The Boxler 2010 Pinot Blanc Reserve - a pure genuine Pinot Blanc from Brand that gets labeled with a capital "B" in its home market - offers a superb example of this variety's underappreciated potential to, among other things, combine subtle creaminess of texture with the vivacity and dynamic fruit-mineral exchange of a Riesling. Scents of gentian and apple blossom, sweet corn and oregano usher-in a palate brimming with fresh apple and lime mingled with pungent corn shoots, green herbs, and sea water. Lush and silken, yet at the same time brightly animated, this brings irresistible saliva-inducement to a gripping finish of captivating, energetic interaction between fruit, herb, liquefied floral perfume, and crystalline mineral impingements, sea salt and iodine. This terrific value is likely to be well-worth employing at table through 2020, if not beyond.
"I picked all of my grand cru Riesling at the beginning of the 2011 harvest," relates Jean Boxler, "because it was already ripe and I did not want to lose purity or acidity, or to gain alcohol, and I wanted to make the wines as dry as reasonably possible. Normally, letting Riesling hang longer is the right thing, but not in this vintage, as what little I picked later demonstrated. Especially in granite soils, maturation was very rapid. In 2010, by contrast, I picked as late as I possibly could and performed no deacidification. The quality of the acids just kept improving and my foliage was still green through October." Muscat in 2011, incidentally, Boxler says of a grape with which his estate often scores memorably, "got Oechsle but simply lacked fruit," and he blended it away. Like me, Boxler deems his 2010s to be in a different class than his 2011s. "Maybe 2010 will be a bit difficult in its youth for some consumers to appreciate, but for the professional ..." he utters a sigh indicating rapture, and after tasting his collection I know what he meant! While hectoliter per hectare yields in 2010 averaged only in the low twenties, Boxler held onto the reserves he had set aside for the U.S., even as he elected to change importers, so that both his 2010s and his 2011s were shipped after the middle of 2013.
Importer: Kermit Lynch Wine Merchant, Berkeley, CA; tel. (510) 524-1524