The Wines

The seeds of K’AVSHIRI date back to 1988 when Robert Joseph, then wine critic of the London Sunday Telegraph and founder-chairman of the International Wine Challenge, made his first trip to Georgia.

Then still part of the Soviet Union, it was a very different country, but Joseph was fascinated by the architecture, the impenetrable language, the delicious east-meets-west cuisine and wines that were like nothing he had ever had before

In 2018, after several other visits to Georgia, Joseph, who’d given up wine criticism in 2005 to launch the innovative and highly successful le Grand Noir range of wines in France, met Vladimer Kublashvili, chief winemaker of Winery Khareba.

Joseph was immediately struck by Kublashvili’s talent and imagination and, over the course of a wide-ranging tasting of wines made from indigenous and often rare Georgian grapes in the Kakheti and Imereti regions, the two men began to imagine the possibility of working together to make a rather special wine.

A musical mosaic

What they had in mind was a mosaic of grape varieties, soils, microclimates and techniques, including fermentation in Georgia’s traditional qvevris.

Some wine traditionalists are ambivalent about blends, overlooking the fact that all great Médoc Crus Classés and most great Champagne and port, owe their character and complexity to the marriage of complimentary components.

Is Debussy’s Clair de Lune a finer piece of music because it is played as a piano solo than an orchestral piece like Berlioz’s Symphonie Fantastique?

Would Miles Davis’s seminal Kind of Blue album have been better if it had been performed by a single musician?

From the outset, the two men wanted to create a white wine that was immediately recognisable as Georgian, but with a fine wine character all of its own. They were inspired by wines like Spain’s Vega Sicilia, Penfolds Grange and Mas de Daumas Gassac, all of which had stepped outside the mainstream of their day.

First attempt

The first exploratory red and white blends were made in 2019. Then came the pandemic, followed by further efforts in 2022. With each session, Joseph and Kublashvili learned more about the way the grape varieties interacted with each other and the role qvevri fermentation and a subtle touch of oak could play.

What they were doing, they realised, was writing and orchestrating a piece of music, adding and removing instruments until the harmony was just right. Often, they were surprised.

Joseph, who had lived in Burgundy, never imagined the contribution of including less than three percent of Aligoté would make to the texture of the white. It was Kublashvili’s idea to add a note of fruit by adding a similarly small amount of Muscat.

For the red, both men were fascinated in the idea of co-fermenting white grapes with the Saperavi which can be a little rustic when used by itself. Why, they wondered, is this technique only used for Syrah/Shiraz and Viognier grapes in the northern Rhône and Australia?

They experimented with Kisi, Krakhuna, Rkatsiteli and Mtsvane and, when tasting the results blind, repeatedly found that the last pair of these had the best effect - giving the resulting red wine the elegance the two men were looking for.

The launch

In early 2023, Joseph returned to Georgia to work with Kublashvili on the final blend, tasting and retasting until they believed they had got it right.
Two thousand bottles of the first Assemblage - the White 2022 - were bottled in late 2023 and shown to a small number of people. A larger quantity - 20,000 bottles - of the 2023 White Assemblage will be released in Spring 2024, along with a limited bottling of the 2022 Red Assemblage.

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