A dry Chenin made by a young woman breaking all the rules on the traditional and revered Hill of Chaume.
Perhaps it’s just me, but I always get a little thrill when I open a bottle of white wine and the cork is glittering with fine, tiny tartrate crystals – ‘wine diamonds’, someone at the Josmeyer winery told me many, many years ago on a visit to Alsace, when I came across them for the first time. It tells me that the winemaker has chosen not to put the wine through ultra-fine filtration or shocked it with severe refrigeration. It means that no one used charcoal or bentonite or anything else to ‘stabilise’ the wine (ie prevent tartrates from developing). It instantly tells me something about the wine and the philosophy behind the winemaking. As I pulled the cork from Vanessa Cherruau’s dry Anjou Chenin, there they were: like fairy dust, sparkling a little bit of magic on my desk, my hand, the cork.
Unlike most owner-winegrowers of a 25-ha (62-acre) property of contiguous cru-quality vineyards complete with winery in the heart of a classic appellation in France, Vanessa Cherruau did not grow up in a vine-growing or winemaking family or in a family with plenty of money. Quite the contrary – she was born in the south of France and grew up in a military family, moving all over the place as she was growing up. ‘A city girl’, she says. ‘I knew nothing about how plants grew!’ She didn’t inherit vineyards or a wine interest, choosing to study journalism at university, with a plan to be a reporter and travel the globe. Then she went to a wine tasting and realised that it was possible to tell the difference, just by tasting, between left-bank and right-bank wine. It was a penny-drop moment that led to her giving up her reporting job, going back to study (oenology, this time), becoming obsessed with wine (organic and biodynamic viticulture in particular), making wine in the Loire, Penedès and Champagne, and eventually coming back to Anjou, which she’d considered home since the age of 17. ‘I was homesick!’ she says simply.