Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Black wine is back. Here are 5 to try.

- Check back in the coming weeks for a story on malbec from Argentina. Michael Austin food@chicagotri­bune.com Twitter @pour_man

You know about red, white and pink wine. You (probably) know about green wine, and orange wine too. Now let’s expand the color palette to include the black wine of Cahors.

Relax: There’s no squid ink or cuttlefish in play. “Black wine” is actually red wine — a very dark malbec.

Cahors (pronounced “kah-OR”) is a small town on France’s Lot River, but it also lends its name to the red-wine region in southweste­rn France that is the ancestral home of the malbec grape. But there, winemakers refer to malbec as auxerrois (confusingl­y, also the name for a white wine grape grown in France’s Alsace region, Germany and more) or cot, and use it to produce the dense, fullbodied, dry wine known as — you guessed it — Cahors.

Just up the road from Cahors, in Bordeaux, malbec is a blending grape. But in Cahors, it is the primary player — the grape variety that winemakers put all of their chips on. The wine was beloved in Europe as far back as the Middle Ages, and it remained so for hundreds of years before suffering some major setbacks due to pests and weather disasters, some of which occurred as recently as the 1950s. Since then, a slow and steady rise to its original glory has been afoot, via an influx of talent and investment money.

Both the wine’s color and personalit­y — broadbacke­d, usually in need of some aging or at least some time to catch its breath in a decanter — earned it the “black wine” nickname centuries ago, and those highly tannic wines are still being turned out. But contempora­ry Cahors producers also make malbecs that are more accessible sooner, and generally easier to get along with.

In fact, getting along with some modern Cahors bottlings is close to effortless. Are these friendlier bottles a response to the popularity of Argentine malbecs — those fruity, lush and juicy crowd-pleasers? Maybe. No matter the reason, it’s clear that Cahors is going through an overhaul of its image.

The place now refers to itself as the “Capitale du Malbec,” and more bottles use the word malbec in place of less-recognizab­le auxerrois or cot. By using the grape’s better-known name, Cahors is sort of … reaching out. Putting in the effort. Trying to make contact with the larger world. And that is nothing but a good thing.

The law calls for Cahors to be composed of at least 70 percent malbec, with merlot and tannat allowed as blending partners. These are big red wines that can stand up to rich and hearty fare such as foie gras, black truffles, beef, game meats, duck confit and cassoulet. Traditiona­lly, Cahors has offered variations on plum, dark berries, smoke, leather, tobacco and hints of so-called animale, but more modern styles can lean to the lighter side, relatively speaking, both in color and body, with supple red fruit qualities and floral notes.

Below are tasting notes for a handful of Cahors that are ready to drink now. They are listed in ascending order, according to price.

2014 Georges Vigouroux

Pigmentum Made of 100 percent malbec, this pleasant and affordable wine offered aromas of strawberry, cocoa, smoke and a touch of animale, all leading to a palate full of ripe cranberry, tobacco, cedar and spice on the finish. $13

2011 Domaine du Theron

Prestige Here is another 100 percent varietal, rich and velvety, with anise, pine needles, bright red berries, herbs, spice and incense arriving in layers — a drinkable wine that would do well paired with a juicy cut of beef. $18 2011 Georges Vigouroux Chateau de Haute-Serre At 15 percent alcohol, this powerful wine opened with raspberry, cherry and minerality that led to a whiff of eucalyptus and licorice followed by a lush wave of soft red fruit and a slow, spice-tinged finish. $23 2012 Chateau du Cedre Expect blackberry, forest floor, ripe dark fruit, cedar, bright acidity and an herbal quality in this wine, which is composed of 90 percent malbec and equal parts of merlot and tannat, and made from vines that are more than 30 years old. $30

2009 Chateau Lagrezette Plum, black cherry, blueberry, vanilla and smoke characteri­ze this complex, elegant wine, which aged for 24 months in new French oak barrels, and was so densely colored I could not see even a dark outline of my finger through it. $45

 ?? MICHAEL TERCHA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Cahors, a French malbec, is revamping its image. Chateau du Cedre is 90 percent malbec and made from vines that are more than 30 years old.
MICHAEL TERCHA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Cahors, a French malbec, is revamping its image. Chateau du Cedre is 90 percent malbec and made from vines that are more than 30 years old.
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