by Wine Owners
Posted on 2018-05-17
An overlooked example of value for money here from the 100 point La Mission 2005. Compared to Domaine Clarence Dillon stablemate Haut-Brion, and the rest of the 2005 First Growths, 2005 La Mission is a clear winner in terms of value as is eminently clear from relative value analysis. The only other 100 point wine on the whole left bank is Haut-Brion, which trades at around £6,500. The other Mouton will cost £5,250, Latour £6,600, and Margaux £6,100, all on 98 points, while Lafite lags behind them all in relative terms, commanding £7,700 for 96 points.
Compared to other 100 point La Missions over the year, the 2005 wins out on relative value as well. Whether any of the 2009, 2005 and 2000 will hit the price highs of the legendary 1989 is a subject on which the verdict is very much out, and will depend on how reputation of the vintages develops. Nevertheless, all three look like relatively sound buys, and the 2005 at the offer price just beats the rest (assuming they can be bought at market level).
“The 2005 La Mission Haut-Brion is pure perfection. It has an absolutely extraordinary nose of sweet blackberries, cassis and spring flowers with some underlying minerality, a full-bodied mouthfeel, gorgeously velvety tannins (which is unusual in this vintage) and a long, textured, multi-layered finish that must last 50+ seconds. This is a fabulous wine and a great effort from this hallowed terroir. Drink this modern-day legend over the next 30+ years. Only 5,500 cases were produced of this blend of 69% Merlot, 30% Cabernet Sauvignon and 1% Cabernet Franc.”
100 points, Robert Parker
La Mission Haut-Brion 2005 is offered £4,300 on the Wine Owners Exchange (£4,435 including fees)
by Wine Owners
Posted on 2017-11-24
The Don, St Swithins Lane, London, a converted wine warehouse, was the venue for one of Wine Owners tasting evenings offered to its members – Trial and Terroir Dinner based upon the 2011 Bordeaux vintage. The evening was conducted in one of the Don’s private rooms with an earthy dinner by head chef Frederick Forster.
Lionel Dougnac, buying director for De Luze & Fils, one of Bordeaux’s most influential negotiants, helped us navigate the properties surrounding the waters of the Gironde estuary. Lionel has been in the Bordeaux trade for over 20 years, specialising in buying classified growths. He has also worked for the top barrel-maker in France. Oaking became an interesting discussion point half way through the evening.
The focus for the evening was to explore the concept of terroir through the different wines presented during the evening from the 2011 vintage in Bordeaux. A vintage which left many enthusiasts wondering if the so-called ‘harlequin’ year could justify its high prices at primeur. Not surprisingly, there was immediately an exchange over what terroir might mean and during the evening there was plenty of opportunity to plumb the depths of this compelling subject. Lionel was quick to point out that, in his view, terroir was not just about the weather and soils but also included other factors, and even the ambitions of the domain owner.
2011: for those that might have forgotten, it was an unusual year by any standard. The year started with a massive water deficiency in First floors, and an unusually warm and protracted Spring. This meant that the vines were well in advance over the average year. Average temperatures during this period were close to if not in excess of any records previously recorded. It culminated in two extremely hot days in June where the temperature exceed 40°C. Some exposed bunches of grapes, especially on gravel soils, were scorched and losses were considerable, as much as 20% of the crop in some instances. If vignerons were concerned that any continuation of the drought would decimate whatever crop remained they needn’t have worried as damp, cool weather set in for much of July, followed by a very hot August. The heat precipitated some substantial downbursts and overall precipitation was above average for the period. An Indian summer followed which provided optimum conditions for the harvest in September. A series of circumstances which profited the white wines of the region but the red wines were heterogeneous.
L’Evangile vs Vieux Château Certan: the expression of the two first wines on offer provided an interesting contrast. The owners at VCC, the Thienpont family since 1924, have always worn their heart on their sleeve combined with an increasingly obsessive focus on managing First floor at a micro level of geography – and an ambition to let the terroir speak for itself using minimum intervention in the wine making. L’Evangile, now wholly owned by Domaines Barons de Rothschild since 1999 (they had earlier acquired a majority a shareholding) is a neighbour from ‘Haut-Pomerol’ with an ambition to become one of the top Pomerol estates. The latter’s substantially higher Merlot in the blend offered a very round and pleasing profile – a whopping 94%, leaving little room for their Cabernet Franc. It was very elegant and restrained which contrasted with the beautifully defined structure of VCC. There were pleasing elements in both wines. Interestingly, guests were not to be tempted by the more voluptuous offer and unanimously preferred the ‘aesthetic values’ expressed in Vieux Château Certan 2011.
In Pessac, the contrast was even more stark. Haut-Bailly, as always, attractive and feminine, seduced much of the company with its approachable elegance based on a more merlotised style than usual - a statistical recognition, if nothing else, that its Cabernet Sauvignon suffered that year. The Cabernet Franc, already on the way out at the domain, hardly got more than a top-up role. Haut-Bailly have always acknowledged that their terroir has issues under dry conditions such as those experienced in 2011. La Mission Haut-Brion was altogether more muscular and intense. It possessed a complex tension which will be years in its evolution. Lionel had obviously selected the wines he felt would give us more to ponder. We digressed into a conversation about how artists’ materials are perhaps the elements of physical terroir; that artistic genius is the inspiration, imagination and ambition of an estate’s terroir interpreted by the owner. Whatever the canvas that year, Wine Owners terroirists’ marginally preferred the more ‘traditional’ yet polished properties expressed in the intense muscularity of La Mission Haut-Brion 2011.
The grand estates of Pauillac were represented by Pontet-Canet and Château Pichon-Longueville Baron. This gave us an opportunity to discuss the influence of biodynamic viticulture in the region and its impact on the wines of Pontet-Canet. Clearly something had separated the processes of these two estates which are largely comparable in terms of size and varieties. When it came down to it, Pichon Baron managed 82% Cabernet Sauvignon in their blend, whilst Pontet-Canet a mere 60%. Yields were disparate too – 39% in the case of Pichon Baron whilst at Pontet-Canet it was 32%. It’s worth just quoting from the specification sheet of Pichon-Baron 2011 to understand properly the enormous lengths châteaux had to go to preserve the quality in the bottle:
“Bespoke grape picking: the grapes were picked and brought in the vat-house plot by plot, in order of maturity, with particular attention to selection on the plots. Sorting in the vat-house was highly meticulous [their bold] keeping only the very best grapes. The grapes were sorted twice, both before and after de-stemming. Once de-stemmed, the selection of the grapes was fine tuned on two sorting lines, one manual and one using optic systems.”
This extensive and costly work appears to have been justified as the assembled company substantially preferred this wine. Perhaps the more laissez-faire practices of biodynamics don’t favour complicated years albeit it may be a more ‘authentic’ product.
Our final flight of the evening ended with a cheese plate and perhaps two of the most interesting wines of the evening – Chateaux Montrose and Calon-Ségur. Both estates in their own ways have seen major upheavals over the last 5-10 years. One could even be forgiven for thinking that terroir might the servant of the ambition of the two new owners. Certainly, the Bouygues have invested colossal sums in an estate which they were always destined to own. The recent vintages have all demonstrated that their terroir has justified the trust of its billionaire owners producing wonderful wines in supposedly less good vintages. 2011 was no exception. Montrose’s enhanced ‘environmental responsibility’ which the Bouygues have brought to the estate extends the work of one of its founders, Mathieu Dollfus, who established a programme of social care for his workers building them free housing in the ‘Montrose village’, included them in profit sharing and even offered free health care – making ‘unique contributions to the community’ of Saint-Estèphe. The windmill which stands on the property is a ‘symbol’ of his tenure and his fight against phylloxera – the windmill drew up water which flooded First floors – a practice which had some success in reducing the disease at the time. At Calon-Ségur, despite the death of its owner at harvest time, pulled off a stunning wine - contradicting received wisdom about yields (the estate had one of the largest yields of all the wines tasted) and demonstrated that even in turbulent times estates can pull something out of a hat. Triumph in adversity is part of the story of Bordeaux. Opinion was equally divided on their relative merits.
Lionel’s deft commentary on the wines permitted discussions on all other matters of interest to the guests. This wasn’t just a working evening – although there was much to delve into.
The evening conversation turned to a brief but informative discussion about the commercial prospects of ‘La Place’, advantages or otherwise of buying en primeur and discussions on some practices of specific châteaux to release wines as ‘library’ wines after primeur campaigns - subjects which Lionel was uniquely qualified to explain.
For those still with the will to carry on tasting there was ample opportunity with additional samples as backup. Overall, the unscientific assessment was that there were 3 stand-out wines – La Mission Haut-Brion 2011, Montrose 2011 and Vieux Château Certan 2011.
Broader definitions of terroir escape the confines of the tightly worded official description. The Australian economist David Throsby outlined the concept of a ‘cultural good’ (in his seminal book Economics and Culture, 2001) which might fit better to the breadth of considerations Lionel managed to convey during the evening. Throsby’s thesis is that a person’s preference for something would be based upon the characteristics of the good which contribute to its cultural value. Some of these are highlighted above in quotes but, in summary, they include aesthetic properties eg elegance and balance; spiritual value – emotional and inspirational attachment; environmental which includes PDO (L’Appellation d’origine protégée) and environmental responsibility; historical – evolution and tradition; symbolic, such as the name of ‘Bordeaux’ itself and what it inspires and among others one might conjure; and authenticity which is embodied in the unique character of a wine drawn from the local area where it is produced.
The WineOwners Trial and Terroir Dinner managed to elucidate these concepts and more.
by Wine Owners
Posted on 2017-04-24
For a detailed overview of the vintage, please see What you need to know about Bordeaux 2016 reds
This year’s Bordeaux 2016 en primeur tasting notes reflect the vintage and its character. You’ll see the same words come up again and again in our tasting notes.
For fruit character, that commonly includes "briar fruit", "cassis" or "blackcurrant" and "sherbetty fruit". Very few showed prune or confit fruit character, and we generally marked these ones down as potentially showing overripe characteristics.
For non-fruit character, it’s "licorice" and "cedar". An Interestingly definitional note: Licorice (or liquorice) is extracted from the root of Glycyrrhiza glabra, a herb whose extract is 50 times sweeter than sugar!
Many of the best wines have a "liqueur-like" refined nose and a similar mouth-feel.
Structurally, a "charge of tannins" is very evident on the attack, often accompanied by a "chewy" finish. This comes from the July/August drought when lack of water led to the plants shutting down and producing correspondingly higher tannins.
The long autumn hang-time with cool nights led to the sense of freshness in the wines. You’ll find lots of wines in my notes that are "mouth-watering", "sappy" and "threaded with acidity".
The finish of the wine is so important when evaluating young, fine (and expensive) wine and this year the finishes are typified by the word "controlled" whilst there was generally very good "insistent" length. It’s that sense of containment and balance on the finish that helps make the best wines so good and sets them apart from the rest.
Further tasting notes will release on the right bank in due course where I did the least tasting, and see these links for what the critics think of St Emilion and Pomerol.
DECANTER - Bordeaux 2016 Right Bank: Anson’s first impression
JANCIS ROBINSON - Bordeaux 2016 : the guide
Picture: Wine Owners Ltd.
SAINT ESTEPHE
Producer | Score | Favourited | Description | Price bracket | Appellation |
Cos D'Estournel | 98 | * | Cedary, sweet nose. Then a charge of tannin. Firm fruit, progressively building from a cool mid palate to a powerful, broad finish - rather like a fan opening or a peacock's tail slowly revealing its intricate colours. | £££ | Saint Estephe |
Montrose | 97 | | Liqueur like nose. Cassis and cedar notes in the attack then sweet mouthwatering, very balanced mid palate. Sweet finish. Very fine. | £££ | Saint Estephe |
Calon Ségur | 97 | * | Blackcurrant nose, airy, structured attack, liqueur-like texture, then rich summer fruits and a warmer than anticipated finish. Nice firm undercurrent nonetheless as the soft tannins push through and bring needed focus to the finale. | £££ | saint Estephe |
Le Crock | 95 | * | Refined nose, lovely attack, grainy fruit. Tremendous attack and energy. Dark fruit infused with licorice. Complete, large scaled and satisfying. | ££ | saint Estephe |
Lafon Rochet | 95 | * | This is fine. Spiced, sweet fruit on the attack and mid palate, a big tannic charge and chewy finish. This is long term, big-scaled and really serious. | ££ | Saint Estephe |
Chateau Phelan Segur | 93 | * | Svelte, dense, lots of freshness, spiced attack. Soyeux, with a point of freshness at the finish. | ££ | Saint Estephe |
Cos Labory | 93 | * | Good density and attack. Very good complexity to the fruit. Mid weight. Super length. Quite clearly the best since the superb 1990. | ££ | Saint Estephe |
Ormes de Pez | 92 | * | Seasoned nose, a touch of cassis and cream, glorious cassis fruit and blackcurrant leaf. Great freshness and zesty finish. | ££ | Saint Estephe |
Pagodes | 92 | | Gentle attack, a sweet flourish and a mouthwatering mid-palate. Attractive, if not the most impressive St Estephe this year. | ££ | Saint Estephe |
Dame de Montrose | 91 | | Lovely attack, good dry fruit, nice lift and fine finish. | ££ | Saint Estephe |
Meyney | 93 | * | Liqueur-like in its texture, a super attack of cassis crème. Long, intense, well balanced and super-well integrated. I love St Estepehe in 2016 | £ | Saint Estephe |
Chateau de Pez | 92 | * | Super-vibrant, a little sweeter than some, but nicely done and a great finish. | £ | Saint Estephe |
Marquis de Calon Segur | 90 | | Evident structure, quite sweet mid-palate but lots of sap to it too to accompany the ripeness, hence the finish coats the lips with a dollop of cassis jam. | £ | Saint Estephe |
Capberne Casqueton | 89 | | Savoury, attractive attack with good weight, a noticeable intensity, but just a little less energy for me than 2010. Second best ever vintage of this wine. | £ | Saint Estephe |
Tronquoy Lalande | 89 | | Briar fruit, quite deep, merlot heavy and correspondingly plush. | £ | Saint Estephe |
Haut Marbuzet | 88 | | It's fine, but in a veritable constellation of terrific St Estephe performances, this is closer to the back of the classroom. | £ | Saint Estephe |
PAUILLAC
Producer | Score | Favourited | Description | Price bracket | Appellation |
Lafite Rothschild | 99 | * | Subtle, elegant, understated. Buffered tannins, very, very complex fruit with an illuminated fringe of acidity. It's an exercise in balance with a firm, insistent finish. | ££££ | Pauillac |
Mouton | 98 | | Aromatic, perfumed, sensual nose. Lush, huge, spiced with cloves. Powerful and dense. Very fine complex palate, anise seeds. Amazingly well-integrated tannins. | ££££ | pauillac |
Latour | 97 | | Restrained nose, fruit attack, buffered tannins, complex with an iron infusion and a touch a meatiness, leading to a firm finish. | ££££ | Pauillac |
Carruades de Lafite | 96 | * | Mouthwatering attack, Covered, voluminous fruit. Powerful, serious wine. Licorice. Very, very long. Best ever. | ££££ | Pauillac |
Pichon Longueville Lalande | 99 | * | Subdued nose, then a very refined attack, more backward than many, but there's evident intensity of fruit, a wonderful aromatic quality, with great prickly acidity throughout. Not showy, but extremely impressive in its reserved, elemental state. It feels like it could be a legend in the making. | £££ | Pauillac |
Pontet Canet | 97 | * | Saline, eucalyptus nose, powerful attack. Sweeter than some others. Unctuous but a beautiful balance. The sweet fruit submerges the considerable tannins. Then a sappy, mouthwatering lift. Pure, powerful and in line with the character of the vintage, a firm finish. | £££ | pauillac |
Pichon Baron Longeuville | 96 | | Vinous nose. Fine attack and mid palate, showing balance and control. Super-refined. Aromatic, characterful and complete. | £££ | Pauillac |
Lynch Bages | 96 | * | Deep nose, packed with fruit. Energetic attack. A formidable charge of tannins; chewy, bright attack. Settled, calm finish. | £££ | pauillac |
Petit Mouton | 93 | | Very fine nose, svelte, integrated, balanced powerful, long and large scaled. | £££ | pauillac |
Chateau Clerc Milon | 96 | * | Seasoned nose, restrained, quite high acidity. Very mouthwatering and dry. Vinous mid palate. Firm, damsons, réglisse, very svelte finish. Liqueur quality of texture. Very refined but not polished or made-up. | ££ | Pauillac |
Grand Puy Lacoste | 95 | * | Rich and generous nose, with a touch of licorice. Smooth, supremely balanced wine featuring crystalline fruit. As good as 2010. | ££ | pauillac |
Réserve de la Comtesse | 94 | * | Vinous nose, perfumed with myrrh, delightfully textured and delicious mid palate. It's hard not to fall in love with this. | ££ | Pauillac |
D'Armailhac | 94 | | Liqueur-like, fine nose. Good attack. Fine thread of acidity. Sweet mid palate and very controlled, sweet, sappy finish. Lots of tannin, very well integrated. | ££ | pauillac |
Echo (Lynch Bages) | 92 | | Large-scaled, aromatic fruit, nice grip, sappy, dry mid palate. Characterful. | ££ | Pauillac |
Chateau Duhart Milon | 91 | | Warm, vinous nose. Quite an overt palate. Slightly bitter twist to the fruit. Quite intense. Powerful tannic charge in the mid-palate. Reminds me of the 89s when they were babies. Ambitious. | ££ | pauillac |
Chateau Croizet Bages | 91 | | Covered, thickly styled fruit, cedary fresh and insistent, long finish. Cedary and good overall balance. | ££ | Pauillac |
Chateau Lynch Moussas | 90 | | Iron-infused fruit. A little fierce, but likely to settle down with a bit of bottle age. There is proper intensity there and it's certainly 'real' young wine; a bit disjointed but with the key elements in place. | ££ | Pauillac |
Pedesclaux | 93 | * | Good concentration, fresh, with a taut citric core. Mouthwatering then the dense fruit kicks in towards the end. Very progressive and very good. Retested May 17: Classical and firm, fresh damsons, spicy, sweet. | £ | Pauillac |
Lacoste Borie | 90 | | Nice density, good weight, freshness and very silky tannins | £ | pauillac |
Batailley | 90 | | Pretty, confit fruit. Earlier drinking but delicious for what it is. | £ | Pauillac |
Grand Puy Ducasse | 89 | | At the sweeter end of the spectrum in the vintage context. | £ | Pauillac |
Griffons | 89 | | Dense and texturally interesting. Liqueur-like, fruity, and a charge of tannins, that perhaps prematurely curtail the finish. | £ | Pauillac |
Pibran | 87 | | Slightly odd. A bit of fur on the fruit. A little savoury and wild for my taste. | £ | Pauillac |
Tourelles de Longueville | | | A bit dull. Uninteresting. | £ | Pauillac |
SAINT JULIEN
Producer | Score | Favourited | Description | Price bracket | Appellation |
Leoville Las Cases | 96 | | Super aromatic nose. Savoury. Finely crafted fruit, comprising redcurrants, briar and cherry. Cushioned tannins, and a very integrated finish, with an orange-peel lift. | £££ | Saint Julien |
Ducru Beaucaillou | 95 | | Vinous nose of blackberry leaf and cedar. Bright attack, chewy without a tannic charge of the year seen elsewhere. Very covered in plush fruit, though fresh and with good energy. Blackcurrant and mint. Cushioned tannins. Lovely but perhaps a little polished for so early? | £££ | Saint Julien |
Chateau Leoville Barton | 95 | * | Lovely firm-fruited attack, intense but not huge. Very fine mid palate Sweet fruited and medium weight. Insistent and elegant. | ££ | Saint Julien |
Chateau Gruaud Larose | 94 | | Cool reserved nose, controlled, fine attack. Very fine tannins. Beautifully balanced. | ££ | Saint Julien |
Branaire Ducru | 94 | | Complete wine, great mouth-coating texture. Big but fine tannins. | ££ | Saint Julien |
Beychevelle | 94 | * | Liqueur-like nose, vivid attack, rich progressive finish but reassuringly controlled. Excellent. | ££ | Saint Julien |
Leoville Poyferré | 94 | | Cedary, saline nose, big cassis and briar fruit, with a touch of warmth. Controlled progression, super-integrated tannins, then a dry tannic charge kicks in with chewy, fresh, matière. | ££ | Saint Julien |
St. Pierre | 94 | * | Powerful attack and tannins but a sweet and long mid palate. Complete and long. Much better balance than the over-polished 2015. Much better and unforced in 2016. | ££ | Saint Julien |
Langoa Barton | 93 | | Round, sweet mid palate and a mouthwatering finish. Charm and character. | ££ | Saint Julien |
Gloria | 92 | * | Cool nose, fine mid palate, good energy and a citrus lemony finish. | ££ | Saint Julien |
Talbot | 92 | | A bit bigger on the attack than some, but certainly not too sweet, and although a little unknit at this stage, there's a fine sap to the finish and it could evolve into an excellent Talbot. | ££ | Saint Julien |
Chateau Lagrange St Julien | 91 | | Cool restrained nose, super charge of tannins, and a sappy finish. A little bit unknit at this stage to be hyper-critical, but the intensity is there, hence the positive score. | ££ | Saint Julien |
Clos du Marquis | 90 | | This is very good, peppery, reserved nose, mid weight. Crystalline, crunchy fruit. | £ | Saint Julien |
Moulin Riche | 89 | | Rich, chewy, with a cocktail of cherry and briar fruit. Gives the impression of being more alcoholic than others. Good length. | £ | Saint Julien |
Petit Lion | 89 | | Liqueur-like and refined on the palate, quite a bit of acidity and right now, not the longest finish. | £ | Saint Julien |
Lalande Borie | 88 | | Mid weight, sappy and a reasonable finish. 2010 a better prospect at this level. | £ | Saint Julien |
la Petite Marquise | 88 | | Cassis nose, creamy and field herbs, including anise on the palate. Approachable and well-balanced with an attractive fresh finish, that is nevertheless on the short side. | £ | Saint Julien |
Croix de Beaucaillou | 88 | | Vinous, liqueur-like nose, sappy, sweet with soft, svelte fruit. Forward. | £ | Saint Julien |
MARGAUX
Producer | Score | Favourited | Description | Price bracket | Appellation |
Palmer | 98 | * | Lots of energy, the attack is incredible. 29 ha/ha due to a mildew attack resulting from a miscalculation (too little) of copper treatment on this biodynamic estate. Creamy briar fruit in a mid-weight+ frame. So much more elegant than 2015. Classy firm fruit. Sweet sherbetty mid-palate and an interesting herbaceousness on the finish. Beautiful wine. | ££££ | Margaux |
Margaux | 96 | | Refined nose, faintly perfumed. Cassis and energetic attack. A less harmonious mid palate than 2015, but still with a at least a good dab of summer pudding emerging with air. More of a sappy character, firm tannins lurking in background but barely surfacing. This could be very good but is somewhat backward today. | ££££ | Margaux |
Pavillon Rouge | 92 | | Subdued nose, saline. Savoury palate, quite powerful attack. Rather unusual 84% cabernet composition, signaling the ongoing and increasing seriousness of Margaux's second wine, lending some support to its market price. | £££ | Margaux |
Ego (de Palmer) | 94 | * | Delicious! Croquant fruit, fine lingering finish, Evident purity. | ££ | Margaux |
Chateau Durfort Vivens | 93 | * | Characterful and grippy. Quite crystalline, crunchy fruit, with black cherry infused mid palate. Chewy finish competes with persistence of fruit on a mid-weight frame. This is different to 2015, that came across as richer and more mineral (iron), but the minerality is still there. Time will tell which is the more satisfying, they are both excellent in their very different ways. Demeter certified this year (French biodynamic certification). | ££ | Margaux |
Brane Cantenac | 92 | | Rounded, showing as forward in the context of the vintage, back cherry infused mid-palate, lifted by freshness and with a very nice finish. | £ | Margaux |
Rauzan Segla | 90 | | Very classy as always but it's not 2015. | £ | Margaux |
Lascombes | 89 | | Nice attack, then mid palate fades away. Maybe just closed? | £ | Margaux |
Cantenac Brown | 89-91 | | Very nicely balanced, mid weight, not a patch on the 2015. Retasted May 17: Ripe, progressive, spiced and very energetic. This has come on leaps and bounds in 6 weeks since previous tasting. | £ | Margaux |
Prieuré Lichine | 88 | | Good energy, just lacking character. | £ | Margaux |
Malescot St. Exupery | 88 | | I worry that there's a bit of a hole in the middle of the palate. | £ | Margaux |
Kirwan | 88 | | OK, but not as exciting as the rather good 2015. | £ | Margaux |
D'Issan | 88-91 | | A bit stalky? Not a patch on the marvelously saline 2015. Retasted May 17: lifted and fine. | £ | Margaux |
Ferriere | 87 | | I love this Chateau for its direct character blending ripe fruit with a classic mould. I'm afraid 2016 isn't one of those vintages I can recommend. You'd be best looking backwards at least 5-10 years for value for money drinking. | £ | Margaux |
MOULIS EN MEDOC
Producer | Score | Favourited | Description | Price bracket | Appellation |
Mauvesin Barton | 92 | * | Superb texture and good length | £ | Moulis en Medoc |
Chasse Spleen | 92 | * | Liqueur-like texture, solid mid-palate and a fine finish. Very good indeed, and this should be a sensible buy as it always performs in the secondary market. | £ | Moulis en Medoc |
LISTRAC
Producer | Score | Favourited | Description | Price bracket | Appellation |
Forcas Borie | 89 | | Superb, fleshy merlot. A lovely near-term wine that should drink on release but has the stuffing to last. A surprise and another good showing for Moulis in 2016. | £ | Listrac |
MEDOC
Producer | Score | Favourited | Description | Price bracket | Appellation |
Les Grands Chenes | 91 | * | Juicy, fruity nose. Liqueur texture in the mouth with a controlled, fresh, mouthwatering finish. Young vines on what Bernard Magrez describes as a very impressive terroir with a little bit of gradient to it. This is not at all what I was expecting: classical and quite fine for what it is. | £ | Medoc |
Goulée | 88 | | Quite rich, warm inviting nose, not the longest. | £ | medoc |
Chapelle de Potensac | 87 | | Savoury nose. Approachable and easy, a certain density notwithstanding, then savouriness on the mid palate and a nice bright finish. Far less serious than Potensac but does that make it any the worse? | £ | Medoc |
Tour de By | 86 | | No | £ | Medoc |
Tour St Bonnet | 86 | | No | £ | Medoc |
Potensac | 86 | | Aromatic attack, a tannic charge and a slightly rustic finish. This is an agitated wine. Big chewy end-game. | £ | Medoc |
PESSAC LEOGNAN
Producer | Score | Favourited | Description | Price bracket | Appellation |
Mission Haut Brion | 97 | * | Vinous. Round, inviting nose. Aristocratic, juggling dense, firm fruit and a mid-weight+ stature. Fresh mid palate, mouthwatering, a fine thread of acidity coaxes the wine into a long, lingering finale. More approachable than Haut Brion and today all the better for it. | ££££ | Pessac-Leognan |
Haut Brion | 95 | | Floral notes precede a cool nose of ripe fruit. On the palate the fruit is firm, a little more withdrawn at first than MHB, showing a touch of oak, but the tannins are super-fine. Cool finish despite the obvious lurking size of the wine. Should show more in the future, for now probably quite impressive, and elemental just like 2015 was, not obviously showy. In terms of ranking I's suggest more like 1998 than 1989, and a notch or two below their super-serious and intense 2015. My guess is the quality of the Cabernet Franc last vintage was a step up. | £££ | Pessac-Leognan |
Carmes Haut Brion | 95 | * | Firm, proper and mouthwatering from partial whole bunches. Very good length. Classy and a standout in Pessac at this level. | ££ | Pessac-Leognan |
Domaine de Chevalier | 94 | * | Lightly seasoned nose. Firm, fruit, bright aromatic mid palate and finale. Sherbetty and refreshing. Fine tannins. Nicely judged weight. | ££ | pessac-Leognan |
Clarence de Haut Brion | 90 | | Fruity accessible nose, touch of white pepper. Textured entry allied to a lightness of feel, then a touch of warmth and caramel on the finish. | ££ | pessac-Leognan |
La Chapelle de La Mission Haut-Brion | 90 | | Vinous, fine tannins, crystalline fruit, and a licorice twist towards the back of the mid palate. Mid weight and delicious. | ££ | Pessac-Leognan |
Pape Clément | 90 | | I fell in love with Pape Clément last year. It had such exceptional balance, lift and class. The terroir truly expressed itself combined with a velour quality to the fruit and great definition thanks to its freshness. 2016 is a step backwards, with hints of over-ripeness within the rich fruit, and (for me) missing a sense of place. | ££ | pessac Leognan |
Malartic La Graviere | 91 | * | Superb, mid weight and moorish claret with gently sweet mid palate. | £ | Pessac-Leognan |
La Louviere | 89 | | Good mid weight, with some intensity and charm | £ | pessac-Leognan |
Esprit de Chevalier | 89 | | Aromatic character, present tannins and graves like dry finish. | £ | Pessac-Leognan |
Solitude | 88 | | Mid weight and nicely balanced | £ | pessac-Leognan |
Espault Martillac | 88 | | Padded savoury fruit. | £ | pessac-Leognan |
Chateau Carbonnieux | 88 | | A bit rustic | £ | Pessac-Leognan |
SAINT EMILION
Producer | Score | Favourited | Description | Price bracket | Appellation |
Cheval Blanc | 96 | | Subdued nose, stony and earthy. Very fine mid palate, progressive, aromatic attack, juicy dark licorice and spiced finish. | ££££ | Saint Emilion |
Figeac | 99 | * | Perfumed nose with jasmine. Energetic attack. Cedary mid palate. Fresh pithy attack. Then chewy bitter, dark cherry conclusion. This is excellent. A bit less of an eager labrador than 2015, it misses the rich summer pudding quality of last year but has greater elegance and is nigh on perfect. | £££ | Saint Emilion |
Petit Cheval | 91 | | Liqueur textured elegance, leading to a dark, slightly pruney finish | £££ | Saint Emilion |
Quintus | 91 | | Sweet fruited nose, good volume, nicely done. | ££ | Saint Emilion |
Quinault L'Enclos | 95 | * | Great fruity nose, very aromatic. Lovely liqueur like mouth feel on a river of flavour. Effortless and fine. Highly recommended. | £ | Saint Emilion |
Corbin | 93 | * | Quite fat, red fruit predominate, super intensity, quite creamy. Bramble and sloe. Very good. | £ | Saint Emilion |
Destieux | 92 | * | Liqueur eau de vie nose, character and energy, good intensity and a properly chewy finish. This will be good value. | £ | Saint Emilion |
Fombrauge | 89 | | Good intensity, tannic charge and grainy texture, with a slightly loose finish | £ | Saint Emilion |
Le Dragon de Quintus | 89 | | Fruity nose, firm fruited palate. | £ | Saint Emilion |
Labergorce | 87 | | Savoury, some intensity, cherry finish but slightly rustic | £ | Saint Emilion |
Saintayme | 87 | | Powerful, lifted attach, with a very firm, slightly bitter mid-palate. (Was this a bad tasting moment of mine?) | £ | Saint Emilion |
La Dominique | 87 | | Middle of the road, nothing to complain about - or to get excited about. 2015 considerably better. | £ | Saint Emilion |
POMEROL
Producer | Score | Favourited | Description | Price bracket | Appellation |
Vieux Chateau Certan | 97 | *
| Reserved nose, with a lovely infusion of eau de vie. There is a very substantial tannic charge in the mid palate, with plenty of intense dark, covered fruit and licorice to compete. Impressive but my guess is that will be a pretty backward wine for years to come. | £££ | Pomerol |
Eglise Clinet | 95 | | Intense, firm, backward, impressive. | £££ | Pomerol |
Conseillante | 95 | | Seasoned nose, cool. Creamy and dense cassis fruit, the attack is rather aromatic. The expansive mid palate is spiced. Chewy but soft and silken tannins on the progressively rich finish. Rich yet there's a crystalline aspect; a control and focus that constrains the eager fruit. | £££ | Pomerol |
l'Evangile | 92 | | Dark hued and correspondingly darker flavours than many in 2016. Cassis, mulberries and a hint of plum. There's a certain freshness that duels with a little warmth on the finish, like a welcome current of air alleviating an otherwise hot day. Those who enjoy bigger wines will attract to L'Evangile. | £££ | Pomerol |
Petit Villages | 95 | *
| Cedar nose, cool. Liqueur like texture, the fruit infused with eau de vie. Super charge of tannins, racy balanced and elegant. Is this the best Petit-Villages ever? | ££ | pomerol |
Vray Croix de Gay | 92 | *
| Reserved, elegant with a fine finish. Good vinosity. | ££ | Pomerol |
Chateau Rouget | 92 | | Good definition, intensity and freshness | ££ | Pomerol |
Petite Eglise | 90 | | An exercise in restraint for the vintage, but for now it presents as a bit angular. (Was this a bad tasting moment of mine?) | £ | Pomerol |
Chateau Beauregard | 89 | | Nice control on he finish though comes across as a little monolithic | £ | pomerol |
Chateau La Pointe | 88 | | Big attack, sticky ripe fruit, quite monolithic | £ | Pomerol |
LALANDE DE POMEROL
Producer | Score | Favourited | Description | Price bracket | Appellation |
Siaurac | 92 | * | Classy, balanced, controlled, rich and delicious. | £ | Lalande de Pomerol |
la Chenade | 88 | | Mid weight, sappy, pure, grippy bitter fruit. Good length and satisfying finish. What I don't get is a specific character. | £ | Lalande de Pomerol |
Cruzelles | 87 | | Bitter cherry, a little drying in the mid palate ((Was this a bad tasting moment of mine?) | £ | Lalande de Pomerol |
Picture: Wine Owners Ltd.
by Wine Owners
Posted on 2015-07-28