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Château Couhins-Lurton Red 2011

Château Couhins-Lurton rouge 2011

1*Étoile

Hachette

15,5/20

Bettane & Desseauve

15/20

RVF

15/20

Gault & Millau

15/20

Jancis Robinson

88/100

Wine Spectator

“What a modern expression this lovely wine offers! Crisp black berries mingle with subtle, well-balanced spices. The inviting palate reveals a woody fruitiness where silky tannins dance with joy.” (Les Meilleurs Vins de France 2015 - Gault Millau) This wine is shipped in a wooden case with any order of 6 bottles.

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Estate

Château Couhins-Lurton

Vintage

2011

Designation

Pessac-Léognan

Region

Bordeaux

Grape varieties

77% Merlot, 23% Cabernet Sauvignon

Terroirs

gravelly soils

Viticulture

reasoned

Grape Harvest

manual

Winemaking

fermentation in temperature-controlled stainless steel tanks

Livestock farming

12 months in oak barrels (40% new)

Eye

a gathered maroon dress, almost black

Nose

refined and elegant aromas of dark fruit with hints of toast

Palate

Smooth, velvety, and very rich. Notes of black fruit, chocolate, and blond tobacco. Well-integrated tannins. Very full-bodied

Serve

at 16-18°C

Open

1 hour before

Drink from

2016

Drink before

2026

Food and wine pairings

Food and wine pairings

It pairs well with wood pigeon or chicken with chanterelle mushrooms, crispy chicken with soy sauce, or more generally, white or red meats, game, and a cheese platter...

More information at Château Couhins-Lurton

More information at Pessac-Léognan

Bettane & Desseauve

Bettane & Desseauve

Wine rated 15.5/20 (Very good wine)

Rated estate (2017 guide): 3 stars (High-quality production, setting the standard in its sector)

About the wine:

Deep color, notes of blackberries and peonies, a fairly broad, smooth attack, noticeable tannins of moderate finesse, and a balanced finish.

About the estate:

The estate has been restructured and the château brilliantly renovated by André Lurton, who, along with La Louvière, has made it his flagship property in the Graves region. Couhins produces a white wine of remarkable finesse, distinctly Sauvignon-style, yet one that develops, with age, the spicy and mineral notes typical of the terroir. With younger vines, the red wine is gradually gaining depth.

Hachette Wine Guide

Guide Hachette des vins

Wine noted (guide 2015) 1*Star (Very successful wine)

About the wine:

Made from 67% Merlot and 33% Cabernet Sauvignon, the 2011 vintage offers an expressive and complex bouquet of black fruit, spices, leather, and forest floor notes. A vibrant, intensely fruity, and subtly oaky attack leads into a full-bodied, dense, robust, and generous palate. It shows great promise for the future.

Gault & Millau Wine Guide

Guide des Vins Gault & Millau

Wine rated (2015 guide) 15/20 (Very good)

About the wine:

What a modern character this lovely wine has! Crisp black berries mingle with subtle, well-balanced spices. The inviting palate reveals a woody fruitiness where silky tannins dance with joy.

RVF - The French Wine Review / Guide to the Best Wines of France

RVF - La Revue du Vin de France / Guide des Meilleurs Vins de France

Wine rated (2016 guide) 15/20 (Good wine)

Rated estate (2017 guide) 1*Star (Up-and-coming stars or quality winemakers producing wines of a high standard—you won’t be disappointed when tasting the wines from these estates)

About the estate:

It took the tenacious André Lurton no less than forty years to successfully rebuild nearly the entire estate by 1992. Classified exclusively for white wines, the production—overseeing which are oenologists Denis Dubourdieu and Valérie Lavigne—is entirely dedicated to Sauvignon Blanc, yielding crystalline expressions of this grape variety. In its youth, the wine may seem to express the primary qualities of Sauvignon Blanc more than those of its terroir, but it often acquires surprising complexity with age, as tastings of ten-year-old vintages have already demonstrated. On the red side, Merlot dominates in a vineyard that is beginning to age a bit, but which has long produced fairly light wines. With the arrival of Michel Rolland and his team, things have been moving in the right direction since 2003 for the reds! A clear pursuit of denser, silkier, and more seductive wines is underway. In 2014 and 2015, a small volume of red wine underwent full vinification in 30 barrels and 4 9-hectoliter casks. And these initiatives will certainly gain momentum with the arrival in 2015 of Christine Lurton at the helm of the Pessac-Léognan estates owned by André Lurton, the man with 600 hectares of vineyards—in which Crédit Agricole is a major shareholder.

Wine Spectator

Wine Spectator

Wine rated (2014 guide) 88/100 (Good wine)

Jancis Robinson

Jancis Robinson

Wine rated (2015 guide) 15/20

No rating available
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