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Items 46-60 of 66
Strawberries, raspberries, and cherries on the nose. The palate is fine, light, and semi-sweet with wild red berries and soft tannins. Until the 1980s the wines of Languedoc-Roussillon were mostly rustic, roasted, and dirt-cheap--of little interest to export markets.
This Bordeaux wine comes from the Côtes de Blaye appellation which is known for providing some of the best value wines. It offers a medium body with intriguing and generous notes of black currants, blueberries, tobacco and mild spices. It's perfect balance and soft tannins make it a great accompaniment to any meal.
Château Bruni is a Blend of Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon. Vinification Traditional maceration (21 days) allows to reveal all the fruity and tannic potential in the grapes which have been picked at an optimum ripeness.
The 2019 Saint Jacques de Siran wine is carefully elaborated by the Siran team. This Siran wine is with black cherry, wild strawberry and vanilla aromas, supported by lively tannins. This French Red wine has a nice complexity on the palate, long finish with high tannins.
Garnet red. On the nose there are scents of cherries, wild strawberries, caramel. Fresh and well balanced, good length on the palate. The grapes are handpicked, sorted and transported to the winery in small containers to avoid crushing berries and premature oxidation.
After sorting in the vineyard and winery, the grapes are de-stemmed then directly put in tank. The spontaneous fermentation then starts. The grapes will stay in tank for roughly three weeks during fermentation. The wine is then put in oak barrels, by gravity, for 10 months (no new oak). No fining is performed.
L'Ancien comes from Jean Paul's oldest vines--hence the name of the wine--in his home village of Charnay in the southern Beaujolais. They range in age from 40 to 60 years old and are planted on slopes sporting the area's signature sandy clay-limestone soils, featuring the particular local "dorée" or "golden" limestone that is laden with iron.
Perret’s approach to winegrowing is classic: respect each individual terroir—he produces several single-vineyard wines—and work the soil to avoid the need for chemical treatments. His goal is to make fresh, structured wines, in “a sort of Burgundian style” as he says, but without too much wood; wines that aren’t too worked over and will age well.