Petrus 1981 bottle copy

Cellar Favorite: 1981 Petrus

Cellar Favorites, France: Bordeaux, cellar favorite

Neal Martin, Oct 2023

Given my rather desultory score for the 1981 Petrus, a bottle that had a tincture of TCA, I was able to order a pristine bottle in London that had been acquired directly from the château, thereby giving me a chance to re-evaluate.

Siran 20s bottles2

Poetic License: Siran 1920-1929

France: Bordeaux, featured

Neal Martin, Oct 2023

In a change to our regular programming, Vinous presents readers with a Tuesday poem about century-old bottles of Siran. We will revert back to normal prose straight after.

Margaux focus 3 cover copy

Margaux Focus 3: Château Margaux

France: Bordeaux, featured, Verticals & Retrospectives

Neal Martin, Sep 2023

Château Margaux is blessed with one of the most iconic facades in Bordeaux, one befitting a First Growth. After spending a day with the team earlier this year, this article examines the estate from vine to wine and revisits vintages throughout the years.

Cover 1 palmer chateau building copy

Margaux Focus 2: Château Palmer

France: Bordeaux, featured, Verticals & Retrospectives

Neal Martin, Aug 2023

Palmer is one of Bordeaux’s leading estates. It is a fulcrum of innovation that perhaps it is not given due credit for. This in-depth article unearths its storied history, vineyard and winemaking minutiae gleaned from spending a day with CEO Thomas Duroux, plus the obligatory slew of tasting notes from both illustrious and esoteric vintages.

Durfort bottles  chateau copy2

Margaux Focus 1: Château Durfort-Vivens

France: Bordeaux, featured, Verticals & Retrospectives

Neal Martin, Aug 2023

Durfort-Vivens is a Margaux estate with a lower profile than others, yet it is one château that has furrowed its own path and perhaps has discovered its identity. This article looks at its elliptical history and innovations implemented by proprietor Gonzague Lurton.

Bordeaux 1953 bottles copy

A Century of Bordeaux: The Threes

France: Bordeaux, featured

Neal Martin, Aug 2023

As I do every year, in this article I take a look back at Bordeaux vintages ending in the same digit. This year, the “magic number” is three. I re-examine the disparaged 2013s and 1973s, feted 1953s and war veteran 1943s, all the way back to long-forgotten 1923s.

Giscours 1865

Cellar Favorite: 1865 Giscours

Cellar Favorites, France: Bordeaux, cellar favorite

Neal Martin, Aug 2023

I don’t know the record for the oldest bottle in Cellar Favorites, but this must be a contender. It certainly ranks as one of the oldest bottles of Claret that I have drunk, and I should point out that it was drunk, not tasted.

Lynch bages bottles2 copy

Passing the Baton: Lynch-Bages 1945-2018

France: Bordeaux, featured, Verticals & Retrospectives

Neal Martin, Jul 2023

This article looks at the father-to-son ownership of Lynch-Bages over the last century. Jean-Michel Cazes’s recent passing marked the end of an era. But as we shall see, he had the foresight to ensure the next generation, not least his son Jean-Charles, would continue to build on his immense achievements.

Doisy vedrines 1989

Cellar Favorite: 1989 Doisy-Védrines

Cellar Favorites, France: Bordeaux, cellar favorite

Neal Martin, Jul 2023

I have a long association with this Barsac estate. Proprietor Olivier Castèja must have done something terrible in a previous life because he was burdened with guiding me through my first en primeur samples in the salad days of my career. Doisy-Védrines tends to be overshadowed by its neighbor, Doisy-Daëne, which is often more unctuous in style, even though both wines contain around the same percentages of Sémillon (85%).

Liber pater collage 2

Going Back to My Roots: Putting Liber Pater In Context

France: Bordeaux, featured, Verticals & Retrospectives

Neal Martin, Jun 2023

Behind its headline-grabbing price, controversy and click-bait marketing, Liber Pater provokes debate about contemporary viticulture in Bordeaux and beyond. I pull back the artifice to examine the positive and negative without pulling punches. Even if you never taste the wine, this might well be the most interesting article you’ll read this year. It certainly was the most interesting to write.