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The Wines You Should Buy in 2019, According to Robert Parker

We're living in a Golden Age of wine. Let's raise a glass to the good stuff.

We are living in a golden age for wine. When I started tasting in the late 1970s and early ’80s, probably 60 percent of the wines I tried were substandard. They were either diluted, made from underripe fruits, or tasted like some sort of vegetable juice. Today, there’s so much competition and so many critics looking on, wines have to be good. And they are. Ninety-five percent of the famous appellations in the world are producing bottles of high quality. Which is great news for drinkers and collectors.

 

So what to buy? For consumption, look for wines that have flexibility: ones you can drink with classic French cuisine, Asian food, or whatever. Generally these wines are not aged in new oak, because that imparts flavors and tannins that can limit matchups. That’s why Bordeaux and Napa Cabernet are meat-and-potatoes wines—they go best with robust flavors. Once you get into more complex foods, you need Rhône wines; they have incredible flexibility. I used to joke that I’d have wines such as Gigondas, Châteauneuf-du-Pape, or Hermitage with sushi, and I’d get mocked, but I convinced some great sushi chefs that it really does work, because of all the fruit they have. The wine just shows the fruit and the terroir they’re produced from—and that’s particularly true of Grenache-based wines that are aged in cement or concrete vats so there’s none of the oak spice.

The Rhône just had two great vintages: the 2015 that came onto the market at the end of last year and the 2016, which is coming on now. You’ll know all about Bordeaux’s most famous region, the Médoc, with its first growths—Lafite, Mouton, Latour. The quality is obviously very high. But to me, the excitement in Bordeaux for the last 10 years and into the future is on the other side of the river: Saint-Émilion is a beautiful medieval village and a UNESCO site. And there, a tremendous number of young people have inherited parcels of land and have traveled the world to expand their techniques, something their ancestors never did, which is leading to some incredible wines. Château Angélus, for example, is  truly fabulous, but you could almost pick any Saint-Émilion from a really top vintage like 2016 and be pretty happy.

 

In Châteauneuf-du-Pape, there are so many producers doing good things. Some of the smaller estates—Clos des Papes, Clos Saint Jean, and Usseglio—are making extraordinary wines right now.

Elsewhere in Europe, southern Italy’s 2016 vintage looks good—wines from Sicily and from the area around Rome and farther south, made from grapes like Aglianico, Piedirosso, or Nero d’Avola, are especially interesting. These are somewhat obscure grapes, planted at the time of the Romans, that have fallen out of favor compared to the international rock stars like Cabernet Sauvignon, Chardonnay, and Merlot, but they go very nicely with lots of different foods.

In the States, look beyond the big Cabernets and the Chardonnays for Zinfandel blends, which can be outstanding. California, unlike Europe, really doesn’t have bad vintages. It’s a bit of Shangri-la for growing grapes, which is why we’re seeing so many investments from the French, the Italians, and the Chinese. It’s just a spectacular place to grow—you don’t have to worry about rot, because there’s no humidity; you don’t have to worry about a lack of rain, because you can irrigate. This translates to lots of fabulous wine coming out of California.

Now that I’m reducing my writing commitments, I think how lucky I’ve been for 40 years to see the wine world through my era’s greatest winemakers. To taste what they’re tasting, feel what they’re feeling. If you were a young artist and you got to spend one week with Matisse, and one week with Picasso, and one week with da Vinci . . . what would that mean to you? I’ve had that for 40 years. The best of the best. I’m happy with that.

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