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Crémant de Limoux Rosé Emotion, Antech 2024
Sparkling Wine from France - Languedoc
Legend has it that the magical area around Limoux, the likely birthplace of sparkling wine, holds many secrets, from Cathar treasure to, legend has it, the Holy Grail itself. More tangible is the quality of the pinot noir that lies behind this fragrant and creamily textured rosé bubbly which delivers subtle notes of raspberry on the nose. Predominantly chardonnay, the wine includes a small amount of chenin, with pinot noir lending the wine colour, bouquet and texture. Made in the traditional method (second fermentation in bottle) the wine spends 18 months on yeast lees before being disgorged.
Price:
£15.50
Bottle
(£20.67/litre)
Price:
£93.00
Case of 6
(£20.67/litre)
In Stock
Code: SG5371
Wine characteristics
- Sparkling Wine
- 2 - Dry
- Chardonnay
- 75cl
- Now to 2028
- 12% Alcohol
- no oak influence
- Champagne cork
- 770 g (Empty bottle weight)
- Organic
Bestselling wines
Georges & Roger Antech
Although Antech gets its name from vintner Edmond Antech, the property actually dates back over six generations of the Tisseyre-Limouzy family. They began cultivating vines in Saint-Hilaire, and in the early 1900s Eugénie Limouzy was one of the first women in Languedoc to manage a vineyard. It was her niece who married Edmond in 1931, and he was responsible for significantly raising the estate’s profile for many years afterwards. Their sons Georges and Roger took the helm after that, and built on their father’s traditions as well as respecting them.
Today, the vineyards are managed by Georges’ eldest daughter Michèle and her husband Jean-Christophe Chauvière. Since 1996, the cellar has been run by sixth-generation Francoise Antech-Gazeau, who grew up on vineyards before travelling the world, and who now takes to her task with painstaking commitment to every detail. Today Antech produces over a million bottles each year.
Limoux is thought by many to be the birthplace of high-quality sparkling wine production in France: it is rumoured that a monk discovered the process by accident in 1531, after cold temperatures halted his wine’s fermentation, which then began again once it had been bottled and gave the wine its signature effervescence.
The thought of producing high-quality sparkling wine in the south of France may seem odd on first glance, but the climate here is quite unlike the rest of the Languedoc. It is noticeably wetter and greener and benefits much more from...