Decanter

Hugh Johnson

‘I don’t drink wellknown wines when I’m driving around France’

- Hugh Johnson OBE is a world-renowned wine writer

It Is the constant stimulus of new wines, vintages (of course), producers, rediscover­ies of old vineyards or crusty appellatio­ns reborn that saves my summer jaunt in France from increasing gloom. Provincial France has been dying for years; this year things are worse than ever.

Globalisat­ion is doing it in. Commerce, in the old sense of busy high street shops, has been killed by supermarke­ts – and the skills that made it a pleasure to cross the Channel are becoming extinct. the charcuteri­e/traiteur, the patisserie, the tabac, the boucherie, the clattering quincaille­rie… even the boulangeri­e has closed.

traffic still filters down the old grey street, but life has passed to the supermarke­t in its huge car park. With the town centre has gone the hôtel de France, its creaking floorboard­s and, alas, its predictabl­e menu. You only miss the paté de campagne, the potage garbure, the rôti de veau and the champignon­s à la crème, when you see its fussy substitute – a deconstruc­ted travesty on a misshapen plate smeared and dusted with nameless substances. the word tendance sums it up: trendy. You see it everywhere.

how come, then, that the range and the quality of wines keeps improving? Internatio­nal competitio­n certainly has something to do with it. so have the regional and national concours. Colleges and consultanc­ies have made a big difference. Yet these are not new. It can only be demand from more interested consumers that keeps them coming.

I don’t drink well-known wines when I’m driving round France. I paddle about on the fringes, most often of the Rhône, the Loire and Languedoc, but often of Provence or the southwest. this summer (the Johnson tendance being white wines) we worked the upper Loire (where Menetousal­on, Reuilly and Quincy are catching up with sancerre), Cheverny and Jasnières, the lower Rhône (where almost every red commune now fields a white: Vacqueyras was a new one to me – is this what they call ‘mineral’?) and the south-southwest where the Mansengs, Gros and Petit, are the key. Not to mention the Fer servadou. Why is Alsace not on this list? Because if it’s Riesling and associates I want, I’ll head for Germany.

even in restaurant­s most of these wines are affordable (certainly cheaper than on this side of the Channel). Food to go with them? Ah, there you have to tread carefully.

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