I planned to write a simple tasting note on the single bottle of Chinese wine I drank in China, while providing background info on the producer. While looking up the winery Changyu, however, I came across a few random pieces of info on the ‘nets that struck me as comment-worthy.
1. Changyu winery just celebrated 120 years of wine-making. What? Maybe they were fermenting Snake Wine, but I highly doubt they have been producing Bordeaux-esque, barrel-aged wines for ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY YEARS. Well, I looked it up and YES, technically the winery and cellar were built in 1892, but they had a hell of a time producing anything worthy of consumption. In 2002, the French Castel Group teamed up with Changyu to create the first professional Chateau in China. I guess I should retract my affront and at least give them credit for being first in trying to establish a vineyard in a non-wine drinking country (at the time). And if that didn’t blow your mind, how about this: Changyu is now the 10thlargest wine producer in the world! So many new (scary?), random facts learned today. Here come some more…
2. Changyu winery announced plans at their 120th anniversary gala to build a wine theme park, twice the size of Monaco. This “Winetropolis” would include such delights as a “wine-themed tourist town”, a vineyard, a shopping street, wine spas, bars and a chapel. Yikes. Having just returned from China and seeing the utter destruction done by the domestic tourism industry to both the natural environment and China’s ancient cities, this scares the crap out of me. Seriously–the whole country is going full-Disney. Why can’t domestic tourists embrace the natural beauty of their country?
Imagine putting up fluorescent, multi-colored high-beams all around El Capitan in Yosemite National Park, then holding a nightly song and dance show at the base of the mountain, set to David Guetta, using workers bused in from Appalachia, forced asked nicely to prance around in fake Native American garb, all while selling out of tickets to this disaster EVERY NIGHT; followed by a mass migration to the historic Ahwahnee Hotel, recently converted into a ginormous, disco-lit karaoke barn. This is the city of Lijiang, China.
3. A French Sommelier, while at the dubious 120th Anniversary tasting, apparently declared he was “glad to see that Changyu can produce great white wines, red wines, sweet wines and brandies—all different products but all at a very high level. They compete very well with the French wines.” Seriously? Who is this Sommelier Pierre Barthe, and what on earth is he drinking in France? Apparently an independent British wine consultant feels differently: “it (Changyu) has yet to improve quality in both its vineyards and winemaking.”
Oh, well. The world is officially insane. And with much ado about nothing, here are my tasting notes:
The wine draws a blank on the nose—very little aroma. There is some perceptible, pleasant red fruit on the palate, but nothing I could pick out of a gang in a fruit line-up. The wine has obviously had some oak treatment, reminiscent of a brown paper bag—possibly oak chips. The tannins are dry, a little scratchy but not totally offensive. Amazingly, this is NOT the worst wine I have ever had. For what it’s worth, we finished the bottle. Of course, my standards may have been lowered inadvertently as a result of the sh!tty-Chinese-beer-fatigue-syndrome I was suffering from at the time.
Today I got two bottles from a Chinese friend.
I’m not a conosieur, but I am from Chile and I like to drink wine.
My friend gave it to me saying I might not like it and that it was a table wine quality.
I disagree. Even though it is not the best wine I have drank, I consider it is of a very nice quality. I’m not sure in what conditions, soil, weather, is the Chinese grape harvested, but I was expecting something definetly worst in what taste refers.
As you said, it does not have a lot of aroma. The flavor is not very profound, but it does have a nice oak flavor that helds for a little while after you swallow it and some fruit flavor in the tip of the tang. It is a little bit dry, but I have had Spanish and Argentinian wines that are even dryer. It is also a little bit acid. However, the dryness is not all bad, since it makes it very refreshing, and it is definetly a wine that you wouldn’t have to think twice about drinking a second glass. I have drank Australian and American wines far worst than this one, those you have to think twice before having a second glass.
Interesting. Do you from which producer the bottle came? Would be curious to hear!
Everything is in Chinese!!
The only things in English are the legend, the type of ine, which says Dry Red Wine, and it says Shanghai.
Googling, it appears that they have a wide variety of wines, they even have wines at more than 100 dollars. So maybe this dry red actually is their table quality wine!
You are googling “Shanghai Dry Red Wine”?
Changyu wine prices.
There I found a web site with prices of wines acrosshe world, and in Europ they have some wines that can cost over 100 us
This is my first time visit at herre and i am actuallpy happy
to read all at single place.
Having just come back from China & trying the wine mentioned. I thoroughly enjoyed your review. We tried it in Beijing after visiting the Great Wall which has got a tabogan ride as a descent. The wine had a nice red colour but a very thin and flavourless consistency.
Thanks for your comment, Ben! Hope you enjoyed China.