The Sunday Guardian

World’s most expensive wine is about to go on sale in Geneva

- JOHN LICHFIELD

Atreasure trove of hundreds of bottles of the most expensive wine in the world, Romanée Conti, will go under the auctioneer’s hammer in Geneva this Sunday.

Usually, the mythical red burgundy is sold in twos and threes or — at most — cases of 12. On Sunday, a private collection of more than 1,400 bottles of burgundies from the Romanée Conti Domain — including hundreds of bottles from the minuscule Romanée Conti vineyard itself — will be sold by a new Geneva auction house called Baghera Wines.

The entire collection is estimated to be worth at least £2.7m. The most valuable single lot is expected to be a case of 12 bottles of 1988 vintage Romanée-Conti, which is estimated to be worth around £140,000.

That works out at £11,666 a bottle or £2,333 for a small glass.

It is debatable, however, whether any of the wine on sale this Sunday, including hundreds of bottles from other Grand Cru Bur- gundy vineyards, will ever be drunk. Investment, or speculatio­n, in trophy wines, notably by Asian buyers, means that the world’s most prized names like RomanéeCon­ti are more often kept in vaults or secure warehouses than in wine cellars.

The collection on sale this Sunday is said to have been assembled over 15 years by a Swiss investor. It has been stocked until now at the Geneva Freeport, a warehouse complex exempt from customs duties and taxes often used to store valuable works of art.

Executive director Michael Ganne, who founded Baghera Wines last year with two former Christie’s col- leagues, Julie Carpentier and Emmanuel Mercé, said the sale was “the most significan­t auction of exceptiona­l wines of the last two decades in continenta­l Europe”.

Such an auction will add to the mystique surroundin­g Romanée- Conti and other grand cru Burgundy wines but will not necessaril­y please Burgundian wine producers. Romanée-Conti and other big names in Bur- gundy have been trying in recent years to control the speculatio­n by selling their wine only to wealthy wine drinkers and traders who promise not to sell to speculator­s or “investors”.

Why is Romanée-Conti so prized, first by wine experts and then by investors?

Roald Dahl wrote in his book My Uncle Oswald: “Sense for me this perfume! Breathe this bouquet! Taste it! Drink it! But never try to describe it! Impossible to give an account of such a delicacy with words! To drink Romanée- Conti is equivalent to experienci­ng an orgasm at once in the mouth and in the nose.”

Romanée-Conti is grown from Pinot Noir grapes in a tiny vineyard about the size of one and a half football pitches close to the village of Vosne-Romanée, north of Beaune and south of Dijon. This plot of land produces only about 6,000 bottles a year — small even for the patchwork of 1,000 mostly tiny vineyards which make up the Côte d’Or in central Burgundy.

It is this scarcity as much as supreme quality which has created the mystique and value of RomanéeCon­ti.

The source of the quality is more complicate­d to define. In 2011, The Independen­t was granted a rare interview with Aubert de Villaine, joint proprietor of the wider Romanée-Conti domaine, whose family has owned the Romanée-Conti vienyard for seven generation­s.

He said that the jagged shapes of the Burgundy vineyards were establishe­d by monks at least 600 years ago. “Over many centuries, these seemingly random boundaries between vineyards were worked out and then engraved in marble by our ancestors,” Mr Villaine said. “They realised that, by doing so, they could capture something unique and wonderful.”

By trial and error — and large and attentive consumptio­n over many years — the monks discovered that wines from closely adjoining plots could have different qualities and tastes. Without knowing it, they had discovered the concept of “terroirs” — the almost mystical French belief that tiny changes in sub-soil and micro- clime can produce vast difference­s in the quality of wine. THE INDEPENDEN­T

The entire collection is estimated to be worth at least £2.7m. The most valuable single lot is expected to be a case of 12 bottles of 1988 vintage Romanée-Conti, which is estimated to be worth around £140,000.

 ??  ?? The collection on sale this Sunday is said to have been assembled over 15 years by a Swiss investor.
The collection on sale this Sunday is said to have been assembled over 15 years by a Swiss investor.
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