A single varietal Petit Verdot wine from a British Columbia
winery is a rare wine.
In the 2018 vintage (latest figures available), the production
of Petit Verdot, at 270 short tons, was a mere 1.27% of red wine grape
production. To put that into perspective, the most widely grown red is Merlot.
At 7,957.5 short tons, it was 37% of red wine grape production.
That explains why few wineries make Petit Verdot on its own.
Those that do include Bordertown Vineyards & Estate Winery of Osoyoos. This
winery will be at the Vancouver International Wine Festival and may have a
Petit Verdot at some of the public tastings. I am assuming it will be under the
table, since it does not appear on the list of wines Bordertown will be
pouring. That is not surprising: only 120 cases were produced in 2017.
I would advise asking for it anyway. You just might be lucky.
There are several reasons why so little Petit Verdot is grown.
The main one is that, as Jancis Robinson observes in Wine Grapes, the
variety is “late ripening – even later than Cabernet Sauvignon.” In BC,
Cabernet Sauvignon comprised 2,926 short tons in 2018, or just under seven per
cent of total red wine grapes.
BC growers have taken a chance on Cabernet Sauvignon because
the variety is far better known than Petit Verdot, thanks the numerous varietal
Cabernets from California, Australia and South America that are ubiquitous in
this market.
For most producers – in Bordeaux as well as in BC - Petit
Verdot is a blending grape that adds colour, volume and spicy to Bordeaux
blends.
The Robinson book continues: “When fully ripe – not always
easy to achieve in Bordeaux – Petit Verdot produces wines that are rich, deeply
coloured, tannic and ageworthy, often spicy and with good levels of alcohol and
acidity in the best sites. Today it generally plays a small part in the
Bordeaux blend but in the nineteenth century … Petit Verdot was the dominant
variety in the Queyries vineyards on the left bank of the Gironde …”
Petit Verdot is widely planted in the south of France. Acreage
has been increasing in California and Australia and, according to the Robinson
book, the variety “looks set for a very positive future in South Africa.”
It is unlikely to see much more acreage of Petit Verdot in the
Okanagan or the Similkameen. The available sites for planting are limited; and
vintages like 2019, when an early October freeze ended the ripening time for
late varieties, discourage growers from taking risks with Petit Verdot.
However, we should be thankful that Mohan Gill, Bordertown’s
owner, took a chance on Petit Verdot. Here is a note on the winery’s 2017 Petit
Verdot.
It is worth observing that his vines are in a vineyard on the
Osoyoos East Bench, one of the warmest sites in the South Okanagan. In 2017,
the grapes were picked on November 14 at a ripeness of 27 Brix. That is very
late.
Bordertown Petit Verdot 2017 ($30 for
120 cases). The wine is characteristically dark as night in colour. (Someone
once remarked that you could look at the sun through a glass of Petit Verdot.)
It begins with aromas of plum, black cherry, blackberry and spice. The wine is
generous on the palate, with flavours of plum, fig and black currants. Spice
and dark chocolate linger on the long finish. 93.
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