The Tb points given to this wine are the world’s most valid and most up-to-date evaluation of the quality of the wine. Tastingbook points are formed by the Tastingbook algorithm which takes into account the wine ratings of the world's 50 best-known professional wine critics, wine ratings by thousands of tastingbook’s professionals and users, the generally recognised vintage quality and reputation of the vineyard and winery. Wine needs at least five professional ratings to get the Tb score. Tastingbook.com is the world's largest wine information service which is an unbiased, non-commercial and free for everyone.
Viinin Kuvailu
The Story
The red is a blend of Cabernet Sauvignon, Carignan and Cinsault. Serge Hochar, who has been involved with the property since 1959, states that the Cabernet Sauvignon provides "the bones and the skeleton to the wine, the Carignan the flesh and muscle and the Cinsault the silky smooth finesse".
Musar wines are unique in that Hochar blends the varietals only after they have spent three years in barrels and then waits a further four years before releasing the end result. This gives time for each variety to unfold its own character. The wines are extremely long-lived, with the best examples lasting for 20-30 years.
Wine Information
The 2003 harvest was a unique experience and two words can aptly summarise it: ALCOHOL & ACIDITY – this vintage is rich in both. After the rainiest winter in 15 years, not a drop of rain fell from mid April onwards and it was hot and sunny throughout the summer months. In May when flowering started, a 10 day heat-wave reduced the harvest quantity by about 30% and this phenomenon was responsible for the concentration of sugar and acidity in the grapes. Our first indications even at the racking stage were that the 2003 vintage would be full-bodied, powerful with great length and 7 years later upon release in 2010, we have been proved right: These will be the defining characteristics of 2003.
The Chateau Musar Red 2003 vintage was released in May 2010.
Château Musar
Lebanon is one of the oldest sites of wine production. The cultivation of the vine goes back to the Phoenicians who traded their wines along the Mediterranean trade routes, introducing viniculture into many parts of southern Europe. Some centuries later, the Romans chose Baalbek in the east of Lebanon as the site to build the Temple of Bacchus as their tribute to the god of wine, a temple that still stands today.
Château Musar, by far the finest and best known of the Lebanon wineries, was established in 1930 by Gaston Hochar in an 17th century castle whose cellars provide storage for over a million bottles of maturing wine. Still a family concern, Château Musar in owned and managed by Gaston's two sons, Serge and Ronald.
Musar is famed for having made wine every year with the exception of 1976. They even continued throughout Lebanon’s long civil war, except for 1984 when their grape trucks were held hostage by practically every political group. Château Musar has had many problems with shells and tanks. In 1983, when battle raged around the vineyards during harvest, Serge Hochar had to be smuggled in by a tiny boat to make the wine. In 1989 the winery suffered direct hits from gunfire, and for a short while the wine cellars served as a trustworthy bomb shelter for both château workers and locals. In spite of the realism that wine making has been a repeatedly dangerous venture in Lebanon, Château Musar has continued to make excellent, long lasting wines. This has continued to be so even though the 36 kilometer drive from the vineyards of the Bekaa Valley, which are remarkably close to the frontline, to Musar´s winery, has so often been a theatre of war.
The eldest son Serge entered the business after completing his oenology diploma in Bordeaux. Serge says that he only seeks to translate what nature intended. He is not looking for varietal or fruit aromas, he wants his wines to speak to him – of the place it comes from and of all that went into it – and for it to integrate with his own brain and history and memories.
–If it doesn't talk to me, I stop drinking. I'm not interested in a wine that's been killed by technology, I want one that vibrates, a true wine.
Soil: gravely soil with a limestone base
Grape varieties: Cabernet Sauvignon, Cinsault, Carignan
Harvest method: hand picked
Winemaking:
fermentation takes place followed by maceration lasting 2 to 4 weeks. During the first year the wine is racked into Bordeaux type barrels made from Nevers oak and where it matures from 12 to 15 months. At the end of the second year blending takes place with the proportions of cabernet sauvignon, carignan and cinsault varying with each vintage, the only deciding factor being taste.
During the third year bottling takes place after which the wine is allowed to rest 3 to 4 years in our cellars before release.
Ageing: the wine is aged for up to 24 months in Nevers oak before being bottled and stored in cellars, and only released after its fifth year
Château Musar
Bekaa Valley
Lebanon
www.chateaumusar.com.lb