Noble Rot: A Bordeaux Wine Revolution
by William Echikson ISBN: 0393051625
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: Noble Rot: A Bordeaux Wine Revolution by Greg GatenbyJust as there is a wine lake in Europe, there is a glut of wine
books in English, full of glossy colour photos and obsequious text.
They promise much but are ultimately thin, leaving little after-taste.
But then comes a volume which is like Chateau Margaux 1945: deep,
balanced, and superbly satisfying. For any oenophile in your life,
Noble Rot: A Bordeaux Wine Revolution by William Echikson is the
perfect gift, one of the finest wine books I've ever read. Despite
the rise of New World wine dynasties, Bordeaux remains primus inter
pares-its antiquity, its intimidating snobbery, and the ludicrous
prices of its First Growths all combining to give it an aura of
royal grandeur. Echikson is brilliant at exposing the absurdity of
most Bordeaux pretensions, but he is no Yank coming in to simply
trash the French. He loves Bordeaux wine, and to understand it
better he undertakes to examine the major owners and wine-makers.
In the process, he uncovers gripping scandals which have barely,
if ever, touched the wine magazines, and delineates the efforts of
those locals who are trying to drag Bordeaux into this century. By
concentrating on the 2001 harvest, he imposes a month-by-month
structure-though he takes long and informative detours when necessary.
His observations, for instance, about the much-written-about critic,
Robert Parker, are smarter-by far-than any I've seen elsewhere and
are worth the price of the book alone.
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