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[TN] '61 Beychevelle

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Mark Lipton

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Sep 9, 2012, 10:27:42 PM9/9/12
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Tonight's dinner was rack of lamb and a potato-green bean salad. Jean
expressed an interest in having a glass of really good wine with dinner,
so I suggested a bottle that she'd received from me for her birthday
last year:

1961 Ch. Beychevelle (St. Julien)
nose: cassis, graphite, cedar, a slight herbaceous note, some earth
palate: fully resolved tannins, medium body, rich mouthfeel, great acidity

This was the second bottle of a cache I gave to Jean last year and it
was even better than the previous one had been. Incredibly youthful
(even down to the cork which was in superb shape), it had a classic
Cabernet nose and an incredible feel of richness in the mouth. It was
acidic enough that it needed the food to show well, but at 11.5% ABV it
showed no heaviness or heat. This led to an interesting discussion
concerning the ABV: since '61 was noted as a warm year that produced
very ripe grapes in Bordeaux, how did they keep the alcohol so low?
Canopy management? Earlier harvest?

Mark Lipton

santiago

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Sep 11, 2012, 10:36:22 AM9/11/12
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Mark Lipton <not...@eudrup.ude> wrote in
news:k2jj8n$sm6$1...@speranza.aioe.org:
> It was
> acidic enough that it needed the food to show well, but at 11.5% ABV
> it showed no heaviness or heat. This led to an interesting discussion
> concerning the ABV: since '61 was noted as a warm year that produced
> very ripe grapes in Bordeaux, how did they keep the alcohol so low?
> Canopy management? Earlier harvest?

I am not an expert, but canopy management sounds quite a recent practice to
me to be the cause. My guess is that they harvested way earlier in 1961
that they do today.

Anyone has access to a historical series of harvest dates going back to
that era?

s.

cwdjrxyz

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Sep 14, 2012, 7:27:05 PM9/14/12
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From what I have read, there was a greatly decreased yield of grapes
because heavy rains washed away the pollen. (In 1945 the yield was
greatly reduced by frost. )There was much rain in July and then
drought in August. Then September was very sunny. The grapes were
small and had thick skins. The wines had very deep color and much
tannin. As a result, many considered the 1959s, which had a better
balance early on, to be better than the 1961s.

For whatever reason, I remember that many fine red Bordeauxs from the
50s and 60s tended to have less alcohol and needed at least 10 to 20
years of age. Some were quite concentrated in color, body, and taste
however. Things started changing in the Parker era when wine became
more drinkable at an earlier age. Perhaps the grapes were picked later
with higher sugar content. Also the amount of press wine added in the
final blend likely was reduced.

santiago

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Sep 16, 2012, 4:06:47 AM9/16/12
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Mark Lipton <not...@eudrup.ude> wrote in
news:k2jj8n$sm6$1...@speranza.aioe.org:
This led to an interesting discussion
> concerning the ABV: since '61 was noted as a warm year that produced
> very ripe grapes in Bordeaux, how did they keep the alcohol so low?
> Canopy management? Earlier harvest?

Besides of an earlier harvest, could it be that they had bigger crops per
hectare therefore harvesting a bit less concentrated grapes with less
sugar?

s.

DaleW

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Sep 23, 2012, 5:05:51 PM9/23/12
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Glad to hear these are doing well! :)
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