2008 Châteauneuf-du-Pape Marie Beurrier
France
Châteauneuf Du Pape
Southern Rhône
Red
Rhone Blend
00
Subscriber Access Only
or Sign Up
You'll Find The Article Name Here
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Integer vitae aliquam odio. Aliquam purus diam, tempor et consectetur vitae, eleifend ac quam. Proin nec mauris ac odio iaculis semper. Integer posuere pharetra aliquet. Nullam tincidunt sagittis est in maximus. Donec sem orci, vulputate ac quam non, consectetur fermentum diam. In dignissim magna id orci dignissim convallis. Integer sit amet placerat dui. Aliquam pharetra ornare nulla at vulputate. Sed dictum, mi eget fringilla lacinia, nisl tortor condimentum mi, vitae ultrices quam diam ac neque. Donec hendrerit vulputate felis, fringilla varius massa.
- By Author Name on Month Date, Year
Henri Bonneau made it clear to me this year that highly structured and/or overly ripe vintages of Chateauneuf-du-Pape aren't his personal preference "because the complexity and terroir are obscured."In fact, he personally prefers the relatively graceful 2006 Celestins to the far more masculine 2005 bottling, and has some (but not many) misgivings about the tannins of 2010, at least at this stage, believing that they will require plenty of barrel aging to show their best.He used some of his colorful female analogies to make his point about finesse over brawniness, opining that "Chateauneuf should be elegant, after all, not brutal."Bonneau told me that he thinks too many wines are being rushed into bottle these days, to the detriment of their character."Everything is being done with speed in mind now in winemaking, elevage and bottling.People want the quickest solution and lack patience, for almost everything, not just wine, but for all work, and so quality suffers."We tried a bottle of the 2005 Celestins at the end of our tasting and while it is still distinctly young and wound up, its depth of fruit is obvious, as are its tannins.Aeration brought up a sexy floral quality as well as a touch of candied licorice and peppery spices.Readers fortunate enough to get hold of this wine are strongly advised to let it gather dust in their cellar for at least another five years and ideally longer.
00
Subscriber Access Only
or Sign Up
You'll Find The Article Name Here
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Integer vitae aliquam odio. Aliquam purus diam, tempor et consectetur vitae, eleifend ac quam. Proin nec mauris ac odio iaculis semper. Integer posuere pharetra aliquet. Nullam tincidunt sagittis est in maximus. Donec sem orci, vulputate ac quam non, consectetur fermentum diam. In dignissim magna id orci dignissim convallis. Integer sit amet placerat dui. Aliquam pharetra ornare nulla at vulputate. Sed dictum, mi eget fringilla lacinia, nisl tortor condimentum mi, vitae ultrices quam diam ac neque. Donec hendrerit vulputate felis, fringilla varius massa.
- By Author Name on Month Date, Year
Once again I left my annual tasting in Bonneau's Cellar That Time Forgot with the distinct impression that the wines here have become, heaven forbid, less rustic and wild in recent years. Nothing has changed in the cellar, that's for sure, although it is actually a bit more organized than in the past, with the most notable change being actual names and vintages of wines chalked onto barrels and tanks. Beyond that, everything's pretty much in the same time warp as ever. Bonneau seemed amused (he's always pretty amused, in fact) by the idea that I found the wines fruitier and easier to read than in the past. "Maybe that's the vintages but maybe it's just you," he said.
00
Subscriber Access Only
or Sign Up
You'll Find The Article Name Here
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Integer vitae aliquam odio. Aliquam purus diam, tempor et consectetur vitae, eleifend ac quam. Proin nec mauris ac odio iaculis semper. Integer posuere pharetra aliquet. Nullam tincidunt sagittis est in maximus. Donec sem orci, vulputate ac quam non, consectetur fermentum diam. In dignissim magna id orci dignissim convallis. Integer sit amet placerat dui. Aliquam pharetra ornare nulla at vulputate. Sed dictum, mi eget fringilla lacinia, nisl tortor condimentum mi, vitae ultrices quam diam ac neque. Donec hendrerit vulputate felis, fringilla varius massa.
- By Author Name on Month Date, Year
Henri Bonneau joked that he was "an original natural winemaker but I didn't know it until it became a fashion." He was referring to the cultish wave of non-interventionist wines that has swept across France and much of the wine world. "I protect the forests because I don't use any new oak, and my cleaning regimen is water and a brush, with a little sulfur burnt in the casks for safety. That's it." Bonneau noted that 2006 is a very underrated vintage because the wines aren't powerful. "The main point is that they have superb balance," he told me, "which is essential if you want wine to age well." Bonneau works roughly six hectares of vines spread across ten parcels, and his fruit, which is almost all grenache and harvested at ridiculously low yields (around 10 hectoliters per hectare) is not destemmed. As in past years, the names that I have given to each wine noted below are the ones that Bonneau told me they're likely to receive down the road. But there are never any guarantees. For instance, last year he told me he was pretty sure that he wouldn't make a Reserve des Celestins from 2008, but this fall he said that he was still holding out that possibility, hence my two notes for his 2008s this year. I was shocked, in a very good way, by the finesse and clarity of Bonneau's 2008s and 2009s, which showed little to none of the wild, volatile character that can mark these wines in cask.