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SOUTH AFRICAN SUCCESS STORY - By Michael
Franz - Wednesday, June 16, 2004
This column marks 10 years for me in this Most
Excellent Job, raising the question: In which country have we seen
the most momentous development during the past decade? Strong candidates
include the emergence or re-emergence of Austria, Greece and Spain
(from, respectively, scandal, obscurity and insularity).
Also quite important are the commercial success of Australia and
the expansion of excellence beyond Sauvignon Blanc in New Zealand.
Argentina and Chile have made extraordinary progress and have (or
should have) producers around the world quaking.
However, my vote goes to South Africa, which resumed
sales to America roughly a decade ago and has since improved its
wines at a pace that is nothing short of astonishing.
A trickle of South African wines began reappearing
here after Nelson Mandela was released from prison in 1990, and
they started to arrive in significant numbers after he was elected
president in 1994. The wines were eagerly anticipated, since South
Africa was not an upstart producer but rather a country with a vinous
history extending back to the 1650s.
Yet, the first wave of wines to hit our shores
looked less like the development of a decade than a bitter disappointment.
Many wines simply did not measure up after years away from the rigors
of international competition because of anti-apartheid sanctions.
A high percentage of bottlings were marred by outmoded production
techniques, unattractive packaging or heat damage suffered in transit.
Nevertheless, this rocky start was followed by
a remarkable recovery. A commercial shakeout removed most of the
disappointing products from circulation, and more careful importers
replaced them with wines that are much more consistent and attractive
in all respects. Packaging and product integrity are now vastly
improved, but the most exciting characteristic of the wines as a
group is their uncanny combination of the moderately ripe restraint
of European wines with the vibrant fruit and soft texture of New
World wines.
The wines that best exemplify this valuable profile
are blended reds, sometimes referred to as "Cape Blends."
Blending wines made from different grapes enables winemakers to
achieve greater consistency from year to year while also striking
a balance between Old World structure and New World fruitiness.
Blended reds are rapidly emerging as the calling-cards wines of
South Africa, and the best current releases are reviewed in order
of preference below, with growing regions, approximate prices and
American importers indicated in parentheses. These blends offer
excellent quality and value.
But South Africa has many other eye-opening wines,
so I'll be back in two weeks with wonderful Sauvignon Blancs and
in four weeks with the best of the rest.
Outstanding
Darling Cellars (Groenekloof) "Onyx
Kroon" 2001 ($25, Loest & McNamee): This marvelous
Pinotage/Syrah blend is built on very deep and intense fruit with
notes of blackberries and black currants, braced by well-measured
oak. Explosively flavorful but civilized, this is great now and
sure to improve for another five years.
Rust en Vrede (Stellenbosch)
2001 ($33, Vineyard Brands): A dynamite blend of
53 percent Cabernet, 35 percent Shiraz and 12 percent Merlot, this
features red berry and black cherry fruit with balanced notes of
spices and vanilla.
Rustenberg (Stellenbosch) "John X.
Merriman" 2001 ($32 , Cape Classics): This blend of
53 percent Merlot and 42 percent Cabernet Sauvignon also has a 5
percent dash of Cabernet Franc and is extremely impressive in terms
of color and flavor. Muscular but balanced.
La Motte (Franschhoek Valley) "Musique"
1999 ($22, Confluence Wine Importers): A classic Bordeaux
blend of 37 percent Cabernet Sauvignon, 35 percent Merlot, 20 percent
Cabernet Franc and 8 percent Malbec, this is woody when first opened
but smooths out within an hour to show rich, soft, dark berry fruit
with oak accents.
Springfield Estate (Robertson) "The
Work of Time" 2001 ($31, Country Vintner): A blend
of unspecified composition, this shows impressive concentration
and tannins that provide backbone but no hardness or astringency.
Energetic but smooth.
Rupert & Rothschild (Coastal Region)
"Classique" 2001 ($21, Caravelle): Very soft
and showy, with lots of succulent ripe fruit and accent notes from
oak.
Very Good
Warwick (Stellenbosch) "Estate Reserve"
2000 ($32, Broadbent Selections): Deep, concentrated fruit
is backed with lots of smoky oak that lends vanilla and spice notes
to the basic berry and black cherry flavors.
Delheim (Simonsberg, Stellenbosch) "Grand
Reserve" 2000 ($29, Fairest Cape Beverage Co.): Dark,
intense, assertive stuff, with intense dark fruit notes and nice
oak edging.
Kaapzicht (Stellenbosch) "Estate Red"
2002 ($14, Fairest Cape Beverage Co.): Formidable but not
hard, this features delicious dark berry fruit with light oak and
soft tannins that make for a long finish.
Groot Constantia (Constantia) 2001
($12, 57 Main Street): A lovely wine and a terrific value, this
shows very strong materials and excellent winemaking. Dark and quite
rich, but still soft and juicy.
Umkhulu (Stellenbosch) "Titan"
2001 ($17, AIDC): A blend of 67 percent Cabernet Sauvignon,
15 percent Merlot, 11 percent Cabernet Franc and 7 percent Malbec,
this shows lots of power but remains balanced and classy.
Laborie (Paarl) Merlot/Cabernet Sauvignon
2001 ($12, 57 Main Street): The blend here is 60/40 and
the results are superb. With open, expressive plum and berry fruit
supported by lightly spicy oak, this tastes more like a $20 bottle.
Charles Back (Western Cape) "Goat
Roti" 2002 ($16.50, Vineyard Brands): This tastes
closer to South Australia than the Northern Rhone, but with soft,
ultra-ripe fruit firmed by seriously spicy oak, nobody will be inclined
to quibble.
KWV (Western Cape) "Roodeberg"
2002 ($12, 57 Main Street): This wonderful bargain is based
on fruit that recalls plums and red berries. With delicate accents
of cedar and spices, it is admirably versatile with food.
Warwick (Stellenbosch) "Three Cape
Ladies" 2001 ($25, Broadbent Selections): Soft and
supple but sufficiently robust to work well with food, this wine
offers blackberry and red cherry fruit with subtle oak and pleasant
texture.
Also Recommended
Le Riche (Stellenbosch) Cabernet Sauvignon/Merlot
2001 ($22, Confluence Wine Importers)
Bradgate (Stellenbosch) Cabernet/Merlot/Shiraz 2003
($10, Vinovative)
Graham Beck (Western Cape) Shiraz/Cabernet Sauvignon "Railroad
Red" 2002 ($10, Country Vintner)
Guardian Peak (Western Cape) "Frontier"2002
($9, Vineyard Brands)
Charles Back (Paarl) "Goats do Roam" 2002
($8.50, Vineyard Brands)
Robert's Rock (Western Cape) Shiraz/Malbec 2001
($7, 57 Main Street).
-- By Michael Franz for the Washington Post
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