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Moulin de Gassac - Hérault Albaran PGI 2024

Moulin de Gassac - IGP Hérault Albaran 2024

91/100

James Suckling

(Notes for the 2022 vintage)
powerful
structured
pot-au-feu
value for money

“A wine with a strong personality!”

Albaran is a superb, affordable wine with notes of ripe and candied fruit. On the palate, its silky, enveloping tannins lend it roundness and warmth. An ideal red wine to enhance your fall dishes—at a great price!

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21156 reviews
-20€

from €99 on your first order

Estate

Mas de Daumas Gassac

Vintage

Albaran

Vintage

2024

Designation

IGP Hérault

Region

Languedoc

Grape varieties

60% Cabernet Sauvignon, 40% Syrah

Terroirs

Limestone slopes dating from the Jurassic period for the Syrah, and slopes of Rognacian limestone sandstone and marl for the Cabernet

Viticulture

Sustainable, Terra Vitis

Grape harvest

Manuals

Wine making

Made in the Médoc, slow maceration (about 20 days) with regular pumping over and racking

Livestock farming

8 to 9 months in barrels that have previously held one to three wines

Alcohol content

14% %

Eye

A beautiful, deep ruby color with brick-red highlights

Nose

Expressive and complex, with notes of ripe candied fruit and fruit preserved in alcohol

Mouth

An initial burst of very ripe red fruit, followed by silky, round, and warm tannins with a lingering finish featuring toasty notes; a structured and balanced finish

Serve

Between 18° et 20°C

Open

1 hour before

Drink before

2028

Food and wine pairings

Food and wine pairings

Pairs well with a Périgord salad, a Bordeaux-style rib of beef, rabbit fricassee, pot-au-feu, Roquefort …

More information on Mas de Daumas Gassac

More information on IGP Hérault

Bettane & Desseauve

Bettane & Desseauve

Rated estate (2025 guide) 3 stars (High-quality production, serving as a benchmark in its sector)

About the estate:

Much has been written about the Daumas-Gassac estate. Aimé Guibert—who passed away in 2016—had identified high-quality terroirs in Aniane capable of producing a Cabernet Sauvignon that was not permitted under the local appellations. For his white wine, he also chose to produce a blend of Chardonnay, Viognier, and Petit Manseng, which similarly barred him from the appellation. His estate therefore produces a red (an 80% blend of non-cloned Cabernet Sauvignon accompanied by some twenty other grape varieties, most of them rare) and a white (also a multi-varietal blend) under the Hérault IGP, which he has successfully positioned at a price point unprecedented in this category. The white is aged in stainless steel tanks, while the red is partially aged in barrels. Both the white and red wines possess unmatched purity, precision, and complexity, and age remarkably well. The range is rounded out by pleasant IGP wines, designed to be enjoyed young. A sure bet in the region.

Hachette Wine Guide

Guide Hachette des vins

Rated estate (2025 guide) Award-winning wines (This producer's wines are regularly recognized by the guide)

About the estate:

A fine example of the rise of Languedoc wines across the five continents, this estate—founded in 1971 by Aimé and Véronique Guibert—caused a stir a few years ago by offering local wines at the same price as top Bordeaux wines. It has, however, remained at the forefront of the industry, producing wines of consistent quality and remarkable aging potential. A benchmark estate now run by the founders’ sons.

RVF - La Revue du Vin de France / Guide to the Best Wines of France

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

Rated estate (2025 guide) 1*Star (Up-and-coming stars or quality winemakers producing good wines; you won't be disappointed when tasting the wines from these estates)

About the estate:

Aimé Guibert was a leading figure in the revival of Languedoc’s wine industry and its rise to prominence first in France and then internationally, after purchasing his old farmhouse nestled along the banks of the Gassac River. He helped restore the potential of the limestone terroir of the Upper Gassac Valley, composed of glacial gravel, in the foothills of the Cévennes. The wide diurnal temperature range and the nature of the soils convinced him that this was a great terroir for Cabernet Sauvignon, which would be sourced from mass selection of the finest Bordeaux châteaux. Aimé’s sons—Samuel, Gaël, Roman, and Basile—now steer the estate’s destiny. Daumas Gassac has distinguished itself through its potential and longevity. Like the world’s great Cabernet Sauvignons, it is best enjoyed after at least a decade. While the estate’s legacy is immense and undeniable, and the quality of the reds is consistently high (even if the wines do not necessarily reflect the terroir’s identity), we expect much more from the entire range.

James Suckling

James Suckling

Wine rating (2023 guide) 91/100 (2022 vintage)

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