Gerard Boulay Sancerre Rosé Sibylle 2022 (6 Bottles) Sancerre, France

$425.00 GST Included

AUSTRALIA WIDE SHIPPING INCLUDED

Let it first be said that Gérard Boulay makes a stunning rosé. While Sancerre is not well known as a port of call for rosé lovers, there are a number of top growers crafting some of France’s finest examples (see Alphonse Mellot and Vacheron for example). This beauty is drawn from Boulay’s mature Pinot Noir vines dotted around Chavignol.

Boulay selects from roughly 0.8 hectares of vines for the rosé (and sometimes a little more in vintages that are difficult for reds). This fruit was hand-harvested and left to macerate for 24 hours, before pressing and wild fermentation in enamel-lined tank. The press wine and free-run juice were vinified separately before blending. There was no malo and no oak.

Boulay’s UK importer has asked, “Is there a better Rosé in France?” We work with many great producers and so we’ll be a touch more diplomatic–it’s up there with the best. For a start, it’s a beautifully coloured wine, more like a light red than a typical rosé with a pale grenadine hue. The palate is effortless, gliding across the tongue with a lacy yet juicy personality, offering up loads of ripe pinot fruit and floral aromas and flavours. It has the length of flavour and vibrant freshness on the close that is so typical of this great grower’s wines. In other words, it’s a knockout.

“Limpid orange-pink. Highly perfumed aromas of mineral-tinged red berries and citrus fruits, plus a suave floral nuance that gains strength as the wine opens up. Concentrated yet lithe on the palate, offering intense red currant, bitter cherry, rose pastille and anise flavors that unfurl and turn sweeter on the back half. The mineral and floral notes return on the penetrating finish, which hangs on with strong tenacity.” 92 points, Josh Raynolds, Vinous

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Description

ALPHONSE MELLOT : Biodynamic Sancerre

REVIEWS

“True artists with Sauvignon… [the Mellot family’s] worthy aspirations have gradually raised them to the peaks of the great Sauvignons of the world. Alphonse Mellot’s white Sancerres are amongst the most brilliant and pure illustrations of the genius of the Sauvignon grape.” The World’s Greatest Wines, Michel Bettane and Thierry Desseauve

“A touch eccentric, and always boiling over with ideas, he [Alphonse Mellot] has taken the world of sauvignon blanc to new heights. The estate, though, is not a one-man show. With 55 hectares of organically farmed vineyards, [and] 45 employees… it is an orchestra conducted by a sometime delirious genius.” Joel B. Payne, vinousmedia.com

HISTORY

If anyone doubted Sauvignon Blanc’s place in the pantheon of Noble White Grapes (and many do), a walk through Alphonse Mellot’s famed La Moussière vineyard or a taste of any bottle of Mellot Sancerre should set matters straight. Mellot’s Sauvignons are capable of recalling great white Burgundy, sometimes Chablis, sometimes Côte d’Or. And they typically age better than most white burgundies do these days! Jacqueline Friedrich summed it up perfectly when she wrote; “Each Sancerre [from Mellot] is at its most elegant: discreetly herbaceous, a beautiful weave of citrus, oak and minerals.”

For those of you new to the wines of Alphonse Mellot, some context is important. For much of its recent history, the Mellot family has crafted its miraculous Sauvignons in a highly popular region where standards were continuously dropping and the viticulture and wine making was becoming more and more industrial. Alphonse Mellot was, and is, one of the beacons of quality in a region where today, some 98% of fruit is machine harvested. The terroir of Sancerre is beautiful, one of Europe’s great limestone soils. Unfortunately, the region’s immense popularity has encouraged apathy and opportunism and Sancerre remains very much a case of ‘All this Useless Beauty’, as Elvis Costello put it – great terroir full of largely untapped potential. Of course Mellot is not alone in bucking the trend: names like Cotat, Vacheron, Pinard and Boulay have also maintained very high standards. But the outspoken Mellot is the most visible, as the late Didier Dageneau had been in Pouilly.

La Moussière, where the estate’s most historic white wines are grown, is one of the most remarkable and best kept vineyards in France. It is a beautiful, south facing, rolling slope, with deep, limestone-rich, ploughed soils. The vines are densely planted (8,000-10,000 vines per-hectare) and there is a large percentage of old vines. Incredibly, 40 people are employed to manage 47 hectares! If anyone can be said to be guardians of Sancerre terrior, it is these hardy souls pruning through winter on the frigid slopes of La Moussière. Here, everything is done by hand, biodynamically and to immaculate standards. The winery is full of the kind of equipment (sorting tables, conveyor belts, pneumatic presses, large wooden temperature controlled fermentation tanks, etc.) that you only typically find in the finest Burgundy domains – absolutely no expense has been spared.

The La Moussière vineyard, Sancerre.

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