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  1. Tasting Notes
March 10, 2025

Andrew Jefford on Bordeaux 2020: A very good and sometimes great vintage

By Andrew Jefford

Wow! 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019, and now 2020 in Bordeaux: five fine vintages out of six (and with 2022 lurking just around the corner). This suggests that Bordeaux found itself, throughout the second half of the 21st century’s second decade, in the Goldilocks zone of the global-warming process. Warmed into beatitude, in other words, but without the decadence of excess. Drinkers are spoiled for choice. The market, though, is hardly on fire—perhaps there is just too much good wine on offer at present, piled up inside the cavernous warehouses of the Quai des Chartrons, for the world’s wealthy to absorb.

Other explanations are possible: There is no longer a single critical hegemon to lead and galvanize the market; top Bordeaux has slid from fashion; wine itself is sliding from fashion; prices remain dissuasively high; the world has too much to worry about to dally over fine wine. Or, perhaps, the new critical watchwords—“freshness and precision”—are delivering wines that early drinkers find just a little intimidating, a little too serious, a little too tense.

2020 is a test case: It’s a very good and sometimes great vintage that is nothing at all like 1982, nothing at all like 1989 or 1990, nothing at all like 2000, and nothing at all like 2009. Its stylistic antecedents are 1996 (a succès d’estime above all), 2005 (still more admired than loved or enjoyed), and the grand but stern 2010. In truth, 2016 was cut from that cloth, though more gently and tenderly so; so, too, was 2019, though it has more inner amplitude. 2020 advances the aesthetic argument further; the optics are still more polished; the dance still more aerial. There are some magnificent wines in 2020, but they can be daunting. It’s a vintage full of intellectual grist, and almost of spiritual striving, too; there are few “pleasure bombs.” Among the successes, there’s a handful of surprisingly and almost shockingly daring wines that push the aesthetic boundaries of Bordeaux firmly in an easterly direction, as I have written in some of my notes.

As Michael Schuster’s exemplary initial vintage report made clear, it was a vintage of successive and varied extremes: mild to begin with, then very wet and hot, then wet and cooler, then very dry though not particularly hot, then very hot (and very wet). Truly sustained, settled heat came only in the first half of September; there were cool nights throughout summer. It was very challenging for growers, especially in their combat with mildew. The various extremes cancelled each other out, hence what Michael described as “the chaud–froid character of the year”: sometimes dramatically concentrated, occasionally opulent—but always fresh. Those challenges mean that the successes are mainly found among the elite; there are plenty of disappointments from the less well-resourced. (Remember, though, that the elite now own plenty of “lesser châteaux,” too.) Ripeness among the less successful is sometimes an issue; so, too, is a coarseness of grain, with sometimes clumsy oak. Tannic amplitude comes and goes, depending on the aesthetic star guiding each chai (though no serious wine is slender or skinny). Best, I think, to read tasting notes carefully (ours and others) before committing to purchase.

Final point. If you’re a Burgundy lover who switched off from Bordeaux years ago, considering them all too ripe, powerful, oaky, and assertive… it’s definitely time to take a second look.

Andrew Jefford’s top Bordeaux 2020 wines

Château Pichon Longueville Comtesse de Lalande 99

Château Palmer 98

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Château Cheval Blanc 97

Château La Mission Haut-Brion 97

Château Montrose 97

Château Léoville Poyferré 96

Château Pape Clément 95

Château Calon Ségur 95

Château Cos d’Estournel 95

Château La Conseillante 95

Château La Fleur-Pétrus 95

Château Lafleur 95

Château Rauzan-Ségla 95

Château Trotanoy 95

Alter Ego 94

Château Angélus 94

Château Canon 94

Château Certan de May 94

La Chapelle de La Mission Haut-Brion 94

Domaine de Chevalier 94

La Dame de Montrose 94

Château Hosanna 94

Le Petit Cheval 94

Château Pichon Baron 94

Pichon Comtesse Réserve 94

Château Suduiraut 94

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