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 » Red Bear
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Last updated: Sunday, October 25, 2009
Red Bear

Bodega Bernabeleva S.L.
Camino de Navaherreros
15% alc.
2008
Vinos de Madrid, Spain

If you believe Aristophanes—drink makes a man rich and successful and happy, good to his friends and lucky in lawsuits (I’m a lawyer)—then as far wine can take you, Camino de Navaherreros may be your daily tipple. This is a big red produced in a small DO just outside Madrid, Vinos de Madrid. It comes from the DO’s southwestern subzone, San Martín de Valdeiglesias, where Navaherreros is the welcoming village to the zone. Granite lies below the sandy, infertile soil here. The climate is harsh with hot summers and cold winters. The fundamental worry in this area is producing wines from overly ripe grapes, leaving a flabby, slightly burnt or overly jammy quality. The grape, by the way, is garnacha (Fr. grenache), which is widespread in the region. In this estate, the wine comes from 80-year-old vines. San Martín’s reds generally are meaty, earthy, concentrated with ripe fruit flavors. Bernabeleva’s wine is a masculine one. It is popular in Madrid wine bars. Not much is exported. His Camino de Navaherreros is a good example of San Martín’s breed of wine. Brawny, bold. Not some little taffeta from the Loire. This wine will make the buttons pop off your shirt.

The 2008 vintage shows a deep ruby hue with aromas of bacon, eucalyptus, earth, coffee, tea and black cherry. Despite the perilously high alcohol, it’s well integrated and nicely balanced, thanks in part to the wine’s crisp acidity and high, firm tannins. Flavors are medium intense: again, bacon, with lots of pepper, cherry, graphite and rose petal. The length, medium. The wine is fermented in old wood, with a long maceration and wild yeasts added. Tellingly, after drinking the wine I discovered that the maker is a Catalan with much experience in cool-climate winemaking. On the bottle’s simple cornflower blue label is a roan-colored silhouette of a tiny goddess of the hunt carried on the rounded back of a huge bear. It’s the family owners’ modern-day symbol denoting the Celtic roots of the land. Grrr. This wine, matched with a good steak, will give you the boldness to tackle anything—file a lawsuit, win over a reluctant friend, buy the elusive lottery ticket that makes you rich and happy and the envy of your enemies. It’s a wine for New Yorkers. The Rare Wine Company. $15.00. 10/25/09.

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