Celebrations
June 21, 1973

Château Mouton Rothschild elevated from Second Growth to First Growth class in the 1855 Classification of Medoc wines, the only significant change in the 154-year-old classification.

June 22, 1999

Robert Parker, America’s powerful and controversial wine writer/expert, is named a Chevalier dans l’Ordre de la Légion d’Honneur. Only wine critic ever to receive the award.

    Swigs
Chateau China

Hong Kong
Wine and prosperity flow along on the same current of joy. A recent Wall Street Journal story by Laura Santini reports that Hong Kong has become an international wine hub, thanks to the growing appreciation of wine and luxury accompanying the new Chinese economy. (Hong Kong is now Sotheby’s leading wine-auction market.) The city has seen an especially large uptick in business because of the elimination of a 40 percent tax on wine imports (it’s 43 percent on the mainland). The preferred bottle to cement and celebrate a business deal? The 1982 Chateau Lafite Rothschild, which sells for roughtly $5,000 in Hong Kong. Although local wine experts suspect a lot of it is counterfeit. 12/5/09.

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Home » Tasting Notes » Like a Prayer
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Last updated: Thursday, August 6, 2009
Like a Prayer

Luc Massy
Chemin de Fer
2003
13% alc.
Dézaley AOC, Switzerland

Some people find God in a church. But, as the old catechism put it, God is everywhere—to a few, he’s even  in a glass of wine. When I pour a glass of Luc Massy’s Chemin de Fer, from the steep Lavaux vineyards in Vaud, Switzerland, I imagine an ancient Romanesque church illuminated by a streak of light. This wine is from the chasselas grape. In former days, chasselas was widely planted in Europe. Today, it survives pretty much as a vinicultural relic. (I can imagine it enshrined in a side chapel of that church.) There is a neutral quality to chasselas: a quiet virtue that is a vice to a modern world of vinous cacophony. Only in Switzerland, primarily in Vaud and Valais, does chasselas produce a wine that can stand out.

The Lavaux vineyards stretch 30 kilometers along south-facing slopes on the steep northern shores of Lake Geneva, near Lausanne. The lake moderates the temperatures and reflects light onto the slopes, to create perfect microclimates that help ripen the grapes. The longstanding Massy family-run winery produces the Chemin de Fer from Dezaley, a Grand Cru tract of land in these Lavaux vineyards. Here chasselas was first planted in the 16th century. The soil there is Morain debris on a foundation of pudding stones, providing excellent drainage and light for the vines.

And what about the wine? Well, the 2003 vintage shows a pale gold core with light notes of caramel, almost butterscotch, flint and white flowers. It is a dry, full-bodied wine offering a broad palate of layered and penetrating flavors of stone, butter, hazelnut and citrus. There is a slight viscous quality well-integrated into the wine’s solid “romanesque” structure. The length is medium with a finish that simply recedes. Everything about the wine falls into place. Elegant and orderly: I want to hear  the clean pure melody of Gregorian chant when I sip this wine. Then again, it’s hard to round up singing monks. Perhaps serve the wine with sole meunière or pheasant. Importer: Robert Chadderdon. $38.00. 8/05/09.

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