Map courtesy JF Hillebrand |
I thought these wines were French, and maybe even high-end. The flight was easily the best my group got in three days, and we were stunned when we learned where they were from.
The best wines had a French sensibility, with elegance, balance and complexity. I think most were Cabernet-based, but I could be wrong, because Lebanese winery websites are terrible.
Moreover, the prices are reasonable: under $20 for the wines I could find. And none were from the only Lebanese winery with any fame in the US, Chateau Musar.
Anything I could tell you about Lebanon's terroir would be something I learned on wikipedia, so you can go there and read for yourself. The short version is that the area is one of the world's oldest wine regions and had the most European culture in the Middle East before its civil war. Consultants, mostly French, are coming back and wine production is increasing. Most vineyards are in the Beqaa Valley, with plenty of sun but temperatures moderated by the high elevation and breezes off the Mediterranean Sea. Chateau Ksara makes 70% of the wines in Lebanon.
The best place in North America to buy Lebanese wines is Canada; the best place in the U.S. is Washington, D.C. I didn't see any of the wines I liked for sale west of the Mississippi River, and many I didn't see at all.
But these were terrific wines, so if you see Lebanon on a wine list, give it a shot.
Wines I gave double-gold (wine names are what I have):
Ksara Réserve Du Couvent 2012 ($15 in Connecticut; this is the only one of these wines I could find a place you could easily order it online)
Les Emirs 2011
Les Emirs 2010 (the 2008 is $15 in DC)
Chateau Ksara Red 2011
Chateau St-Thomas 2010
Wines I gave gold:
Clos St-Thomas Les Gourmets Rouge 2012 (the 2011 is $14 in Canada)
Ksara Le Prieuré 2012 (the 2011 is $11 in DC)
Saint John 2010
Thouraya 2008
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1 comment:
Nice post, Blake. I lived in Beirut in 2005 and 06, and I found a lot to like in the local wines. The winemakers were far ahead of most of the public, which is majority muslim. So the prices are low. But as you pointed out, the Lebanese winemakers learned a lot from the French. And they are adapting their knowledge to the hotter climate there. All good.
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