When I set off on my first tasting trip to Beaujolais in four years at the end of February I didn’t expect amazing things. That was no prejudice against the region – I love good and great Beaujolais – rather, it was the result of tasting my way through two pallets of Beaujolais samples at home before I left, predominantly from the new vintage in bottle, 2021.
Don’t get me wrong, there were many good 2021 wines and a few very good ones on those two pallets, but often the most exciting Beaujolais I tasted were late releases from 2020 or 2019. Those were both warm and sunny years of the kind that gave the great Beaujolais wines of the past in legendary vintages like 1976 and 1959. The gamay grape, which the region is almost totally focused on (98 percent of all vineyards), is one of the big winners of climate change in Europe.
READ MORE TOP 100 WINES OF FRANCE 2022