Malbec - an Intriguing Grape Variety

Malbec - an Intriguing Grape Variety

16 April 2018

Wine Wyse

Bordeaux Inhabitant finds new home in South America

 


This could have been a headline in the mid-nineteenth century, when people from many European countries were flocking to the New World to take advantage of the opportunities there. However, it applies not just to people, but also to other items which these emigrants took with them – such as vines. Many of the French pioneers who settled in Chile and Argentina, were already growing vines and making wine in their home country, so naturally they took some of their vines and cuttings with them to their new home.

One such vine variety was Malbec. With World Malbec Day falling this week on Tuesday 17th April, what better time to go out and buy a bottle or two with which to celebrate? This grape variety was once one of the main varieties grown for Bordeaux reds and is still grown there, albeit in much smaller quantities. It is one of the six red grape varieties allowed in the blends for these wines. However, the numbers of Malbec vines grown in the Bordeaux region was drastically reduced after the devasting winter of 1956.
Temperatures were so low for so long that many of the vines were killed and great areas of the vineyards had to be replanted. Since Malbec is a more difficult grape variety to cultivate, being prone to disease and needing just the right climatic conditions, very little of the Malbec was replanted, being replace by the easier and more adaptable Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot. Further south-west, around the town of Cahors, conditions are drier and more suitable to Malbec and it is the king variety of the wines made in this region. One top producer here, the award winning Chateau Laur, even produces white, rosé, sweet and sparkling wines from the variety.

Returning to our French pioneering wine-makers, they took many different grape varieties with them and planting them in different countries with different climatic conditions, soils and terroirs, was largely experimental. Some worked better than others and one of the great successes, particularly in South America, was and is Malbec. The original clone of the variety has developed over nearly 200 years and has adapted so well in Argentina, that some of the best Malbec wines in the world are made there.
Argentina today is the prime maker of Malbec wines, with some 80% of the world production based here. The wines are mellow, fruity and deeply coloured, with no harsh tannins and are difficult not to like. It is thought that the variety came to Argentina via Chile, where it also makes some excellent wines on the other side of the Andes mountain range. Climate, as mentioned before is all-important, and the sunny, dry climate, with gentle breezes to keep the vines disease free, is perfect, particularly at some higher altitude sites, which moderate the temperatures.

A perfect example of Malbec from Chile, rather than Argentina, is the Caliterra Tributo Malbec 2015 from Colchagua Valley. The deep clay-loam soils are strewn with sharp schist stones which add to the mineral profile of the wines. Partly fermented in used French oak barrels, the wine is then matured for 12 months in French oak, 9% of which is new to attenuate the tannin levels. The deeply coloured wine has a fresh and vivid style, with intense red berries and soft spice and a touch of sweet almonds and herbs on the nose. Soft tannins balanced by crisp acidity gives an overall elegance and excellent value at around £13.30 from on-line merchants such as North and South Wines in Wandsworth, London.

Malbec has also found new homes in other New World countries. The 2014 Left Field Malbec from Hawkes Bay in New Zealand is deep flavoured, mellow and delicious. £17.45 from Noble Grape Wines or www.nzhouseofwine.co.uk . Its somewhat ‘whacky’ description runs thus “Down a dark alleyway the brooding and intense characters of blackberry and liquorice meet the heroically proportioned mass of dark chocolate, draped in smooth, fine velvet”.