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Vouvray Le Clos du Bourg Demi-Sec, Domaine Huet 1970

White Wine from France - Loire
5.000000000 star rating 1 Reviews
Pale but firm gold in colour with a complex, layered nose and strong acid backbone, elegantly poised between richness and dryness which makes it a very good bet for roast or slowly braised pork.
Price: £150.00 Bottle
Price: £1,800.00 Case of 12
In Stock
Code: LO9391

Wine characteristics

  • White Wine
  • 3 - Dry, rich
  • Chenin Blanc
  • 75cl
  • 11.5% Alcohol
  • no oak influence
  • Cork, natural

Loire

The Loire is the longest river in France, stretching some 1,000km from its source in the south to the Atlantic coast a little west of Nantes. At times majestic, never more so than when overlooked by one of the many spectacular châteaux that lie close to its banks, it was in the past a vital trade waterway. Today, it is better known as a tourist destination. Throughout, the river has been a key factor in the production of wine, whether as a transport route, as a supply of water, for its cooling effects on the surrounding land, or for the mist that often lingers along parts of the valley and helps in the production of many of the fine sweet wines that the Loire Valley is famous for.

The geology and climate - the terroir - varies dramatically along the length of the Loire, and, as a result, so too does the choice of grapes planted and the style of wines produced.

Red wines are in the minority but a combination of vastly improved husbandry over the last few years coupled with what looks...
The Loire is the longest river in France, stretching some 1,000km from its source in the south to the Atlantic coast a little west of Nantes. At times majestic, never more so than when overlooked by one of the many spectacular châteaux that lie close to its banks, it was in the past a vital trade waterway. Today, it is better known as a tourist destination. Throughout, the river has been a key factor in the production of wine, whether as a transport route, as a supply of water, for its cooling effects on the surrounding land, or for the mist that often lingers along parts of the valley and helps in the production of many of the fine sweet wines that the Loire Valley is famous for.

The geology and climate - the terroir - varies dramatically along the length of the Loire, and, as a result, so too does the choice of grapes planted and the style of wines produced.

Red wines are in the minority but a combination of vastly improved husbandry over the last few years coupled with what looks increasingly to be the effects of climate change have made these wines more and more attractive. The main varieties are:

Gamay produces wines akin to Beaujolais in the south; in the Touraine, gamay generally has less overt fruit and a slightly earthy character which is not unattractive with food but some will find an acquired taste.

Cabernet franc, one of Bordeaux’s grapes, is normally grown here as a single varietal. At its best it has a lovely fragrance and freshness with a good, gentle tannin structure, making it the ideal lunchtime red.

Pinot noir is the most delicate of the Loire’s red grapes, producing excellent rosé as well as fine reds that can rival good village Burgundy (more Côte de Beaune than Côte de Nuits in style).

Whites are made principally from three single grape varieties. Muscadet, or melon de Bourgogne as it is still sometimes called in France, dominates in the far west, producing fresh, dry, sappy wines that are at their best with seafood.

Chenin blanc covers much of the vineyard land around and between Angers and Tours, and is responsible for the Loire’s sweet wines as well as some excellent - and quite varied - dry ones. Many develop greater finesse and complexity with age, but chenin is a grape that requires patience and understanding as, more than any other variety, it can pass through a rather ungenerous "closed" phase, only to blossom again later. Something Noël Pinguet of Domaine Huet likens to the unresponsive teenage years of our children.

Sauvignon blanc offers important volumes of good, everyday drinking in the Touraine region but produces its best examples in the Central Vineyards of Sancerre and Pouilly and its near neighbours Menetou-Salon, Reuilly, and Quincy. Loire sauvignon is rarely oaked and is normally fresh, grassy, bone dry and lightly aromatic, making it the perfect wine to serve with fish.


Other than the grape, two other key factors should influence your choice of Loire wines. Far and away the most important is the name of the producer. Buy from a trusted, ideally tried and tested source and you will not be disappointed in quality terms.

The other major influence in the Loire is the style and quality of the vintage. As one of France’s most northerly wine producing regions, and even with the apparent effects of climate change, the Loire does suffer from the vagaries of the weather, which means that the quality and even more the style of the harvest can vary quite significantly.

As a very rough rule of thumb, if we have poor spring and summer weather in the UK then chances are there will have been similarly poor weather in the Loire. On these occasions it is all the more important to stick to growers you trust, read whatever information you have easy access to in order to better inform your choice, and be prepared to adapt to sometimes significant shifts in style. 2005 and 2006 were warm, healthy vintages with ripe fruit and lower acidity, producing more approachable wines. 2007 and 2008 mark a return to much more typical, classically styled Loire vintages with wines that are lighter in body (and alcohol) and with much fresher acidity. If you are lucky you will enjoy both, but many will have a strong preference for one style over another.
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Huet L'Echansonne

Domaine Huet is the undisputed leader of the Vouvray appellation on the north bank of the Loire River where the chenin blanc grape is king. The exemplary house style here is one of purity of expression and the wines are legendary for their tautness and minerality. Huet is certainly the greatest domaine in all of Vouvray, if not all of the Loire and its current proprietor is Chinese-American financier, Anthony Hwang, also owner of the famed Királyudvar estate in Tokaji in Hungary.

Huet makes the whole spectrum of Vouvray styles, from bone dry through to fully sweet and sparkling. The vintage conditions determine which wines are made in any one year; in less good vintages only dry or sec wines tend to be made. Most vintages produce demi-sec, whereas the sweetest style, moelleux, and the special cuvées of sweet wines are only produced in more favourable years.

The tuffeau limestone-rich soil helps provide near perfect conditions for chenin, a relatively easy grape to grow, though a difficult one from which to make consistently top quality wine. It is prone to the benevolent fungus botrytis cinerea, or noble rot, which adds complexity to sweeter styles when conditions are right. There are three vineyard sites, all of which are managed on biodynamic lines and certified so: Le Haut Lieu, the original vineyard of the domaine and tends to be the earliest to mature, Le Mont, which is usually the last vineyard to be picked and lastly, the iconic walled vineyard, Le Clos du Bourg,...
Domaine Huet is the undisputed leader of the Vouvray appellation on the north bank of the Loire River where the chenin blanc grape is king. The exemplary house style here is one of purity of expression and the wines are legendary for their tautness and minerality. Huet is certainly the greatest domaine in all of Vouvray, if not all of the Loire and its current proprietor is Chinese-American financier, Anthony Hwang, also owner of the famed Királyudvar estate in Tokaji in Hungary.

Huet makes the whole spectrum of Vouvray styles, from bone dry through to fully sweet and sparkling. The vintage conditions determine which wines are made in any one year; in less good vintages only dry or sec wines tend to be made. Most vintages produce demi-sec, whereas the sweetest style, moelleux, and the special cuvées of sweet wines are only produced in more favourable years.

The tuffeau limestone-rich soil helps provide near perfect conditions for chenin, a relatively easy grape to grow, though a difficult one from which to make consistently top quality wine. It is prone to the benevolent fungus botrytis cinerea, or noble rot, which adds complexity to sweeter styles when conditions are right. There are three vineyard sites, all of which are managed on biodynamic lines and certified so: Le Haut Lieu, the original vineyard of the domaine and tends to be the earliest to mature, Le Mont, which is usually the last vineyard to be picked and lastly, the iconic walled vineyard, Le Clos du Bourg, which is the most regular producer of sweeter styles from grapes either affected by botrytis or passerillage. The wines from the latter are amongst the greatest and longest lived white wines in the world.
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