Clos Larrouyat Jurancon Sec Comete 2021 (6 Bottles) South-West, France

$456.00 GST Included

AUSTRALIA WIDE SHIPPING INCLUDED

Comète is a blend of 75% Petit Manseng and 25% Camaralet. The latter variety is hardly seen in Jurançon vineyards today, although the fact that two of the appellation’s more progressive domaines are invested (Dagueneau is the other) surely speaks for itself. Here, the Salharang’s Camaralet (which covers 10% of the vineyard) brings spicy/citrus cut to the juicier Manseng.

In the cellar, fermentations are wild, and the wines are raised in old oak barrels (purchased from Smith-Haut Lafitte). In cooler years, Salharang stirs the lees to promote depth and texture. The wines always pass through malo, which is needed to balance the extraordinary acidity gained in this cool terroir. Added sulphur is kept under 40 mg/L and the wines are seldom fined before bottling.

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About Clos Larrouyat wines

Our long, drawn-out search for a second Jurançon Domaine came to an emphatic end in March 2021 when we came across a young producer celebrating just its 10th anniversary. Clos Larrouyat is a tiny, family-run Domaine with pristine mineral whites that are the first to hold a torch to the quality and style of the wines we have tasted from Benjamin Dagueneau’s Jurançon outpost, Les Jardins de Babylon. The three-hectare Domaine lies in Gan in the commune of La Chapelle de Rousse. Just south of Pau, it’s a beautiful town well-known to lovers of the Tour de France as the staging post to the Pyrenees, with its panorama-dominating skyline.

After graduating from Bordeaux (where he studied under the learned Denis Dubourdieu), in 2011 Maxime Salharang and his wife Lucie began planting their vineyard on a block of land belonging to Maxime’s grandfather. The terroir here is some of Jurançon’s most interesting and sits on a rare band of Triassic limestone that runs through this part of the appellation. Atop the limestone bedrock lies a blanket of poudingue, a mixture of clay with chalk, crushed pebbles and large galets stones—the legacy of the nearby Ossau Valley.

Jurançon’s Petit Manseng forms the lion’s share of the plantings, followed by Gros Manseng and the rare, underused Camaralet; all planted on sheltered, east-facing slopes in the coolest part of the appellation. Paul Strang has written [in South-West France: The Wines and Winemakers] “The wines from this area are said to be more minerally and lively, to have what the French call toupet, real nerve.” This observation is certainly borne out in Salharang’s strikingly bright wines, which seldom ripen to 13° potential.

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