Wine Details

Les Douze
France • Languedoc • Fitou
2004
01.06.07
1
9.99
Auchan
2001
-
Jancis Robinson
I was impressed by how much depth of flavour there is in the 2001 - a marvellous vintage throughout southern France which in this case is already showing a little attractive bottle age - not often delivered for under six pounds. 01.05.2004
Notes
Alcohol: 14%
http://www.jancisrobinson.com/articles/wineweek0504
This is an entirely new wine from one of the most enterprising, and well-situated, co-ops in France, Les Producteurs de Mont Tauch in the village of Tuchan, high in the rugged hills of the southern Corbières in Cathar castle country. This is not one of the sleepy wine producers entirely out of touch with international consumers that are compromising France's future as a wine exporter (see France discovers non-French wine in purple prose).

In fact this very wine was dreamt up specifically to appeal to Mont Tauch's most important export market, the UK. The packaging is modern and stylish and the concept (you have to have a concept at this price level) is presumably that it will appeal to sports-loving wine drinkers. It's a blend, supposedly, of the best lots of the local grapes Carignan, Grenache and Syrah, from 12 (douze) particularly good growers who supply the co-op. Each of their names is listed down the long dark label, as though they are team members. Thus, we travel down the bottle from Michael (mysteriously not Michel) to Jean-Luc.


But what really matters of course is what's inside the bottle. To me this is a sort of poor man's version of the impressive, and deeply terroir-driven wines produced just a few miles south west of Tuchan in the upper Agly valley around Maury which I described in detail in wine news last year. Schist is the dominant soil type in both and this is precisely the sort of wine that has no need of oak.

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