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New Vintage
The Society's Exhibition Côte de Brouilly 2023
The 2023 Côtes de Brouilly is a serious vintage, with structure and minerality, capturing the generous purity of fruit from the vintage with freshness, structure and elegance. At 320ha this is one of the smallest of the crus but it has a strong personality. It is an oval-shaped hill with vineyards at all points of the compass, including one called La Glacière (the glacier) on the north-facing slope. Whilst most Beaujolais comes from soils of pink granite, the Côte de Brouilly`s soils are principally bluish, composed of diorite, an igneous rock of a bluish grey colour with a green cast, together with some schist and granite. Its wines are structured, mineral and age worthy. This is a blend of two wines. One was selected for its wonderfully ripe, richly fruity, concentrated and creamy texture, blended this with a more structured and mineral wine which contributed some underlying freshness and improved the length of flavour. Try with beetroot roasted with shallots, garlic and thyme.
Price:
£11.95
Bottle
Price:
£143.00
Case of 12
In Stock
Code: BJ10421
Wine characteristics
- Red Wine
- Medium-bodied
- Gamay
- 75cl
- Now to 2027
- 13.5% Alcohol
- no oak influence
- Cork, diam
- Vegetarian
- Vegan
Les Vins Aujoux
This is the source of the bulk of our Beaujolais for the last 50 years, and many members will also have tried the fruits of The Society’s work with this excellent Beaujolais-based négoce in the form of our bestselling white wine, The Society’s White Burgundy, sourced from the Mâcon.
Dealing with a négociant allows The Wine Society to pick and choose, often blending together from different estates in order to end up with a wine that is better than any of its parts.
Négoces have had a huge part to play in the recent history of Beaujolais, some of it not so good but some of it very positive. For all its apparent simplicity, Beaujolais is a complicated region that is often the victim of its own capricious climate with late frosts and violent hailstorms a common recurrence.
The one name that stands out for us is Dépagneux: Jean Dépagneux was the last of this illustrious merchant family who, with his partners, bought up a list of ailing names such as Aujoux, which had made its name selling Beaujolais to the once profitable Swiss market. Jean retired about a dozen years ago and his place was taken by a young and talented oenologist from Viré called Jean-Marc Darbon. One consequence of the change has been the meteoric rise in the quality of The Society’s White Burgundy.
Since 2002 Les Vins Aujoux have operated an office in the Languedoc-Roussillon in the deep south of France, sourcing a range of wines.
Decanter
A captivating, value-driven cru Beaujolais with a vibrant, light palate, rustic tannins and fresh cherries, raspberries and violets. Offers purity and precision. Vibrant, with a rustic, tannic finish.