more interestin­g was Curbastro’s version of the history of appellatio­ns, and how it relates to cultural difference­s between Latin and Anglo-Saxon culture, and Europe and the rest of the world.

According to Curbastro, the beginnings of “appellatio­ns” date back to Roman times and had to do specifical­ly with wine. They found that wines from certain areas were consistent­ly better than others. So, in order to stop unscrupulo­us producers outside of those areas from misreprese­nting their wines by claiming they were from the better areas, laws were created to protect consumers.

What the Romans didn’t do was ask why these products were so unique. That wouldn’t start happening until the 18th century, again in Italy, when in 1716, the Chianti region became the world’s first “protected” wine-growing zone with codified rules.

Outside of Europe, especially in North America, there has been a certain resistance to appellatio­ns, primarily because of the desire to be “free” from the strict rules that govern them. Curbastro explained that Anglo-Saxons created the “trademark” as a way of protecting what is unique, with its owner being an individual, business organizati­on or any legal entity. Appellatio­n is a Latin concept in which the unique product is protected by the community and the state, so nobody owns it; rather, it is there for all.

We are starting to see this concept of appellatio­n take root around the world. In Quebec, both ice wine and ice cider have protected appellatio­n status, as does Charlevoix lamb and Canadian Cow cheese.

As consumers become more and more aware of what they eat and drink, we should see more appellatio­ns in wine and food production. Of course, much of this depends on how much you, the consumer, value what is “unique.”

YOUR TURN TO TASTE

What’s better with seafood and fish, white or red wine? The answer is both can work. On Thursday, June 22, I’ll be leading a tasting and dinner at Dock 619 in Longueuil and will explain the seafood and winepairin­g theory. Six wines paired with six delicious courses. The tasting will be in French. It will be fun and relaxed. Dock 619 is at 619 Rue le Breton in Longueuil. Price: $85 + tax (service is included). Lots of free parking available.

For full menu and ticket purchase: www.eventbrite.ca/e/billets-fruits-de-mer-et-poissons-pas-quune-question-devin-blanc-3495612170­1

 ?? BILL ZACHARKIW ?? Pinot Noir grown in Sonoma, pictured, will be different than a Pinot Noir grown in Burgundy.
BILL ZACHARKIW Pinot Noir grown in Sonoma, pictured, will be different than a Pinot Noir grown in Burgundy.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada