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- NWR Weekly 040724 (copy 01)
NWR Weekly 040724 (copy 01)
đ· How to buy white Burgundy right now and Masters Champions Dinner wine


THE MASTERS CHAMPIONS DINNER NEEDS SOME WINE PAIRINGS. WEâVE GOT âEM.
Each year before the start of golfâs most famous tournament, all the former winners don their green jackets and gather for the Masters Champions Dinner (officially the âMasters Club Dinnerâ). The honor of selecting the menu goes to the most recent winner, Jon Rahm.
Rahm, with an assist from star chef José Andrés, paid tribute to his grandmother and his Basque heritage with a fabulous-looking selection of Spanish dishes.
But what should everyone drink? We asked three top sommeliersâone whose list leans natural, one whose list leans steakhouse, and one who works closely (but not exclusively!) with Burgundy and Champagneâwhat theyâd pair with Rahmâs feast. We are trying really hard not to make a golf pun here, so letâs just say that their choices are awesome and we want to drink all of them.
Note to Jon Rahm: Jon, thereâs still time to take their advice.
WHITE BURGUNDYâS STRONG â22 AND WILD PRICES
Christy Canterbury MW spoke with numerous expertsâincluding a fellow Master of Wine and a Master Sommelierâwho had lots of strong opinions about buying and understanding whatâs happening with one of the worldâs great wines. A small sampling of what they said:
Vanessa Conlin MW, Head of Wine Retail as Sothebyâs: âEveryone is so excited about the [2022] vintage . . . Everything I have heard from winemakers and importers is good. The early previews I tasted when I was there for the Hospices de Beaune auction in November showed wines that are expressive but not fat, concentrated but elegant. A warmer vintage, but it still has lots of freshness.â
Collector Ed Zimmerman: âI am definitely buying Burgundy. And it is definitely more painful than it used to be. I also feel more confused than ever because buying it is easier than drinking it. You buy a $100 bottle. The bottle becomes worth $200. I can have the conscience to drink that. Now, it is worth $400 and is irreplaceable . . . Am I going to flip it? What do you do when that bottle is $1,500?â
John Sellar, EVP, Independence Wine and Spirits: âMost people are mid-term aging their white Burgundy now. Itâs not like it used to be. Some people donât even know that premox exists! Itâs just not on peopleâs minds anymore. Burgundians have pulled back from working the wines like they did during those years. They have regulated the sulfur now. It is probably the gatekeepers that are selling whites that way. I think that shying away from old white Burgundy is in the past, but it depends on the sophistication of the collector.â
Morgan Harris MS, Head Sommelier at Angler: âBurgundy prices have gone through the roof . . . Weâre seeing village Puligny from C+ producers at $100 a bottle [wholesale]. I donât know what to do with that wine. Weâve moved to Saint-Romain and Saint-Aubin. But even Saint-Aubin Premier Crus are now $250+ on the list.â

NEW AND AMAZING THINGS ARE HAPPENING IN PRIORAT
Jason Wilson has a bunch of terrific new-wave Priorats that he recommends, but he also goes much, much deeper on a region thatâs staged a remarkable comeback. He writes:
âItâs hard to believe now, but in the 1980s, the mountainous Priorat was nearly extinct as a wine region. It had depopulated steadily during the early 20th century, after phylloxera devastated its vineyards. âEveryone left the higher altitude villages and went to the villages down in the valley,â says Sara PĂ©rez of Mas Martinet. âThen came the war. Then came the industrial wine era.â Many residents moved to the Catalonia coast as mass tourism took off in the 1960s.â
Credit for regionâs revival is due in part to a group of winemakers who banded together to create what became Prioratâs famously tannic, bold reds. But global tastes have swung toward a subtler, more elegant kind of wine, and a new crop of winemakers is seizing the opportunityâoften with spectacular results.
WHERE ARE ALL THE CELEBRITY BOURBONS?
âEven if you donât drink tequila, you know that Casamigosâ celebrity backer is George Clooney,â writes Whiskey Editor Susannah Skiver Barton. That tequila, of course, took the spirits world by stormânote: we are not saying itâs a particularly good tequila, mind youâand eventually sold for $1 billion. But despite all the celebrity bourbons out there from Bob Dylanâs Heavenâs Door to Peyton Manningâs Sweetens Cove, none have made anything close to such a splash. Why? Her answers reveal both her deep whiskey expertise and a bunch of fascinating dynamics still playing out in the spirits and whiskey worlds.
WINE DEAL OF THE WEEK*
We have been gobsmacked by Benjamin Leroux's recent run of vintages for his white Burgundies. Perhaps thatâs why weâve overlooked his reds. But his 2020 Gevrey Chambertin was a highlight of a recent wine dinner we attended, even in the context of a super stacked lineup of worthy bottles. Itâs here for $74âthe best price in the U.S, by a significant margin. Snap âem up before we do.
*NWR is not compensated for the links in this section.
AROUND THE WINE (AND WHISKEY) WORLD
đ©đżâđł The 2024 James Beard Award Nominees are here.
đ Chicagoâs best wine lists, according to the NY Times (paywall)
As always, thanks for reading! See you next week for much more.
Santé!
The NWR Editors
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