2011 Bordeaux Vintage Report, Wine Styles and Characteristics

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2011 Bordeaux Wine Vintage Summary with harvest information, vintage characteristics, buying tips and links. For a series of detailed interviews with growers and owners from chateaux all over the entire Bordeaux wine region: 2011 Bordeaux Harvest Reports, News, Interviews and Photographs.

If you want to read tasting notes, reviews and ratings for the top 350 Bordeaux wines from 2011 : 2011 Bordeaux Tasting Notes Buying Guide for 350 Best Wines

2011 Bordeaux Vintage Report… A vintage of selection…

All agricultural regions enjoy, or suffer from, the capricious vagaries of Mother Nature. The 2011 Bordeaux vintage was one of the more difficult growing seasons in recent history.

Things started off normal for the 2011 Boredaux vintage.  After the cold, dry winter faded, spring arrived. But far too early.  Bud break took place at the end of March. In fact, by the time April rolled around, much of Bordeaux was enjoying summery conditions.  April was hot: the second hottest April on record since 1900! May was almost as hot and dry, which brought about an early flowering.

The first half of the 2011 Bordeaux Vintage was one of the warmest periods enjoyed by the region in six decades!  However, accompanying the warmth was very little rain.  The drought conditions were exacerbated by a heat spike in June that caused serious problems due to lack of water in the vineyards. Many growers suffered  while some of their fruit was ruined by sunburn. The Cabernet Sauvignon planted in  dry soil was hit the hardest.

By the time the Bordeaux weather usually warms up, things changed again. This time it was worse.  In July, the warm, dry summer conditions that had been taking place since February reversed direction. July became one of the coldest months in over three decades!

While some rain fell at the right moment, offering nourishment for the vines for many growers, fears of rot were not uncommon. For other growers, the rains were too little, too late. Producers who had enjoyed back-to-back stunning vintages with 2009 and 2010 were faced with a myriad of choices, all of which requiring extensive work and selection in the vineyards.

If that wasn’t enough to cope with, a massive storm slammed in the Northern Medoc, September 10, causing some estates to begin their harvest earlier than anticipated and further reducing their yields.

August 17 marked the start of the harvest for the white wines for the 2011 Bordeaux vintage. This was, on average, about two weeks earlier than usual. September 5 saw the first picking of Merlot. This was followed one week later by the Cabernet. Depending on the vineyard, most of the harvest was concluded by late September or early October.

The 2011 Bordeaux vintage will be known as one of the earliest harvests in history, competing with 1893 for that record.  Producers that were willing to ruthlessly discard unripe or damaged berries were able to make good wine.  Yields are low. Interestingly, a greater percentage of the harvest was relegated to the Grand Vin in 2011, than in 2010 or 2009. Yet the total amount of wine is less in the 2011 Bordeaux vintage. This is due to greater selection taking place, problems encountered with the younger vines, the development of rot and damage caused by drought and hail.

For some chateaux, they set records for the smallest yields in their history. Others had to go back to 1961 to find a year with such low yields. Low yields are a positive sign because it leads to concentrated wine. At this moment, it looks like vineyards planted on water retentive, clay or limestone terroir produced the better wines from the difficult vintage. Selection was paramount for growers.  Fruit from old vines, which reach deeper into the soils, helped as well, as young vines suffered.

What does this mean for the red wines from the 2011 Bordeaux Vintage? This is a good, but not great vintage with some nice wines. There is more red fruit than black fruit. You will not find dark flavors than you will experience  in higher-alcohol, riper vintages like 2010, 2009 or 2005. You’ll taste more cassis and cherry and less blackberry or liqueur. Very little licorice or other ripe sensations appear in the wines.

Wines from the 2011 Bordeaux vintage are in general, fresh, bright, aromatic and show more acidity than the previously mentioned vintages. The wines are less concentrated in flavor this vintage when compared with recent years like 2009 and 2010. However, the wines are ripe.  Because they are lower in alcohol, you have less of a voluptuous feeling in the mouth. The problem with many wines is too much extraction and wood. Using the same techniques in 2011 that were practiced in 2010 will not return good results. Those wines feel dry in the mouth. Most of the wines can age, but 2011 Bordeaux is not a vintage to cellar for decades. Similar to 2001 Bordeaux, many of the wines will start drinking well between 5 and 10 years after the vintage. 2011 Bordeaux shares another commonality with 2001 Bordeaux, a myriad of chateaux from Pomerol produced outstanding wine.  Due to their low production, the high level of quality coupled with strong demand, Pomerol is the only appellation to consider buying as a future.  2011 Bordeaux is also another excellent year for the sweet Bordeaux wines of Sauternes and Barsac as well as being strong for the white wines of Bordeaux.

To buy or not to buy? That’s the question.  Buying Bordeaux wine comes to down price and quality.  Every chateaux owner and director know prices need to come down.  How far they will drop is the question.  Most owners and directors feel their wines are priced fair. It is their neighbors that need to give the biggest discounts. For the wines to sell through to consumers, the wines need to take a big step back in price. I’d like to see reductions from 2010 drop by 40% to 50% for many properties. Based on numerous conversations, that is unlikely to happen.

The 2011 Bordeaux vintage has become one of the slowest sales campaigns in history. Many of the wines have been priced too high for the market. The problem the chateaux faced were, that regardless of how low the wines were priced, consumer interest was low. A few estates have seen sales. Those estates took notice of the market conditions and priced their wine accordingly.

Chateau Latour announced that the 2011 Bordeaux Vintage would be the last time they would offer their wines for sale as futures. Starting with the 2012 vintage, the wines would be held back until they were ready for consumption. It is not yet known how long that could be. Chateau Latour stated their wines would still sell through the negociant system. But not as futures. While the announcement sparked a lot of chatter, does it matter? Perhaps not as much as people think. Latour has the ability to sit on their wines for decades if they like. They are not owned by a large company or numerous shareholders seeking income. The number of estates that could follow in the footsteps of Latour are far and few between. Chateau Lafite Rothschild made news of a different sort. They offered their wines for sale before the official Robert Parker was released. The wines are available for about $650. Clearly they are trying to make a statement. They are discretely saying that on a going forward basis, all great vintages will be priced at $1,000 a bottle, give or take. Will the marketplace agree? Your guess is as good as mine.

Add to that all the trouble with the world economy and the rising potential for problems in the Eurozone and it’s not a pretty picture.

With all that in mind, 2011 is not a vintage to invest in, which means it’s not necessary to buy the wines as futures.  You can buy the wines when they hit the stores.2011 Bordeaux is a year made for drinkers. When it comes to pricing, some vintages favor the chateaux. Other years, the consumer sets the price. The 2011 futures campaign will be a mini war between the owners, who want the most money, and the consumer, who will rightly demand the lowest possible price after spending so much money to buy 2009 and 2010 Bordeaux wine.

In this difficult, uneven vintage, some estates are going to outperform others. 2011 Bordeaux is not a vintage to buy blindly. A few more important points you should consider when thinking about what wines to purchase. What might happen in 2012?  Of course it’s far too early to know. But as of early April, 2012 already bears some resemblance to 2011.  The winter was one of the driest on record. There is very little water in the soil at the moment. But a repeat of a vintage similar to 2011 is possible. From October 2011 to March 2012, Bordeaux received about 300 mm of rain. That is the same amount of rain that fell during the same time period the previous year. The amount of rain has decreased. For the same period, over the last 10 years, the average amount of rain was 500 mm. For those of you that like statistics, over the last 30 years in Bordeaux it rained on average 128 days per year. Today it’s closer to 88 days per year.

It’s April now and very warm in Bordeaux. If the region does not receive adequate rain to help feed the vines, the vines will be stressed and might not gain phenolic ripeness. You also need to add into the equation that if the region does not receive enough rain, there could be even less wine than we saw in 2011!

If 2012 turns out similar to 2011, 2009 and 2010 could become even more collectible as consumers and collectors with a thirst for the best wines will want to own even more of those already legendary vintages. It is our opinion that in time, due to the unique, opulent style of the wines, coupled with the extraordinary number of 100 Pt wines, according to Robert Parker, 2009 Bordeaux will become the most collectible vintage in history. But that’s a fun conversation and tasting best suited for another day.

10 Comments

  1. The High Bordeaux prices cannot be sustained. I think that the hard evidence for this is that the 2009 top growth vintages are starting to hit the wine auction floors for the first time. And the prices are down, especially when compared to other vintages such as 2000.

    • Thank for the post Michael. IMO, 2011 is overpriced for its quality. But having tasted close to 500 different 2009 Bordeaux wines on multiple occasions, those wine are so good, the prices being asked for many of the wines seems fair to me.

  2. Palmer has a very good weather chart on their website that enables one to compare rainfall and temperature between two years. While there are similarities between 2011 and 2012 over winter, the start of spring looks more like 2009-10, with temperature almost mimicking 2010, but with more rainfall like 2009 (also very similar temperature wise); it is, however, noticeably cooler than 2011. It is very early days yet, but I’d keep an eye on these charts; modest rain throughout April, with no big storms, is exactly what the vineyards need.

    While you make the comparison with 2001, don’t forget 1986: hard tannic reds, many of which lacked enough fruit to carry the tannins, and lovely sauternes.

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