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In Stock
Parker 85-87 Points
Château Jean Faure 2018
Only 2 Bottles

Château Jean Faure 2018

AC Saint-Emilion Grand cru classé, 6000 ml

Assortment Baur au Lac Vins
Grape variety: Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Malbec
Producer: Diverse
Origin: France / Bordeaux / St-Emilion
In stock
Article nr. 24805614
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Last update 1.5.2024 09:38. To make a reservation, please contact your desired shop.
Grape variety: Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Malbec
Producer: Diverse
Origin: France / Bordeaux / St-Emilion

Description

Unusual blend with not only high Cabernet Franc but a dash of Malbec. It makes it an atypical St Emilion but a rather lovely one. It’s austere, as you might expect, but has real juiciness throughout, and you can feel the flesh of the fruits against the walls of the tannins, with a spicy finish. Look forward to retasting in bottle. -Quote from Decanter-

Attributes

Origin: France / Bordeaux / St-Emilion
Grape variety: Merlot, Cabernet Franc, Malbec
Ripening potential: 5 to 15 years after harvest
Drinking temperature: 16 to 18 °C
Volume: 14.5 %
Note: Contains sulphites
Grape variety

Merlot

Everybody’s darling

Merlot is the most charming member of the Bordeaux family. It shines with rich colour, fragrant fullness, velvety tannins and sweet, plummy fruit. It even makes itself easy for the vintner, as it matures without issue in cool years as well. This is in contrast to the stricter Cabernet Sauvignon, which it complements as a blending partner. Its good qualities have made the Merlot famous worldwide. At over 100,000 hectares, it is the most-planted grape in France. It also covers large areas in California, Italy, Australia and recently in Eastern Europe. The only catch is that pure Merlot varieties rarely turn out well. Its charm is often associated with a lack of substance. Only the best specimens improve with maturity. They then develop complex notes of leather and truffles. This succeeds in the top wines from the Bordeaux appellation of Pomerol and those from Ticino, among others.

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Merlot

Malbec

New Home, New Fortune

The Malbec once belonged to the classic assortment of varieties from Bordeaux. But it was demanding to cultivate, and in the changeable climate of the Bordelais it often became green and herbaceous, so winemakers replaced it with Merlot in the middle of the 20th century. Luckily, the Malbec found a new home in Argentina. In 1868, a Frenchman brought the first stocks along to the land of the Andes. Today, the Malbec is the most-planted variety there. Especially in Mendoza, it shows what it can do: it yields very dark, well-structured wines with aromas of black fruit, violets and game. They just call out for an Argentinean steak! The Malbec has its origins in Cahors, in southwestern France. There, it is kept today under the name Cot. Due to their earthy tannins, in the middle ages the growths from this area were also called "the black wines of Cahors".

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Malbec
Subregion

St-Emilion

Saint-Emilion: unique Bordeaux idyll

A unique terroir, unique assemblage formula and a unique classification: Saint-Emilion occupies an exclusive position in Bordeaux. The wines are not as angular as in the Médoc, but not quite as opulent as in Pomerol. In terms of maturity, the wines fall between the early-maturing Pomerols and the Médoc growths, which require plenty of time. In assemblages, Merlot often plays the formative role. But Cabernet Franc also contributes greatly to the unique Saint-Emilion feel.

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Saint Emilion S
Region

Bordeaux

Bordeaux: high prestige, high quality

With a total area of around 115,000 hectares, Bordeaux may not be France’s largest wine-growing region, but it is certainly its most prestigious. The range of wines produced here today is enormous: ranging from red everyday wines with a great relationship between price and quality to exclusive, and accordingly expensive, premier crus. Elegant white wines and noble sweet specialties round out the spectrum.

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Bordeaux S1
Country

France

France – Philosophy in a bottle

According to French philosophy, wine should be an expression of the soil and climate. They use the word “terroir” to describe this. Terroir makes every wine different, and many especially good. French wine is regarded worldwide as an expression of cultural perfection. The French believe that humans are responsible for the quality of the berries, the vine variety for their character, and nature for the quantity. This philosophy can be expressed succinctly as: “the truth is the vineyard, not the man.”

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Frankreich S
Epicurean profile
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Rating
Parker 85-87 Points

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