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Marlborough

Marlborough's Climate: Cool Maritime

Cool Maritime

Marlborough's Grapes: Chardonnay, Pinot Gris, Pinot Noir, Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc

Chardonnay

Jancis Robinson described Chardonnay as the tart of the grape world, as it would lie down anywhere and do what the winemaker told it to do! In other words it will grow almost anywhere and produce decent and quite stylistically different wines ranging from minerally Chablis, Champagne, buttery fruit wines, tropical fruit wines or oaky vanilla wines. During the late 1990's Chardonnay was the drink of choice for many. However people became bored with the oaky wines found in so many bars and the term, 'ABC' (Anything but Chardonnay) came about. The ubiquitous yet noble Chardonnay grape has virtually become a brand name. From its homeland in Burgundy, its fame and fortune have taken it all over the world. It�s grown on different soils in varying climates to be used either as a single varietal or in blends, for still and sparkling wines, and with or without oak ageing to create a wide range of wines with diverse personalities. As a result, it�s impossible to describe a typical Chardonnay. For a start, the grape can make anything from an everyday glugger to a high-quality wine deserved of ageing. Its popularity in the vineyard stems from the fact that it�s easy to grow, consistently yielding generously with relatively high sugars (and, therefore, alcohol). In the winery its advantages are obvious � it�s difficult to make a poor wine from it, unless it�s been picked too late, because then its acid levels fall quickly, which make it flabby. Chardonnay isn�t strongly aromatic: some detect anything from apples (or barely ripe apples in Chablis) and melon in Maconnais Chardonnay to tropical fruit flavours in New World examples. Common descriptives, however, tend to refer to texture and weight rather than flavour � buttery for broader styles, such as Meursault from the Cote de Beaune; steely for Montrachets and nutty for Corton-Charlemagne. There�s an attractive leanness to fine Cote d�Or white burgundy, that sets it apart from Chardonnays from the rest of the world, but this can be emulated further south in the Cote Chalonnaise and Maconnais in good vintages with clever winemaking.

Pinot Gris

Pinot Gris is a mutation of Pinot Noir so, not surprisingly, it originated in Burgundy. With its �grey� grapes (well, any shade from greyish blue to brownish pink, actually), it�s found all around central Europe under a multitude of names � Rulander or Grauburgunder (when vinified dry) in Germany, the infamous Pinot Grigio in Italy, Szurkebarat in Hungary and Malvoisie in Switzerland as well as France�s Loire, Ain and Savoie, to name a few. It has also migrated to the cooler areas of the New World, such as New Zealand, parts of Australia and Oregon. Within France, however, Pinot Gris is most revered in Alsace, particularly because it partners food so well. Here, it�s also known as Tokay, a name over which there is some debate. It�s been suggested that a colonel in the imperial army brought vines back from Hungary to Alsace, having fought the Turks over the town of Tokay. Whatever it�s called, Pinot Gris produces soft, gently perfumed, full-bodied wines with relatively high extract and more colour than most whites. The grape�s characteristics are most pronounced in Alsace and Germany. While elsewhere � even within one country in the case of Australia - styles can vary from richer examples to more vibrant ones with lemon freshness and crisper acidity, rather like the Pinot Grigios of Italy. The vines have a good resistance to most pests and diseases, like deep soils with a high mineral content and can yield well with newer clones. Ripening depends again on location � for example, it�s earlier in Oregon, but late in Alsace � and this grape also has the ability to make deliciously sweet late-harvest wines.

Pinot Noir

Pinot Noir (pronounced PEA-no NWAHR, the grape that produces Burgundy's finest red wines, is one of the hardest to grow. This thin-skinned variety is generally an early budder and ripener, so it is best-suited to cool, marginal climates - 40 to 50 degrees latitude - and only produces good wine when the fruit is controlled to very low yields. It has the problem that it mutates easily and is also particularly susceptible to leaf roll, and to rot because of its compact grape bunches. Pinot has no single recognisable flavour or style. Young Burgundy, however, can be reminiscent of raspberries or strawberries, while mature French Pinot tends to evolve into anything from violets, game and truffle to farmyard aromas and compost. Despite its difficult temperament, Pinot Noir is hardly just a French phenomenon. It crops up in Northern Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Eastern Europe as well as California, Australia, New Zealand and even South Africa and Chile. It�s a successful ingredient for sparkling wine and is one of three grapes used in champagne, bringing good acidity, structure and body. Pinot Noir goes by a long list of names, which include Spatburgunder and Blauburgunder in Germany and Klevner in Switzerland.

Riesling

Riesling is probably the most misunderstood and mispronounced grape variety, despite being widely acknowledged by wine critics as one of the world's greatest grapes. Riesling is the noble grape variety of Germany, known there as the King of Grapes! Riesling ripens early and is best fermented cool. It should be bottled early with as little interference as possible in the processing - no oak-ageing or malolactic fermentation is required. As well as delicate dry to off-dry wines, Riesling produces some fine late harvest wines.

Sauvignon Blanc

Grassy and herbaceous, with the characteristics of gooseberries, nettles and cat�s pee � this can only be referring to one grape variety: Sauvignon Blanc. The grape has its origins in Bordeaux but is now widely cultivated over France and around much of the world. Think of Pouilly-Fume and Sancerre from the Loire � both these wines are made from Sauvignon Blanc and are, probably, the grape in its purest form: crisp, dry, aromatic and unoaked. In Bordeaux, it�s blended, particularly with Semillon, for the dry whites there, but it�s also an ingredient for the region�s luscious dessert wines, such as those of Sauternes and Barsac. On the other side of the world, however, New Zealand has also virtually made this white variety its own, giving the wine a screwcap along the way. Yet this fashionable grape does have its faults. For one, unblended, it doesn�t age. Wines made from Sauvignon Blanc are generally meant to be drunk young, but then that can also be a bonus � as soon as you�ve bought a bottle, you can just chill this zesty little number and enjoy it! On the growing front, it�s susceptible to botrytis, oidium and black rot and will also rot if grown on fertile soils, preferring gravelly or sandy loams, or chalk in parts of the Loire. It also tends to be very vigorous and if it�s allowed to become over-productive on heavy soils, then the characteristics of the wines will be much diluted. Sauvignon Blanc goes by a few other names, the most common probably being Fume Blanc, as it�s known in California.

Marlborough

Climate: Cool Maritime

Key Grape Varieties: Chardonnay, Pinot Gris, Pinot Noir, Riesling, Sauvignon Blanc

Wine Region Map

Marlborough is located on the northeastern edge of the top of New Zealand’s South Island, and is centred around the towns of Blenheim and Renwick. It is the country’s pre-eminent wine-producing region, boasting names such as Cloudy Bay, Hunter’s and Montana. Commercial winemaking began as early as 1875. However, the modern story really starts in 1973 when Montana planted varieties such as Sauvignon Blanc, Muller Thurgau and Cabernet Sauvignon.

Marlborough’s soils are the result of the past 200 million years, when glaciers carved out mountains and deposited stony soils along the Wairau River. Silty and sand loam now cover the stony base, creating free-draining soils, which are perfect for grape growing. Marlborough’s sunny but not excessively hot climate gives grapes a long, slow, ripening period. The region’s average daytime temperature of 24 degrees C and night-time temperature difference of at least 10 degrees C (on most days) help to keep the acids in the grape. This gives the freshness that the wines are known for. Sauvignon Blanc is Marlborough’s jewel in the crown, and the wines made here are known for their intense, grassy, gooseberry style. Other varieties to keep an eye out for include Riesling and Pinot Noir.