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E. Guigal, La Turque, Cote Rotie 2015
Type | Red |
Product number: 695996
£395.00
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THE PRODUCER
The Guigal name is synonymous with Cote Rotie, and Etienne Guigal’s arrival in
the appellation in 1946, was one of the main drivers behind the whole of the
Cote Rotie appellation’s subsequent success. Today Guigal produces nearly ten
million bottles of wine a year along the length of the Rhone Valley. In Cote
Rotie they own a stunning 40 hectares out of the appellation’s 323 hectares –
more than 12% of the whole – and these holdings are in prime parts of the
various vineyards that make Cote Rotie so complex.
Guigal originally brought themselves, and the appellation, to the world’s
attention with three single vineyard wines known now as the “La-Las” – La
Landonne, La Mouline and La Turque – wines aged for 42 months in new oak
barriques. The wines took on statuesque personalities, with the ability to age
for decades, and fame and fortune to match.
THE WINE
One of Guigal’s iconic single vineyard flagship wines, La Turque was the last
addition, first produced in 1985. Always composed of around 93% Syrah and 7%
Viognier, fruit for La Turque is sourced from a 1 hectare very steep vineyard
plot of around 30-year-old vines on the Cote Brune side of the Cote Rotie, not
far from where the La Landonne plot is. After fermentation and around four weeks
of maceration, the finished wine spends 42 months ageing in new French oak
barrels.
La Turque is characterised by having the ruggedness and vigour of the Cote Brune
combined with the grace and subtlety of the Cote Blonde, and as such it is
fuller and more structured than La Mouline but doesn’t quite have the power of
La Landonne. Only 400 cases are produced annually and this, along with the other
single vineyard flagships, regularly receive high scores from the world’s
leading wine critics.
INFORMATION
Type:Red
Vintage:2015
Country:France
Region:Northern RhoneSub region:Cote RotieGrape:93% Syrah & 7% ViognierStyle:
Bold and StructuredSweetness:DryABV:14%Drinking window:2022 - 2045Size:750mlFood
match:Lamb
CRITICS SCORES
We choose our wines based on a range of criteria(seehow we choose our wines)of
which critic scores is justone. Rather than simply highlight the best score to
promote a wine, our average critic score is calculated from the scores provided
by several respected wine critics, who we follow for specific regions. They do
not represent all critic scores and, wherever possible, we try and give more
weight to more recent reviews. Where appropriate we consider market-based scores
like Global Wine Score or Wine Searcher Average scores.
As a rule, we look to offer wines that achieve a92/100average critic score or
better and frankly a lot of very good wines simply don’t make the cut. As a
high-end provider we want to reflect that positioning in the quality of wines we
offer. Such wines are only a tiny fraction of those generally on offer in the
market. We believe that an average score is a more conservative and
representative approach, but it is still subjective and only offered as a guide
to our customers, who will (and should) do their own research. We will add
individual critic scores to our website in the future.
The Guigal name is synonymous with Cote Rotie, and Etienne Guigal’s arrival in
the appellation in 1946, was one of the main drivers behind the whole of the
Cote Rotie appellation’s subsequent success. Today Guigal produces nearly ten
million bottles of wine a year along the length of the Rhone Valley. In Cote
Rotie they own a stunning 40 hectares out of the appellation’s 323 hectares –
more than 12% of the whole – and these holdings are in prime parts of the
various vineyards that make Cote Rotie so complex.
Guigal originally brought themselves, and the appellation, to the world’s
attention with three single vineyard wines known now as the “La-Las” – La
Landonne, La Mouline and La Turque – wines aged for 42 months in new oak
barriques. The wines took on statuesque personalities, with the ability to age
for decades, and fame and fortune to match.
THE WINE
One of Guigal’s iconic single vineyard flagship wines, La Turque was the last
addition, first produced in 1985. Always composed of around 93% Syrah and 7%
Viognier, fruit for La Turque is sourced from a 1 hectare very steep vineyard
plot of around 30-year-old vines on the Cote Brune side of the Cote Rotie, not
far from where the La Landonne plot is. After fermentation and around four weeks
of maceration, the finished wine spends 42 months ageing in new French oak
barrels.
La Turque is characterised by having the ruggedness and vigour of the Cote Brune
combined with the grace and subtlety of the Cote Blonde, and as such it is
fuller and more structured than La Mouline but doesn’t quite have the power of
La Landonne. Only 400 cases are produced annually and this, along with the other
single vineyard flagships, regularly receive high scores from the world’s
leading wine critics.
INFORMATION
Type:Red
Vintage:2015
Country:France
Region:Northern RhoneSub region:Cote RotieGrape:93% Syrah & 7% ViognierStyle:
Bold and StructuredSweetness:DryABV:14%Drinking window:2022 - 2045Size:750mlFood
match:Lamb
CRITICS SCORES
We choose our wines based on a range of criteria(seehow we choose our wines)of
which critic scores is justone. Rather than simply highlight the best score to
promote a wine, our average critic score is calculated from the scores provided
by several respected wine critics, who we follow for specific regions. They do
not represent all critic scores and, wherever possible, we try and give more
weight to more recent reviews. Where appropriate we consider market-based scores
like Global Wine Score or Wine Searcher Average scores.
As a rule, we look to offer wines that achieve a92/100average critic score or
better and frankly a lot of very good wines simply don’t make the cut. As a
high-end provider we want to reflect that positioning in the quality of wines we
offer. Such wines are only a tiny fraction of those generally on offer in the
market. We believe that an average score is a more conservative and
representative approach, but it is still subjective and only offered as a guide
to our customers, who will (and should) do their own research. We will add
individual critic scores to our website in the future.