Great Chardonnay Showdown

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The Great Chardonnay Showdown, held in the spring of 1980, was organized by Craig Goldwyn, the wine columnist for the Chicago Tribune newspaper and the founder of the Beverage Testing Institute, with help from three Chicago wine stores. A total of 221 Chardonnays from around the world were selected for the blind wine competition. France and California were heavily represented, but entries from many countries around the world were included.

"Five panels of five judges each first selected 19 finalists. Then ten of the original judges reviewed the finalists a second time." The winning wine was the Grgich Hills Wine Cellar Sonoma County Chardonnay 1977, which was the new winery's very first vintage. It was declared the best Chardonnay in the world.

The winemaker was Mike Grgich, who had earlier made the Chateau Montelena that won first place among white wines at the historic Judgment of Paris wine competition.

Another major Chardonnay wine competition was the Grand European Jury Wine Tasting of 1997.

[edit] See also

[edit] Sources

  • French Wine Producers and Consumers
  • Taber, George M. Judgment of Paris: California vs France and the Historic 1976 Paris Tasting that Revolutionized Wine. NY: Scribner, 2005.