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2005 Cabernet Franc - Jancis Robinson
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The Finger Lakes - New York's secret wine region
A recent trip to a
part of the world where Hillary Clinton is regarded as a saviour and true missionary was an eye-opener in many a sense.
The Finger Lakes in
Central New York state are a bucolic playground of boats, vines,
rolling hills and a landscape that looks little changed since the late
18th century when the colonisers finally managed to wrest this pretty
region from the native Iriquois. Two things strike the visitor
interested in wine: firstly the exceptional quality of the Rieslings
made there (sweet and, especially, dry), and secondly how little they
seem to be appreciated, or even known, in the city that bears the
state's name. Although the Finger Lakes are little more than three
hours' drive away from Manhattan, wine producers there seem almost
fatally daunted by the prospect of trying to persuade New York's
sommeliers, regarded as impossibly sophisticated by their exposure to
the finest wines of the world, of the charms of their wines.
Not so Senator
Clinton. Determined to regenerate the depopulated agricultural
heartland of her state, which has experienced America's lowest growth
rate over the last 10 years, she has made New York Farm Day, an annual
feast in Washington DC hosted by her and designed to show off New
York's finest foods and wines, one of the hottest tickets for America's
lawmakers and top political aides. It was in an announcement about this
year's event held earlier this month that the president of the New York
Wine & Grape Foundation described Senator Clinton as true
missionary for New York agriculture, including the grape and wine
industry.. And this is far from the only initiative by which she has
earned the industry's respect and affection.
Grapes are even more
important than wine in New York state, which lags far behind California
and even behind Washington (the state) in terms of volume of wine
produced but is America's prime source of grapes for jelly, jam and
juice of typically native purple Concord grapes distinguished by a
powerfully musky, “foxy" flavour that is a long way from wine as most
of us know it as made from vine varieties of European origin.
Since the 1960s,
however, more and more European vinifera vines have been planted in the
Finger Lakes, New York' most important wine region by far (Hudson
River, Long Island and the new Niagara Escarpment are much smaller;
Lake Erie is principally for hybrid and native grapes rather than
wine). The pale undersides of the thick, round Concord leaves make it
easy to spot the Concord vines with their white crests just like the
lakes. Some of the vineyards look scarcely tended.
But producers such as
Fox Run, Heron Hill, Hunt Country, Red Newt, Treleaven and the
old-timer Hermann J Wiemer, who has just passed on the baton to his
young winemaker Fred Merwarth, are making wines from conventional
European vinifera grapes that can well stand comparison with
international archetypes. With Arctic winters, the Finger Lakes is
still essentially white wine country. In fact it is only the moderating
influence of Lake Ontario to the north and the region's exceptionally
deep, heat-storing lakes that give growers here enough frost-free days
to ripen grapes at all. Vines are planted on the lakeside slopes so as
to minimise the effects of such frosts as there are.
Fashion and global
warming have helped to swell the ranks of Finger Lakes wine producers
as never before in recent years, with the total number of wineries
approaching 200, many of them tiny operations but virtually all of them
heavily dependent on the vast numbers of tourists that can be relied
upon this close to Niagara Falls. Weekend visitors to the cluster of
universities such as Cornell and Syracuse help too.
The Finger Lakes wine
business has limped along thanks to the crutch of being able to sell at
the farm gate about two-thirds of all wine made. Indeed wineries often
deliberately construct tasting rooms on the tortuous lakeside tourist
trails even though they may be far from their centre of operations. But
the demands of the average tourist have been relatively low. If the
industry is to grow and gain international recognition (national
recognition would be nice too), it has to set its sights higher than
sweetened-up juice from hybrid vines.
One of the more
outspoken winemakers here, Canadian-Hungarian Thomas Laszlo of Heron
Hill, whose dry Riesling 2002 won best white of the San Francisco Wine
Show in 2004, declares that all Finger Lakes vines that are not
Riesling should simply be pulled out and replaced by The Noble One. He
certainly fashions some of the most ambitiously full bodied, dry and
age-worthy examples not unlike some of Germany's best modern dry
Rieslings.
Laszlo is already
rubbing his hands in glee over global warming's effect on German
vineyards, hoping that this will signal a new interest in the Finger
Lakes as it is rather cooler than any of Germany's wine regions -
certainly in the winters which are so cold that many vinifera vines
have to be painstakingly banked up against what can be a fatal freeze.
In 2003 so many cold-sensitive Chardonnay vines were killed in the
Finger Lakes that many growers replanted with the hardier Riesling,
much to Laszlo's delight. But all Finger Lakes wine production is on a
much smaller scale than the other American redoubt of this fashionable
variety, so that while Washington state Riesling may sell for $800 a
ton, Finger Lakes prices are likely to be double this.
Nevertheless, Finger
Lakes wines are as inexpensive as one would expect of such a humble
region, with Fox RunÃ's price tag of $30 for their dry Riesling, which
bears an uncanny resemblance to a well made Clare Valley Riesling from
Australia, being seen as greedy by locals. Heron Hill still charges
only around $18 for their admirable dry Riesling from the difficult
2004 vintage.
Thanks to climate
change, the Finger Lakes may yet become a red wine producing centre
too. Pinot Noir is likely to shine here but one of the single best
wines I tasted was a Cabernet Franc 2005. Grown by top local grower Jim
Hazlitt, it was vinified by Dave Whiting of Red Newt Cellars and
Bistro, whose restaurateur wife Deb has been regarded locally as the
Finger Lakes' chief culinary ambassador.
A significant recent
addition to the region however is the New York Wine & Culinary
Center in Canadaigua, a handsome small town of broad streets and
substantial houses selling at bargain prices. Canandaigua was
previously famous in the wine world as the headquarters of the
eponymous wine company that has since outgrown its kosher winemaking
roots in New York to become the world's biggest wine company
Constellation with subsidiaries such as Robert Mondavi of California
and Hardys of Australia. The Center with its wine and cooking classes
also has a chef, Daniel Martello, whose expertise was not trumped on my
recent two-week tour of the US until I reached Thomas Keller's French
Laundry in Yountville.
It would seem that the
New York Wine & Grape Foundation finds New York's restaurant owners
less intimidating than their wine waiters. Next month 26 leading New
York restaurateurs have been persuaded to feature New York wines and
foods, perhaps with a nudge from Hillary. For more details see www.newyorkwinesanddines.org.
Some exceptional Finger Lakes wines:
Fox Run Vineyards, Reserve Riesling 2005
Heron Hill, Riesling Reserve 2002, 2004 and 2005 (dry)
Heron Hill, Late Harvest Riesling 2002 (sweet)
King Ferry Winery, Treleavan Chardonnay 2005
Red Newt Cellars Cabernet Franc 2005
Hermann J Wiemer Dry Riesling 2005
Tasting Notes
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