Chateau PEY LA TOUR 2010

“Give me books, French wine, fruit, fine weather and a little music played out of doors by somebody I do not know.” …..  John Keats

With prices for some bottles of French Bordeaux getting so much press as their prices crest a thousand dollars plus per bottle, is it any wonder many Americans avoid those aisles in the wine shops?  Even those who may ask for a Cote du Rhone (nothing wrong with that) have taken to American red-blends (nothing wrong there either). But for those who have never tasted Bordeaux, quelle dommage!  Having enjoyed French Bordeaux in 1969-1972, I could scoop up Lafite-Rothschild, Latour, Mouton Rothschild, Margaux and Petrus for less than the price of some premium cigars today.

Quelle dommage indeed!  French blending is different. Blame it on terroir. Blame it on old world style. Blame it on French oak if that makes you feel better, but while you may debate whether this aspect or that is better, no wine lover can deny that it is different. And, as the French say, vive la difference because it is the many differences in wine grapes and wine making and soil and climate and so many other things that make tasting wine so enjoyable.

So while Premiers Crus are now priced out of reality for most people (I am “most people”), you can still enjoy Bordeaux wine that offers a taste of this uniqueness and at a value price that is shockingly friendly.  If you agree that $13 to $16 is shockingly friendly, please read on.  Chateau Pey La Tour is a Bordeaux Superieur from the Aquitance region (see map) about halfway between Bordeaux (the town) and St. Emillon.  The Dourthe family, with a wine history dating back to 1840, bought Pey La Tour in 1990. But even in 1929, Roger and Andre Dourthe (4th generation) were focusing on terroir and quality improvement.     

Without getting into the tiresome debate on the value of point ratings, the fact that James Suckling gives this wine 88 points and Wine Enthusiast awards it 85/100 demonstrates that this wine has drawn attention.  Now add that Chateau Pey La Tour has an average retail price of $15 and that you get to experience (perhaps for the first time) what a Bordeaux blend is and you have real value in the taste and the experience.

The Chateau’s soil is clay-sand on a limestone base with small gravel as seen throughout Bordeaux.  My nose detected a slight bent toward new world style with fruit being slightly forward and sweet (but not over ripe).  Still, the wine was balanced, typically French, with no bullying notes.  A blend of 8% Merlot, 9% Cabernet Sauvignon and 7% Cabernet-Franc (blend percentages may change each year), I enjoyed tastes of plum, raspberry, violet, some blueberry and a hint of earthy forest floor with herbs.  The finish is pleasingly dry and a nice contrast to the seemingly sweet beginning.  Tannins are smooth and the wine is easy drinking, eminently enjoyable and, at $15, comes without “buyer’s remorse.” 

Pey La Tour carries the “Bordeaux AOC” designation. While that is the lowest ranked classification a wine can be awarded and still enjoy vin de Bordeaux status, it has no pretentions toward being a Premiers Cru, nor does it come with the pretentious price of one. What it does purport to be is affordable, premium Bordeaux wine; something that has become a rarity the last forty years. Speaking of forty years, Chateau Pey La Tour is not a wine to cellar for that long (as are some). Nor would this wine improve much over time. Nonetheless, it should hold well to 2016 and it would be interesting to enjoy a few bottles over the years and see how they develop.

Sante!
…………………  Jim
Follow Wine Mizer on Facebook for mini reviews, fun facts, recipes and more.


LEFT BEND 2010 Cabernet Sauvignon

“Wine is the most healthful and most hygienic of beverages.”Louis Pasteur

Can anyone discuss the taste of a Cabernet Sauvignon without mentioning cassis?  Well, it’s obviously too late for me to do that, so I’ll put off that description for a moment and instead talk balance. Balance as in a wine of balance; a flying Walenda of balance.  This is my second tasting of the Left Bend winery’s offerings; the winery being a collection of small vineyards scattered throughout the Santa Cruz Mountains AVA. (For more on this AVA and the winery, see:  http://www.winemizer.net/2013/12/left-bend-2010-syrah.html 

I opened the Cab without decanting or aerating and was impressed with its immediately pleasing and balanced nose: no sharp single notes; instead a harmony of scent: black berry, black cherry and cassis …. oops, there’s that word again.  It’s deep purple in the glass, proud to be a Cabernet Sauvignon and showy of it. This is a viscous wine, silky and smooth in the mouth, luxuriously coating the palette like plum juice, but not one-dimensional. Instead, the wine offers tastes of its own nose with taste of black berry, black cherries, plum and … yes, cassis.

I guess I’ll just have to deal with that cassis issue.  Cassis is the berry fruit of a shrub not allowed in the U.S. My instinct is that some people using that term to describe the taste of Cabernet Sauvignon do so out of rote, not experience:  Hear it, read it, repeat it and pass it on and have someone else do the same. Cassis is another gift in the world of pleasing tastes and you don’t have to leave the country to enjoy it. You can buy (see photo) cassis liqueur (not crème de ….. unless you want to imagine what the taste of cassis and dairy combined with wine taste like). And doing so will give you the advantage of actually having tasted cassis, instead of just having read the word in a wine review.

Anyway, there definitely is cassis in Left Bend’s inaugural release of their 2010 Cabernet Sauvignon.  It is most pleasing, but even more impressive is how it is in balance with the wine’s other notes. And while cabs tend to be tannic (and good for aging) this wine having aged 27 months in barrel offers smoothed tannins and can be enjoyed now. It has a lingering but clean finish that develops and builds in the mouth then ends nicely with clean acid.    

Somebody has to absorb the cost of French barrels and the cost of cellaring, and it can’t forever be the winery if you expect them to remain in business next year. So you’ll find this wine at about $45. Value being a relative thing, I would value this wine along with cabs I have tasted that cost more.  As I do with most wines I taste, I vacuum pump the bottles, store them in a cool / dark place and taste them again the next day (oh, the work of it all).  Unlike Left Bend’s Syrah, the Cabernet Sauvignon did not improve.  So the bad news is you may have to finish the wine in its first day. And the good news is that you may have to finish the wine in its first day.       

The biggest challenge to enjoying this wine is finding it. With production limited to 30 cases (not a typo), it is unlikely you will find it locally or at any “big box” retailer.  Contact winery directly for information.

Cheers!
…………….   Jim
Follow Wine Mizer on Facebook for mini reviews, fun facts, recipes and more.

Left Bend Winery
12255 New Ave.
San Martin, CA 9504


* Sample was provided by winery for review
                                 
TECH SPECS FOR THIS WINE:
Clones: 4 and377
Alc:         13.8%
TA (acidity)         6.3 g/l
 pH:        3.57
Hand harvested, sorted and destemmed
100% whole berry fermentation
Punched down twice daily
10% oak cooperage (66% new [French} 40% neutral)
27 months barrel aging
Natural malolactic – 100%
Not filtered or fined