by Tim York » Tue Nov 13, 2007 11:05 am
I suspect that what Johnson actually wrote is far more balanced that the Sunday Times journalist's initial paragraph suggests -
"IT is enough to make wine connoisseurs choke on their Pétrus. Hugh Johnson, the doyen of wine critics, has decreed that vintages hardly matter any more."
What rubbish! Indeed the few quotes in the article are a lot more sensible than that headline.
It is true that bad vintages are far less common than three or four decades ago. Furthermore in mass market wines the industrial type techniques used can smooth over many of the differences which do occur and, in any case, vintage variation is far less marked in countries like Australia and Chile than it is in North Western Europe.
Having said that, it suffices to attend a tasting, like the one where I was yesterday, to understand the markedly different character which each vintage brings to wines of the same estate and vineyard. Hugh Johnson knows that as well as anybody.
Certain critics do over-praise certain "big" vintages like 2000, 2003 and 2005 in Bordeaux but that means that there is more wine from the others at sensible prices for people like me. I am confident that there will be some good bargains from 2007 in areas which suffered from the poor summer and, of course, conditions in the southern Rhône and most of Italy were reportedly excellent.
Tim York