Thursday, September 7, 2017

Gryphus Carménère 2016

At my first liquor store job, I had a sales rep (from some random company I can’t remember now) who seemed to always have very interesting descriptors for the wines he was peddling. The most memorable of those was his selling point for Carménère (all his wines were Chilean), a varietal he’d always claim was a “panty-dropper”. To this day I have yet to have proof of this and I mostly suspect he was an idiot who probably hadn’t even tasted the wines he was selling, but it’s always stuck with me, mainly because it is hilarious.

Carménère has a very interesting background: it started as one of the six grapes allowed for France’s Boredeaux AOP, but these days it is virtually extinct in the region. After phylloxera devastated much of France’s vineyards in the mid-1800s, it wasn’t really replanted due to its unpopularity and thus it became the “lost” grape of Bordeaux. Luckily, cuttings of this varietal wound up in Chile, where for years it was mistaken for Merlot. It wasn’t until DNA research in 1994 proved that much of what Chilean wine-makers thought was Merlot was actually Carménère and since 1998 the country has embraced the varietal that is now considered the national grape of Chile.

I’ve found that wines made with Carménère are usually very interesting (though not quite “panty-dropping”). They tend to be medium-bodied with distinct green pepper and spicy notes that pair very well with heavy meat dishes. For quite a while I was under the impression that it was a varietal that needed to be paired with food (mostly because that's what everyone always told me), but since then I’ve started to enjoy it all on its own. I’ve had Montes’ Purple Angel (a beautiful expression of this grape from the Colchagua Valley), but since I can’t afford $70-ish wine all the time (or ever, really), I’ve sought out other, more affordable Chilean Carménères.


The one I’ve been most impressed with recently was the Gryphus Carménère, a very affordable wine from the Maule Valley in (it probably goes without saying, but heck, I’ll say it anyway) Chile. It is 100% Carménère with 40% aged in used French oak barrels. This wine starts off bursting with flavors of black cherry, blackberry and plum which are then quickly followed by notes green and black pepper. It has a medium finish with smooth tannins and a slight acidity. It had surprising complexity and elegance that I don’t usually expect in wines that are so inexpensive (under $10). This wine is more than enough proof that Carménère has found a very good home in Chile… and maybe it really could be a panty-dropper (though I’m still waiting on more concrete evidence of that before I start using it as a descriptor).