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2008 百大葡萄酒 (WINE SPECTATOR\'S TOP 100 )

(2008-11-20 21:46:40) 下一个

一年一度扣人心弦的的美国知名葡萄酒杂志-《Wine Spectator》,百大好酒评选活动已经出炉。今年一共超过19,500款葡萄酒参加TOP 100的评选活动, 超过 5,300 种赢得所谓卓著品味的规定值 90 分.

今年的 百大好酒来自世界上十四个国家,《 Wine Spectator 》的编辑凭着他们对葡萄酒的热情,采用盲试的方法,在完全不知酒名的情况下,评比综合了 : 质量 ( 口感分数 ); 价值 ( 发行价格 ); 产量 ; 和「 X-Factor 」 (← 兴奋指数 )… 等等条件,评选出了2008年的百名好酒。其中质量是根本, 但是在口感分数相同的情形下,酒的价格和产量也会决定排名的顺序,所以百大好酒并非一定是珍稀高贵的酒庄名酒。

如果你喜爱葡萄酒, 看一看自家的存酒吧, 如果有幸先买了百大好酒之一, 岂不是像中了乐透!

即使没有存货,以后有机会能买得到百大好酒之一的话, 不妨试试,看看这百大的口感究竟有什么独特之处。

The Top 10 of 2008

Wine Spectator's Top 100 - #01
Casa Lapostolle
Clos Apalta Colchagua Valley 2005
96 points / $75
5,987 cases made
Chile

Since its outstanding debut 1997 vintage, Casa Lapostolle's Clos Apalta bottling has helped to establish Chile as a premier red-wine region. Owner Alexandra Marnier-Lapostolle and her team created a blend of Chile's distinctive Carmenère variety, Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon sourced from the estate's oldest vines in Colchagua's Apalta sub-valley, then kept refining: fermenting in smaller lots, hand-destemming berries and constructing a gravity-flow winery. All this came to fruition in the long, warm, dry 2005 vintage, easily Chile's modern best. Marnier and new winemaker Jacques Begarie blended in 4 percent Petit Verdot for the first time, adding aroma and color. Rich and velvety, the 2005 Clos Apalta should reward cellaring. The wine's price has remained relatively modest through the years.

Wine Spectator's Top 100 - #02

Château Rauzan-Ségla
Margaux 2005
97 points / $100
10,000 cases made
France

Estate manager John Kolasa claims that nature did the lion's share of the work in 2005, leaving him and his team with a relatively simple job. Yet vast investment at the estate since the mid-1990s by the owners, who also control Chanel, enabled Rauzan to reap the benefits of a great growing season. The estate's grand vin, which reached a quality pinnacle in 2005, is 54.5 percent Cabernet Sauvignon, 39 percent Merlot, 5 percent Petit Verdot and 1.5 percent Cabernet Franc, selected from 74 of the 128.5 acres of vineyards.

Wine Spectator's Top 100 - #03

Quinta do Crasto
Douro Reserva Old Vines 2005
95 points / $40
1,500 cases imported
Portugal

This red from Portugal's Douro River Valley is at the crest of the new wave of high-quality table wines issuing from the historic heartland of Port. Up to 30 different grape varieties from old-vine vineyards compose this refined blend. Some of the grapes are foot-trodden in lagares during initial fermentation, and the wine is then aged 18 months in French (85 percent) and American oak. It is neither fined nor filtered before bottling. The winemaking team includes Manuel Lobo, Dominic Morris and Tomás Roquette.

Wine Spectator's Top 100 - #04

Château Guiraud
Sauternes 2005
97 points / $57
9,165 cases made
France

Bordeaux's sweet wines shared the limelight in the region's legendary 2005 vintage. Many châteaus, like Guiraud, long under the direction of Xavier Planty, produced their best wine ever. During the harvest, grape pickers passed painstakingly through the estate's 210 acres of 35-year-old Sémillon and Sauvignon Blanc vineyards, selecting only grapes affected by botrytis. By harvest's end, each acre yielded only enough grapes for 54 cases of wine, with about 20 percent of that set aside for the estate's second label.

Wine Spectator's Top 100 - #05

Domaine du Vieux Télégraphe
Châteauneuf-du-Pape La Crau 2005
95 points / $55
15,830 cases made
France

Brothers Daniel and Frédéric Brunier represent the third generation of Bruniers to run this famed estate. With a large (173 acre) contiguous vineyard, a rarity in the appellation, the Bruniers rely heavily on Grenache, Mourvèdre and Syrah to produce their top red cuvée. Tight and almost gravelly in feel when young, the wine has a proven ability to reward cellaring. The 2005 is a blue-chip bottling from a structure-driven vintage.

Wine Spectator's Top 100 - #06

Pio Cesare
Barolo 2004
94 points / $62
7,000 cases made
Italy

This big, juicy, chewy wine is one of Piedmont's most reliable and widely available quality blended Barolos. Pio Boffa represents the fourth generation to run this estate, located in the heart of Barolo's capital of Alba. He sources Nebbiolo grapes from the winery's own vineyards in the Serralunga d'Alba commune and supplements them with grapes from trusted suppliers in the region.

Wine Spectator's Top 100 - #07

Château Pontet-Canet
Pauillac 2005
96 points / $100
20,830 cases made
France

Owner Alfred Tesseron has masterminded one of the most remarkable turnarounds on Bordeaux's Left Bank in the past decade, elevating the quality of Pontet-Canet's wines beyond that of fifth-growth. While Pauillacs such as Château Mouton-Rothschild and Château Latour draw much higher prices, Pontet-Canet too crafts powerful wines, built for aging, that express its vineyards planted on poor, gravel soils half a mile from the Gironde River.

Wine Spectator's Top 100 - #08

Château de Beaucastel
Châteauneuf-du-Pape 2005
96 points / $95
15,000 cases made
France

One of the largest estates in the Châteauneuf-du-Pape appellation, this property is owned and run by the Perrin family. In 2005, they produced their best regular cuvée since 1989 (Wine Spectator's Wine of the Year in 1991). The Beaucastel vineyard produces dense and explosive wines from a collage of 13 different grapes, most notably Grenache and Mourvèdre. Each is fermented separately in concrete or wooden vats. The third year of drought, 2005 only intensified the concentration and structure of this ageworthy red.

Wine Spectator's Top 100 - #09

Mollydooker
Shiraz McLaren Vale Carnival of Love 2007
95 points / $90
2,596 cases made
Australia

Carnival of Love is one of the few great Aussie Shirazes priced less than $100. Mollydooker owners Sarah and Sparky Marquis buy the grapes from the Gateway Vineyard, a property planted in 2000. They aim for 4 tons per acre from the site, but severe drought in 2007 reduced yields by nearly half. The wine finished primary fermentation in barrel to better integrate the flavors and tannins of the 100 percent new American oak.

Wine Spectator's Top 100 - #10

Seghesio
Zinfandel Sonoma County 2007
93 points / $24
68,000 cases made
California

The Seghesio family has been making wine for a century in northern Sonoma County and farms more than 400 acres of Zinfandel in Alexander and Dry Creek valleys. They make a range of vineyard-designated Zinfandels, such as Home Ranch and Cortina, and a bottling from the oldest vines. But for this Sonoma County 2007, winemaker Ted Seghesio tapped his diverse grape sources for a more widely available, well-priced wine. Aged 11 months in 75 percent American oak, it's complex, with a supple texture and a spicy finish.


Wine Spectator’s 2008 Top 100 At A Glance

来源-《Wine Spectator

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