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Does 1947 Château Cheval Blanc Escape The 25% Usa Wine Tariff...?

by Stuart George

As of Friday 13th March 2020, the USA’s 25% tariffs on imports of French, Spanish, and German still wines under 14% alcohol remain in place.

Most, if not all, of Arden’s classic wines have less than 14% alcohol so we cannot dodge the tariff.

However, it is not always stated or known what the alcohol level of old wines are.

For example, it has been claimed that some of the grapes that contributed to Château Mouton Rothschild 1945 – of which we have sold a bottle from the cellar of Faringdon House – produced must at 15% alcohol. But the overall alcohol content of this exceptional wine is probably lower, and probably less than 14%.

Older Bordeaux and Burgundy wines – up to the early-1980s, perhaps – frequently had alcohol levels of 11%-12.5%. Wines that achieved high alcohol levels were exceptions to the norm.

Château Cheval Blanc 1929 and 1947 (the latter is shown here – a now empty bottle from a wine-fuelled trip to Scandinavia 15 years ago) apparently achieved 14.4% alcohol. Cheval’s position on the St-Émilion graves (gravel)has always imbued it with a richness and potency that its neighbours Figeac and La Dominique do not match.

But Cheval Blanc 1961 had a level of “only” 12.5% because fermentations by this time were more carefully controlled than they had been.

So we can send Cheval Blanc 1929 and 1947 tariff-free over the Atlantic – but not the 1961…


About the Author

Stuart George - Mayfair-based Arden Fine Wines was founded by Stuart George in 2019. Stuart began his wine career 24 years ago working alongside the distinguished Master of Wine and Burgundy expert Anthony Hanson. A holder of the prestigious Wine & Spirit Education Trust Diploma in Wine and Spirits since 2000, Stuart has tasted vintages back to 1780. He was UK Young Wine Writer of the Year in 2003. He was winner of the 2019 Scuderia Ferrari Wine Award for “outstanding professional achievements" and of the 2020 Family Office Awards Wine Writer of the Year.

Visit Stuart George's Website