search.noResults

search.searching

saml.title
dataCollection.invalidEmail
note.createNoteMessage

search.noResults

search.searching

orderForm.title

orderForm.productCode
orderForm.description
orderForm.quantity
orderForm.itemPrice
orderForm.price
orderForm.totalPrice
orderForm.deliveryDetails.billingAddress
orderForm.deliveryDetails.deliveryAddress
orderForm.noItems
opinion / one bottle / 2020 Un Jour Sur Terre Clos d’Un Jour Cahors


Shocking depth and vivacity from historic Malbec


Andrew Jeff ord


ome wine regions bask in good fortune; others don’t. We’re all familiar with such inequalities— they’re vast in human lives, too. How gratifying it would be to redress bad luck on occasion with a few waves of the philanthropic wand. I’d wave mine at Cahors, which has been on the wrong side of history for the past 800 years. The region’s difficulties stem from physical location—its essence, in other words. Cahors is the great wine region of the River Lot, a river that rises at the very edge of the watershed that divides the Mediterranean from the Atlantic. Historically, each sea—and across each sea, each route to market—has been just a little too distant for comfort. The upper part of the river cuts its way through gorges overly narrow for viticulture; while the lower part of the river, prior to its union with the expansive Garonne at Aiguillon, is placidly arable. Between St-Cirq-Lapopie and Fumel, though, the river undertakes 15 majestic meanders, opening the valley up to falling light and warmth: a southern French echo of the Mosel. This tumbling photosynthetic nourishment meets succeeding beds of stony river terraces, steep hill slopes, and sheltered shelves, dips, and scrapes cut into the limestone causse (or plateau) above. Malbec loves it here, giving wines of almost shocking depth and vivacity. Some 800 years ago, the climate in this part of the Lot was warmer and drier than Bordeaux’s often drenchingly wet seasons; its harvests were more regular, its quality superior (Roger Dion, Histoire de la Vigne et du Vin en France des Origines au XIXe Siècle, 1959, pp.396–97). The apogee of the medieval wine trade that flourished during English rule in Aquitaine came in the early 14th century: 850,000hl (or just over one fifth of the total 2022 Bordeaux harvest) was shipped in cask out of Bordeaux on an armada of small boats between 1308 and 1309. This frenzied endeavor is still more astonishing when you realize that half of that wine had


S 170 | THE WORLD OF FINE WINE | ISSUE 87 | 2025


been produced upriver, either along the upper Garonne around Agen or in Quercy, the historical province centered on Cahors (José Baudel, Le Vin de Cahors, 1995, p.8).


Ambition over adversity What do you do if you can’t compete fairly? You compete unfairly. Bordeaux struck back with its infamous privilège: an intermittent, 500-year-long ban that made life as hard as possible for inland exporters, who could only ship their wines once the Bordeaux trade had sated itself on the all-important new-vintage sailings. It took Louis XVI’s controller general of finances, Anne-Robert-Jacques Turgot, a free-thinking, free-trade liberal from Paris, to abolish the privilège, in 1776. Competition from the fertile Languedoc plains subsequently savaged the Cahors trade in the railway age—via the new privilege of vastly higher yields than were possible in a twisting river valley. Then came the disease and pest catastrophes of the later 19th century, followed by hybrids, imposture, and North African competition in the early 19th century—and almost total eclipse after the savage winter frosts of 1956. These multiple setbacks meant that the Cahors appellation was awarded late, after a long VDQS incubation, in 1971. Perhaps too late: Many of the high-quality, long-lost hillside vineyards were excluded from the appellation, since they lay under forest; they’ve still not been replanted. Huge tracts of low-potential land, by contrast, were included in the appellation zone, which covers 21,700ha (53,600 acres). A mere 3,323ha (8,200 acres) of this is planted today. Puzzlingly, the appellation is for red wines alone, though limestone-rich Cahors has excellent white-wine potential. Cahors’s leading wine growers have had to find their way forward through this long drizzle of adversity, the latest setbacks being an internal crisis between 2001 and 2007, triggered by dissension about a cru system; and more recently frost, hail, and mildew, which compromised the


2022, 2023, and 2024 vintages. A twinkly wave is overdue. Magic wands don’t exist, of course.


Only good wines exist—and despite everything, Cahors has many. I’ve loved this unoaked cuvée since I first tasted an earlier vintage in 2015, when its fruit perfumes marked it out from a mass of oakier efforts. This vintage, too, seems to offer a cream of dark fruits, though there’s another earthier dimension to it, almost as if the 140-liter earthenware jars in which the wine spends 18–22 months has contrived to intensify the aromatic presence of warm stone and humus (often a feature of Cahors) in the wine. I applaud its ample ripeness, too, giving the wine glowing resonance and length in the mouth. Cahors is beginning to plunge, like other red-wine regions, into a dash for “freshness,” which can compromise the resonance that comes only with ripeness. Not here—this is a languid, slow, dense, and naturally articulated synopsis of a fine season down on the third terrace of the Lot. (Wines grown at higher altitude on the causse possess different balances.) I tasted it alongside a range of other ambitious cuvées from the region’s leading producers—and Cahors’s long history means that there is a developed estate system here. Among the gravel-terrace cuvées currently on offer, look out for the richly detailed 2020 Elegance from Château Nozière, the graceful yet generous 2018 Expression from Château Lamartine, and the dense, mouth-filling 2020 Haute Collection from Château Eugénie. If you prefer the shock and brilliance of the weathered, iron-rich limestones of the causse, try the 2020 Le Lac au Cochons of the Ilbert family, packed with depth and drama; the perfumed purity of the 2018 Les Graves de Paul from Château Vincens; or the vitality and intensity of Pech Chagut’s 2022 Parcelle 1233. Fine wines all, from a region that poet Geoffrey Chaucer’s father John (who supplied wine to Edward III’s court) most likely preferred to St-Emilion or Pomerol. 


Illustration by Dan Murrell


Page 1  |  Page 2  |  Page 3  |  Page 4  |  Page 5  |  Page 6  |  Page 7  |  Page 8  |  Page 9  |  Page 10  |  Page 11  |  Page 12  |  Page 13  |  Page 14  |  Page 15  |  Page 16  |  Page 17  |  Page 18  |  Page 19  |  Page 20  |  Page 21  |  Page 22  |  Page 23  |  Page 24  |  Page 25  |  Page 26  |  Page 27  |  Page 28  |  Page 29  |  Page 30  |  Page 31  |  Page 32  |  Page 33  |  Page 34  |  Page 35  |  Page 36  |  Page 37  |  Page 38  |  Page 39  |  Page 40  |  Page 41  |  Page 42  |  Page 43  |  Page 44  |  Page 45  |  Page 46  |  Page 47  |  Page 48  |  Page 49  |  Page 50  |  Page 51  |  Page 52  |  Page 53  |  Page 54  |  Page 55  |  Page 56  |  Page 57  |  Page 58  |  Page 59  |  Page 60  |  Page 61  |  Page 62  |  Page 63  |  Page 64  |  Page 65  |  Page 66  |  Page 67  |  Page 68  |  Page 69  |  Page 70  |  Page 71  |  Page 72  |  Page 73  |  Page 74  |  Page 75  |  Page 76  |  Page 77  |  Page 78  |  Page 79  |  Page 80  |  Page 81  |  Page 82  |  Page 83  |  Page 84  |  Page 85  |  Page 86  |  Page 87  |  Page 88  |  Page 89  |  Page 90  |  Page 91  |  Page 92  |  Page 93  |  Page 94  |  Page 95  |  Page 96  |  Page 97  |  Page 98  |  Page 99  |  Page 100  |  Page 101  |  Page 102  |  Page 103  |  Page 104  |  Page 105  |  Page 106  |  Page 107  |  Page 108  |  Page 109  |  Page 110  |  Page 111  |  Page 112  |  Page 113  |  Page 114  |  Page 115  |  Page 116  |  Page 117  |  Page 118  |  Page 119  |  Page 120  |  Page 121  |  Page 122  |  Page 123  |  Page 124  |  Page 125  |  Page 126  |  Page 127  |  Page 128  |  Page 129  |  Page 130  |  Page 131  |  Page 132  |  Page 133  |  Page 134  |  Page 135  |  Page 136  |  Page 137  |  Page 138  |  Page 139  |  Page 140  |  Page 141  |  Page 142  |  Page 143  |  Page 144  |  Page 145  |  Page 146  |  Page 147  |  Page 148  |  Page 149  |  Page 150  |  Page 151  |  Page 152  |  Page 153  |  Page 154  |  Page 155  |  Page 156  |  Page 157  |  Page 158  |  Page 159  |  Page 160  |  Page 161  |  Page 162  |  Page 163  |  Page 164  |  Page 165  |  Page 166  |  Page 167  |  Page 168  |  Page 169  |  Page 170  |  Page 171  |  Page 172  |  Page 173  |  Page 174  |  Page 175  |  Page 176  |  Page 177  |  Page 178  |  Page 179  |  Page 180  |  Page 181  |  Page 182  |  Page 183  |  Page 184  |  Page 185  |  Page 186  |  Page 187  |  Page 188  |  Page 189  |  Page 190  |  Page 191  |  Page 192  |  Page 193  |  Page 194  |  Page 195  |  Page 196  |  Page 197  |  Page 198  |  Page 199  |  Page 200  |  Page 201  |  Page 202  |  Page 203  |  Page 204  |  Page 205  |  Page 206  |  Page 207  |  Page 208  |  Page 209  |  Page 210  |  Page 211  |  Page 212  |  Page 213  |  Page 214  |  Page 215  |  Page 216  |  Page 217  |  Page 218  |  Page 219  |  Page 220