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Merlot, 2000
(5 



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:Wine Rating
:Wine Type
A varietal bottling from our Marinus estate vineyard, the year 2000 was a cooler
year that nonetheless gave us great color and depth of flavor.
Not a “fruit bomb” style of merlot, this wine shows great elegance in the European
style of finesse and balance between aroma and texture.
:Description
Carmel Valley, United States
:Wine Region
:Vineyard
,
:Vineyard Region
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Wine Encyclopedia Review
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COMMENT ON THIS WINE
The earliest recorded mention of Merlot was in the notes of a local Bordeaux official who in 1784 labeled wine made from the grape in the Libournais region as one of the area's best. The name comes from the French regional patois word "merlot", which means "young blackbird" ("merle" is the French word for several kinds of thrushes, including blackbirds); the naming came either because of the grape's beautiful dark-blue color, or due to blackbirds' fondness for grapes. By the 19th century it was being regularly planted in the Médoc on the "Left Bank" of the Gironde. [2]
It was first recorded in Italy around Venice under the synonym Bordò in 1855. The grape was introduced to the Swiss, from Bordeaux, sometime in the 19th century and was recorded in the Swiss canton of Ticino between 1905 and 1910. [2]
Researchers at University of California, Davis believe that the grape is an offspring of Cabernet Franc and is a sibling of Carménère. [2]
Until 1993, the Chilean wine industry mistakenly sold a large quantity of wine made from the Carmenere grape as Merlot. In that year, genetic studies discovered that much of what had been grown as Merlot was actually Carmenere, an old French variety that had gone largely extinct in France due to its poor resistance to phylloxera, which as of 2006 does not exist in Chile.
The labeling Chilean Merlot is a catch-all to include wine that is made from a blend of indiscriminate amounts of Merlot and Carmenere. With Merlot ripening 3 weeks earlier than Carmenere, these wines differ greatly in quality depending on harvesting.
After a series of setbacks that includes a severe frost in 1956 and several vintages in the 1960's lost to rot, French authorities in Bordeaux banned new plantings of Merlot vines between 1970 and 1975. [4]
In Merlot early history with California wine, the grape was used primarily as a 100% varietal wine until wine maker Warren Winiarski encouraged taking the grape back to its blending roots with Bordeaux style blends. [5]
A mutant that produces white grapes has been found, and white wine is made from this mutant by Beringer in California and Skalli in France.[6] It has nothing to do with the rosé wine made from red Merlot that is sometimes sold as "White Merlot".
Merlot is produced primarily in France (where it is the third most planted red grape),[7] Italy (where it is the country's 5th most planted grape)[8] and California, Romania and on a lesser scale in Australia, Argentina, Canada's Niagara Peninsula, Chile, New Zealand, South Africa, Switzerland, Croatia, Hungary, Montenegro, Slovenia, and other parts of the United States such as Washington and Long Island. It grows in many regions that also grow Cabernet Sauvignon but tends to be cultivated in the cooler portions of those areas. In areas that are too warm, Merlot will ripen too early. [2]
In the traditional Bordeaux blend, Merlot's role is to add body and softness. Despite accounting for 50-60% of overall plantings in Bordeaux, the grape tends to account for an average of 25% of the blends-especially in the Graves and Médoc. However, in the regions of Pomerol and Saint-Emilion it is not unusual for Merlot to comprise the majority of the blend. [7] One of the most famous and rare wines in the world, Château Pétrus, is almost all Merlot.
In Italy, the Merlot grape is often blended with Sangiovese to give the wine a similar softening effect as the Bordeaux blends. [8] The Strada del Merlot is a popular tourist route through Merlot wine countries along the Isonzo river. [4]
In Hungary, Merlot complements Kékfrankos, Kékoportó and Kadarka as a component in Bull's Blood. It is also made into varietal wine known as Egri Médoc Noir which is noted for its balanced acid levels and sweet taste
(from: georgeb )
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