If you're a wine lover, you'll naturally have heard of the notion of vintage. But do you know why it's important, and why it's an essential benchmark for a wine, and even an indicator of its quality? Do you know the different factors that go into a vintage? Find out in the following lines...
A vintage is an indication of the year in which the grapes were harvested and the wine produced. Usually mentioned on the label of the bottle of wine, it is often associated with the quality of the wine. Indeed, the weather conditions of each year can have a significant influence on the growth of the grapes and, consequently, on the taste and quality of the wine produced. Wine lovers can track vintages to identify particularly good or outstanding years for a given wine. Many websites list and classify the best years by vineyard or the best vintages by region or country.
The quality of a wine vintage can vary according to a number of factors:
In addition, Bordeaux winegrowers do not use irrigation to meet the water needs of the vines. They therefore traditionally rely on rain, making obvious the direct link between the climate and the yield of the vines.
In short, one vintage can be considered better than another because of a combination of these factors: favourable weather conditions, optimal ripening of the grapes carefully monitored by the winemaker, good yields, good health of the vines and the winemaker's know-how.
The vintage of a wine plays a crucial role in tasting. The best way to discover the characteristics and qualities of a vintage is to undertake a vertical tasting. Of all the types of tasting that exist, this is the one that allows you to better understand the real impact of the vintage on the wine and the winemaker's technical choices over the years.
It involves tasting the same vintage, from the same estate (and by deduction the same appellation), over several years. Several vintages, preferably from the most recent to the oldest, are thus tasted and compared in order to glimpse the aging potential of the vintage and to imagine the evolution of the wine up to its optimal tasting window recommended by the winemaker, or even beyond. In addition to the pleasure of oenological discovery, this type of tasting has an educational vocation for wine lovers and professionals and involves four essential stages:
The price of the bottle of wine you find on your wine merchant's shelves depends on the supposed, then proven, quality of a vintage. The price of a vintage wine can be influenced by several factors:
Ultimately, the rarity of a vintage, its quality, the reputation of the estate and the vintage, professional assessments and competition awards, ageing potential and production costs are all complex factors which, alone or in combination, determine the price of a vintage.
As you will have realised, the vintage plays an essential role in wine appreciation. It reflects the year's climatic conditions and production techniques. Whether for wine enthusiasts or well-informed investors, the vintage offers a unique sensory experience and a testimony to the history and tradition of wine making. It invites discovery, exploration and comparison. It embodies the celebration of the diversity of terroirs and know-how. In short, the vintage is much more than a simple indication of the year of production; it is the symbol of excellence and authenticity, capable of delighting the most demanding palates and transcending time. The vintage captures the very essence of the winemaker's expertise.
However, as the saying goes, sometimes it's in the bad vintages that the great wines are born, revealing against all the odds the great terroirs and the best winemakers.
Note that this notion of vintage also applies to other agricultural products such as coffee, tea, honey or even certain olive oils, although in these cases the importance of vintage is considered to a lesser extent than for wine.
Have you bought a bottle of wine from the best year of a wine region and whose aging potential is advertised as good? All you have to do is store it in good conditions until you can discover all its taste qualities in a few years. Discover our optimal storage recommendations which will allow you to enjoy tasting wine in all its aromatic complexity!