The Hamilton Spectator

Aging wine is a risky propositio­n

It’s like putting all your money into a single stock. With multiple bottles, your bets are hedged

- ERIC ASIMOV

Aging wine is an act of hope and optimism, laced with fear and dread.

You dearly want to be rewarded by a bottle that matures from awkward, inarticula­te youth to expressive beauty and, eventually, elegant complexity. The fear is of waiting not long enough or too long, of storing it wrong and, ultimately, of missing out on what could have been, or what once was.

Entwined with this anxiety is a misplaced conviction that bottles age toward a momentary peak, then drop away into oblivion. Opening a bottle at the wrong time, many believe, risks missing that special moment. Too often, I’ve seen people unable to enjoy an otherwise delicious bottle of wine because they have convinced themselves that they missed the peak.

Determinin­g which bottles to age and when to open them is among the most puzzling aspects of wine. Misunderst­andings can cause misery. The aging question just adds one more layer of doubt to a subject with a seemingly endless capacity to induce angst in otherwise confident people. Every day brings numerous possible pitfalls.

Did I pick the wrong wine? Did I pay too much? Did I choose a bad producer? Did I serve it with the wrong food? In the wrong glass? Maybe I should have decanted it? Or not?

Here is the good news about aging wine: regardless of what many people assume, there is no single right time to open any particular bottle. Whenever you decide to drink a wine is the right time. If you go about it the right way, it’s hard to make a mistake.

First, it’s important to understand that wine does not age toward an apogee of developmen­t, then drop off. Bottles that can improve with aging tend to move along a gentle arc, during which they will offer many delicious expression­s, from youthful exuberance to middle-age complexity to eventual fragility.

The best time to open a bottle is subjective. The trick is getting to know your own preference­s, which takes a bit of time and effort. Which stage you prefer depends on the particular wine and, especially, your own taste.

One good method is to buy multiple bottles of an age-worthy wine. A case is great, but six is plenty. Then you wait, sometimes for a long time. Open a bottle in two years, a second in five. Note the path of the evolution and decide which stage you prefer.

Years ago, before prices soared, I bought six bottles of Louis Jadot Clos St.-Jacques 2002, an excellent premier cru Gevrey-Chambertin. I opened a bottle in 2007, and it was way too young, offering only the barest hint of what it might be. Drinking it was like being confined to only the first paragraph of a great book.

If that had been my only bottle, I might have been despondent. Aging one bottle of a wine is a risky propositio­n, like putting all your money into a single stock. With multiple bottles, your bets are hedged. Opening one bottle too early becomes useful informatio­n rather than a source of despair.

It was almost 10 years before I opened the second bottle, but wow, was it delicious, deep and complex yet still youthful. This wine has a long way to go, and I’m delighted to have four bottles left.

Storage

If you do plan to age wine, it’s important to have proper storage. A cool, dark cellar, free of vibrations, is ideal. So is a million dollars to fill the cellar.

Most of us will have to survive with something less than ideal. Wine refrigerat­ors are one solution. Good ones are worthwhile investment­s, though I have yet to meet anybody who believed that their refrigerat­or was big enough.

If you have a cellar, but it doesn’t keep the ideal 55 F year round, fear not. Temperatur­e variation is not terrible, as long as it does not get too warm. Except for very old vintages, wine tends to be sturdier than we think.

No matter how you store bottles, wine will occasional­ly find a way to fail you. A bottle might be corked, otherwise flawed or simply disappoint. Your annoyance level will rise in proportion to your patience and the size of your investment.

Sadly, it comes with the territory.

The evolutiona­ry path a bottle will take varies, depending on the type of wine, the style of the producer and the conditions of the vintage.

Wines like the finest Bordeaux, Burgundy and Barolo have a long arc of evolution. For their first 10 years, their potential for pleasure may be locked down underneath impenetrab­le tannins.

But these famously long-lived bottles are not the only ones worthy of aging.

The propulsive vivacity of young Muscadet, for example, turns broad and deep over the years, no longer as incisive but more complex.

One of the great joys of wine used to be well-aged white Burgundy. It was said often that white Burgundy aged better than red. But that was before the late 1990s, when bottles of white Burgundy began prematurel­y oxidizing on a regular basis. Countless white Burgundy fans have had the unpleasant experience of eagerly anticipati­ng a great bottle, only to pour out a cider-coloured oxidized disappoint­ment.

While strides have been taken, the problem has not been entirely eradicated. Far from every bottle is affected. But enough have been that I, like many other people, have cultivated a taste for fresh, young white Burgundy instead.

Perhaps more difficult than knowing when to open a bottle is initially judging its aging potential. Track records help to form general estimates. Aging estimates for wine genres are not hard to find on the internet or in wine textbooks.

For individual bottles, people often share their personal experience­s on crowdsourc­ed sites like cellartrac­ker.com. You know a young Barolo or Barbaresco will need time. How much depends on your taste, the style of the producer and the quality of the vintage.

Other wines, eminently capable of aging — like the Chenin Blancs and cabernet francs of the Loire Valley, the reds of Mount Etna and blaufränki­sches of the Burgenland, to say nothing of well-made rosés and sherries — require more intuitive guidance.

The structure, provided by tannins or acidity or both, and concentrat­ion, indicated by density of flavour, are the most obvious signs that a wine has what it takes to age. Yet, just as important, if not more so, is balance, the sense that all the elements are there in proper proportion.

The issue of balance can sometimes call into question the proclamati­ons of experts, and the ultimate importance of aging. Certain vintages deemed great, like 2000 Bordeaux and 2005 Burgundy, have yet, in my estimation, to offer much pleasure. Both are concentrat­ed and powerful, but a sense of equilibriu­m has often been missing in bottles I have tried.

Meanwhile, the 2001 and 2008 Bordeaux vintages, and the 2007 Burgundy, thought to be lesser vintages, have been delightful. Will they still be good in 2050, by which time future generation­s may be astounded by the 2000 Bordeaux and the 2005 Burgundy? Perhaps.

The best way to determine which wines to age is trial and error. Do you like young grüner veltliners? Put a couple of good bottles away for three or four years and see if you like the result. Try it with Beaujolais, too, or a good cabernet franc. Experiment­ation is crucial, but sadly, time will not speed up for earlier results.

 ?? JEFF HINCHEE NYT ?? Determinin­g which bottles to age and when to open them is among the most puzzling aspects of wine.
JEFF HINCHEE NYT Determinin­g which bottles to age and when to open them is among the most puzzling aspects of wine.

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