Beaujolais Nouveau wine ages gracefully

Wed Aug 29, 2007 3:51pm EDT
 
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PARIS (Reuters Life!) - Beaujolais Nouveau wine will be older this year - if only by a handful of days.

The harvest of grapes used to produce the fruity wine served up traditionally from the third Thursday of November started in earnest last weekend - two weeks earlier than normal.

"It's the fifth time in my life that we have seen such a phenomenon. It's a bit exceptional," said Georges Duboeuf, head of one of the Burgundy region's biggest vineyards. He said the previous years were 1947, 1976, 2000 and 2003.

"Globally, if you look at the 1970s and 1990s, we would harvest on average by September 20, before it was more often end-September or the beginning of October. Between 1995 and 2000 it was around September 15 and now, since 2000, it's between September 2 and 15," he said.

"It's clear the trend in the last 50 years is to earlier and earlier harvests."

He said, however, he did not expect any change to the official marketing date of the third Thursday in November - which this year happens to fall on November 15, the historic date for the start of Beaujolais sales.

The extra few days the wine spends in its vats won't make much difference to its taste, he said.

"For Beaujolais Nouveau, like many wines, if it's good at the start, it will be good at the end. It's not because the harvest is earlier that the wine will be more rounded or structured, or the taste will be different," he said.

"Each vintage has its own characteristics," he said, adding the first indications for 2007 were for a fruity wine, albeit without the body of 2005, an exceptional year for French wines.  Continued...

 
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