March has been a quieter month, so just ten wines, five in each part. It’s not so much the alcohol as the cost of wine now, as my last article explained. That said, with various wine-loving guests coming to stay, starting today, who knows what the cellar will look like by the end of April. Actually, I’m not complaining. I prefer to be able to share good wine. All these upcoming guests usually bring a bottle or two, and I’ve been promised some Swiss wine from our first overseas visitors of the season. I can tell you, that makes me very happy indeed.
Part One, here, starts off with a wine from Aosta, yet another wine region (like Lavaux, Valais, Deutschschweiz…) I can’t really find enough of in the UK. Then we go to Moravia, Alsace, McLaren Vale and Northern Burgundy. As usual, every wine here warrants inclusion, but that last wine is something very special.
Blanc de Morgex et de la Salle 2018, Maison Vevey Albert (Aosta, Italy)
I’ve posted reviews of a number of Morgex etc wines here before, but this is a new producer for me, and a bottle whose label I admit to seeing a few times online, but had never tasted. This is a wine from that part of the Aosta Valley that is closest to the Mont Blanc Tunnel. It’s often stated that this wine with a long name grows “in the shadow of Mont Blanc”, and whilst that isn’t exactly true (in fact, the grapes are often in bright sunshine as the Vevey vines climb well over 1,000 masl), they are not far away, pretty close to the ski resort of Courmayeur.
The variety is 100% Prié Blanc. It is supposedly the first variety documented by name in the region, a true autochthone of the valley. The vines Albert Vevey planted are now quite old, and most of them are ungrafted, grown on their own rootstocks. They grow on steep terraces which are difficult to work and this tiny sub-appellation gets an even tinier mention in the World Atlas of Wine. It’s a wonder any of those bottles that are imported here get bought, but they deserve to be.
Albert’s two sons now run the winery, where they make wines from just this one variety, turning out a small but commercially important for the village, six-to-seven-thousand bottles a year. Generally, you will just find the dry white on shelves, if you are very lucky, as we have here, but under the Morgex et de la Salle label there is also sparkling wine and a sweet wine. Here at Maison Vevey, they freeze the grapes for the sweet wine, like an ice wine (Vin de Glace), and call it “Flapi”.
This dry Morgex is a yellow-green colour, there’s a definite green tinge to it. Not quite Green Chartreuse green, but definitely green. The bouquet shows herb and citrus oil. The palate has a textured dryness. I once published a tasting note on a wine forum of the local co-operative’s Vin Blanc de Morgex, suggesting it tasted like a smooth pebble in a mountain stream. I didn’t convince many, but it’s not so far-fetched as the bottle had been cooled in a stream up above the valley on a refuge walk from just above Valgrisenche, on the edge of the Gran Paradiso National Park.
Think fresh citrus acids, an almost resinous mouthfeel, with a pebbly-textured softness. Some UK sources suggest that this should have been drunk by 2023, but that is just inexperience. Ask anyone in Aosta and they will say Prié Blanc can age for ten-to-twenty years. Its acids keep it alive, and it is never a “fruity” wine. For me, it really reflects its mountain origins. And those mountains! Definitely a region of high-altitude walking, castles, great food, a bit of skiing and Roman ruins, with wines you almost never see outside of Italy. Aosta is Italy’s smallest wine region.
I found this by chance at Raeburn Fine Wines in Stockbridge, Edinburgh. This is why I believe in browsing wine shops rather than web sites, where this probably wouldn’t have jumped out at me. They had it for £26, though I have since seen it on sale for up to £34 at other sources. So glad I grabbed one. I may buy another when I’m next down there.

Riesling 2022, Mira Nestarcová (Moravia, Czechia)
Milan Nestarec is probably making the best wines of his career so far, but his wife, who is producing a range of varietal wines from unpruned vines allowed to grow wild, is hard on his heels. Every one of her 2022s has been wonderful so far, and I have just recently taken delivery of some of her 2023s as well.
The couple make their wines in tandem in the village of Velké Bílowice in Southern Moravia. From vines grown on mostly sandy soils, this organic Riesling is, like all those wines made by this family, a natural wine. Mira adds not even sulphur to this cuvée.
The wine is a delicate pale-yellow colour, with a fresh citrus bouquet. Flavours echo lemon and orange, grapefruit and tart apricot, and I’m not the only one to notice mint as well. The ’22 saw some skin contact, but just overnight. You can’t tell from the pale colour, but there is a tiny bit of texture here. Ageing was six months in acacia.
A mineral, I’d call it “chiselled”, wine, beautiful at the same time. The intense fruit flavour is almost off the scale. Energy, salinity, purity…each one of Mira’s wines seems to top the previous one. Actually, they are all (Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Noir and Cabernet Franc are available) worth looking for, worth the proverbial detour.
Mira is imported by Basket Press Wines, and I bought mine from their online shop. They are now sold out of 2022 and onto the 2023s, which have recently arrived, and the Riesling costs £33. The label continues the dance theme on all her bottles, Mira having previously been a dancer. The photo is of Nijinsky.

Zellberg L’Hermitage Sylvaner 2020, Patrick Meyer (Alsace, France)
Patrick Meyer inherited his mother’s vines at Nothalten and initially rejected what he thought were her “old-fashioned” ways of making wine. He implemented everything he had been taught at wine school and then pretty much realised the error of his ways immediately, when the wines lacked the character and life these sites had previously given them. They seemed attenuated. Fully converted back to the old ways of doing things, Patrick is now a committed proponent of biodynamics, and is making some of the most highly-regarded natural terroir wines in the region.
Patrick does seem to have an affinity with Sylvaner, a variety that is starting to get the attention that it deserves now. This is partly down to it finally being granted Grand Cru status on the Zotzenberg site (near Mittelbergheim), giving it a better profile, but more importantly, a younger generation of winemakers has looked at this variety afresh and overcome the prejudices of the previous generations, who cropped it high and let the acids go awol.
This bottling, from a favoured plot within the Zellberg site, is rich and nutty with fresh apple acidity. Aged on lees in Alsace foudre, and knocking out 13.5% abv, this is both richly complex and challenging, the latter I mean in a good way. On the edge, perhaps, which makes for a thrilling glass. Zero sulphur was added, of course.
Patrick calls it “dissident”, which not only describes it very well, but might just be the best description of a wine I’ve seen all year. However you care to describe it, it sure lingers on the palate a long, long time.
Purchased from Gergovie Wines, £30.50.

The Green Room McLaren Vale Grenache 2022, Ochota Barrels (South Australia)
I drank this remembering Taras, who left us after a long illness in late 2020. He was one of the key movers in that Adelaide Hills revival which saw it become a hotbed for Australian natural wine, maybe “the” hotbed at the time. Much was made of Taras Ochota’s punk rocker and surfer image, but rather than a stereotypically brash Aussie, he was a softly-spoken and thoughtful philosopher of the vine. A truly innovative winemaker.
Luckily, his work is continued by his wife, Amber, and her team, who made this equally innovative Grenache from the Vale’s limestone and schist soils up at around 550 masl. The vines are pretty old, planted in 1946. Around 65% of the crop was whole bunch fermented (the rest destemmed), with different batches spending between 8-23 days on skins, followed by just two months ageing in old French barriques.
The result, as you’d expect, is a super-fresh wine with shining bright red fruits. These are mostly scents and flavours of strawberries, light and delicate (the abv says 11.1%), but there is allegedly a tiny percentage of Syrah in here (which I can’t confirm). Whatever, there’s certainly a nice savoury, herbal, twist here on the finish. A lighter natural wine, much more delicate than the standard impression of McLaren Vale, and a lovely expression of Grenache in all its vibrant fruity glory. You might hate this descriptor, but ”yum” is pretty apt.
I bought this from Communiqué Wines in Edinburgh. I can’t remember what I paid (and as the shop doesn’t yet have its web site, I can’t easily check). Expect to pay retail around £30 or thereabouts, I think, but there won’t be a lot about as not much Green Room Grenache was made. The importer is Indigo Wines.

Nuova Descriptio 2022, Alice & Olivier de Moor (Chablis, France)
The de Moors are special to me as they were among the first natural wine producers I really got into, first finding their Chablis at the Basingstoke factory outlet of Berry Brothers, of all places. It was love at first taste and for some reason they always had some bin-ended when I visited. At the time, it was probably an adventurous selection for the average BBR customer, but I think Jasper was a big fan.
From their base at Courgis, three-or-four kilometres southwest of the town of Chablis, Alice and Olivier have become pioneers not only of natural wine, but of the whole holistic approach to sustainable viticulture. This now includes having been among the first in France to utilise agro-forestry in a viticultural setting.
Alice and Olivier are so much more than Chablis AOP. They have embraced Sauvignon Blanc, renting vines in St Bris, and Aligoté (their old vine Plantation 1902 is arguably the finest Aligoté now being made, so good that even its £50 price tag seems far from ridiculous these days). They have also managed to make exciting wines on their Vendangeur Masqué label from bought-in low intervention fruit.
Nuova Descriptio is, however, something very special, even within the de Moor canon. It blends Sauvignon Blanc from St Bris, in the Auxerrois, Aligoté (vinified with skin contact) and Chardonnay. Very fruity, this is drinking extremely well right now. There are elements of each of the three grape varieties you can identify, but for me it majors on orange peel and ripe peach flesh with a good soft mineral texture.
I understand this might be a one-off cuvée, which would be a shame as it is brilliant. My bottle came from The Solent Cellar at Christmastime last year, and I’m sure they have sold out. They got it via importer Les Caves de Pyrene. There are odd bottles knocking around at the £50 mark, and Roberson in London appeared to have some (for £55) when I looked. Hedonism, surprisingly, list it online at £40. It is well worth seeking this particular cuvée out if you can find some.


















































































