Site icon Tony Aspler, the Wine Guy

A Wine Lover’s Diary, part 705: Château Le Puy

wld_180827_langlais

Harold Langlais

I had lunch recently with Harold Langlais of Château Le Puy, the only Bordeaux property I know that has Carménère in its vineyard (1 hectare). They also have 3 hectares of Semillon and some Ugni Blanc planted. Le Puy, in the Côtes de Francs, is one of the oldest wineries in Bordeaux, dating back to 1610. Fourteen generations of the Amoreau family have grown wine here. They were also the first St. Emilion château to practice organic winemaking.

The 2014 vintage of Château Le Puy Emilien, which we tasted over lunch at Can Can Bistro on Harbord Street, is a blend of 85% Merlot, 7% Cabernet Sauvignon, 6% Cabernet Franc, 1% Carménère and 1% Malbec: Deep ruby in colour with a cedary blackcurrant nose lifted with oak spice and a floral top note; medium-bodied, dry, savoury, red and blackcurrant flavours carried on lively acidity. A beautifully balanced wine with well-integrated oak. ($29.95: 91 points)

The Amoreau family is lobbying the government to create a special appellation for a 3-hectare plot called “Les rocs” (85% Merlot, 15% Cabernet Sauvignon) from which they produce a wine called Barthélemy. We tasted the 2011 vintage: Mature ruby in colour; cedary, cigar box nose, lightly peppery and graphite notes on the nose with a lovely floral note; medium-bodied, dry, plum and black cherry flavours with ripe tannins. Very light on the palate for its 14% alcohol. A beautifully balanced wine – old style claret. ($170 in Quebec: 93)

“Our wines,” remarked Harold, “taste younger when they’re old and older when they’re young.”

Miscellaneous wines tasted this week:

The password for the Wine Reviews page is drinkme – visit it for full detailed reviews of recent Vintages releases.

Exit mobile version