Archive for the 'Carignan' Category

29
Feb
12

Irish Connection Part 2 – Domaine Aonghusa

Continuing on with our Irish Connection Wines, we are proud in introduce Pat Neville and his Corbieres wines – Domaine Aonghusa. Remember between now and the 17th March, we’ve 30% OFF our featured Irish Connection Wines

The Region:

Fontjoncouse (‘Source of the rushes’) is a small picturesque village set in a ruggedly beautiful, unspoiled chunk of garrigue in the Haut Corbieres. Fontjoncouse is one of those French villages where you would be forgiven for wondering if there is anybody home. From its hillside perch you can see the Mediterranean. Up here it’s quiet. There is, of course, a purr of traffic to its two-star Michelin restaurant, Auberge du Vieux Puits.

The Story:

The Irishman, Pat Neville from Wellington Bridge, Wexford, now lives an hour from Carcassonne; a couple of hours flying time from Dublin and a world away from St Peter’s College, Wexford, where this journey began. It’s a passion he shares with his wife, Catherine McGuinness. From their very earliest days, the couple spent holidays visiting vineyards wondering why it was that people were prepared to pay for a particular soil, a year. Eventually the lure of a return to formal study led him to UCC, a degree in English and Greek and Classic Civilization, an MA exploring language through Old English riddles, and a couple of years as a senior tutor. The couple then moved to Holland and later to Geneva.

He was 45 and “almost giving up” in 2001 when their search for their own vineyard ended in Corbieres AC, one of a number of winemaking regions in Languedoc- Roussillon.

The Vineyard:

A house in Fontjoncouse with its own winery and eight hectares of vines and Domaine Aonghusa (McGuinness) was born. They have added another four hectares, including a plot of 60-year-old Grenache vines. The vineyard work is geared to producing high quality fruit in the most environmentally friendly way possible and yields can be as low as 20hl/ha. Treatments are limited to what’s necessary to avoid disease but the approach is based on common sense, not cosmological tomfoolery. In well established vines natural fauna is left to compete / cooperate with the vines and is generally is controlled by mulching and strimming. This sometimes result in ‘untidy’ looking but living vineyards.

The Vines:

The vines are planted on fossil strewn slopes at between 200 and 250 metres altitude. Soils and textures are varied: clay limestone, shale, scree are most common and sometimes occur in the same vineyard. In places the vines are planted almost directly into the mother rock, and struggle to gain a foothold. The grape varieties planted here are typically Mediterranean: Grenache, Carignan Syrah, Cinsaut. Some of the vines were planted as early as 1903, some 100 hundred years later.

 The Process:

The grapes are harvested in small fruit baskets and are sorted in the vineyards. They are destemmed and slightly crushed and depending on the year and the sugar levels, the fermentations are carried out by wild or selected yeasts. In general, Pat tends to use selected yeasts if the sugar levels are very high. The fermentations take place at their own pace in the relatively cool cellar.

They try to use as little of SO2 as possible at all stages. Depending on the year or particular vat, maceration can extend from 10 to 25 days.

In general the wines are aged half in barrels of different ages and size, half in vat. Again the percentages depend on the year and vat. Bottling usually takes place 12 – 28 months after the harvest. The wines are sometimes lightly fined but are not filtered and a minimal dose of SO2 and gum arabica is added to ensure stability.

 The Wines:

Domaine Aonghusa Noah

Climate: Hot, dry, windy Mediterranean modified by altitude.

Vineyard: South /south east facing slopes of clay limestone / shaley marl at 150-220 metres altitude.

Harvest: By hand in small 10kg fruit baskets. There followed a separate selection process in the vineyard where all remaining sub-quality fruit was removed.

Fermentation: The fruit was destemmed and lightly crushed and the alcoholic fermentation was carried out by indigenous yeasts. The wine was lightly fined and bottled unfiltered.

Domaine Aonghusa Cuvee Laval

Climate: Hot, dry, windy Mediterranean modified by altitude.

Grape varieties: 50% Grenache (25 year-old); 50% Carignan (101 year-old).

Vineyard: South /south east facing slopes of clay limestone / shaley marl at 225 metres altitude in a lieu known locally in Occitan as ‘Laval’ or ‘The Valley’.

Harvest: By hand in small 10Kg fruit baskets. There followed a separate selection process in the vineyard where all remaining sub-quality fruit was removed. Both varieties were picked in several goes.

Fermentation: Traditional fermentation of both grape varieties together. The fruit was destemmed and lightly crushed and the alcoholic fermentation was carried out by indigenous yeasts. Half of the wine then spent 10 months in 2-year-old 225 litre casks (origin – Chateau Tertre Rotebouef) before being reassembled with the remainder in vat for another 10 months. Bottled by hand, no fining or filtration.

Pat is no longer merely visiting, but working vineyards. “I want to make a wine where the third glass is more interesting than the first, not one where everything you want to know is in the first mouthful.”

It hasn’t all been easy, but Pat says this was about pursuing a passion rather than fulfilling a romantic dream. “We do it because we want to and have been able to.”

 

09
Mar
11

The Irish Connection

German – Irish Wines??

With St. Patrick’s Day, our national holiday just around the corner, it got us thinking again about our ‘Irish Wines’. We have a number of wines which can someway or another be traced back to Ireland.  So between now and the 17th March, we’ll be publishing a blog on each of our featured wines.

So lets get started with Germany:

Burgerspital is located in a fantastically beautiful courtyard right in the middle of Würzburg, is one of the largest wine-growing estates in Germany and one of the most important. With a wine-growing area of 110 hectares.

The slopes and steep sites of the hills along the River Main offer ideal conditions for growing wine. The sun smiles upon the vineyards quite early in the year, the Shelly limestone soil (Muschelkalk) storing the warmth.  The location, the soil, the climate, the proximity to the river, the selection of the types of vine and the art of the Bürgerspital wine-growers enable exceptional wines to be grown here.

Burgerspital is reknowned for using the “Bocksbeutel” - a flattened, round bottle shaped like a leather pouch for bottling the wine – and yes it is a full sized bottle holding 750ml.

In 1726 the Council of the City of Würzburg decided that the “Bocksbeutel” be the mark of quality compared with poorly produced wines. To this day, the first sealed specimens of the Bocksbeutel are stored in Bürgerspital’s cellars.  Bürgerspital has been totally committed to the Bocksbeutel’s claim to quality right up to the present day.

The Vineyard:

The most favourable conditions for viticulture in Germany are the south and southwest-facing slopes of protected valleys, e. g. along the Rhine and its tributaries as well as the valleys of the Elbe, Saale and Main rivers. The exposure to sunlight is more intense on slopes than on flat sites and slopes with a southern exposure also profit from longer periods of sunshine.

All Bürgerspital sites are Einzellagen (individual vineyard sites) and located in the heart of the specified wine-growing region Franken (Franconia).

Würzburger Stein
They only cultivate classical varietals (Riesling, Silvaner, Weißer Burgunder, Gewürztraminer, Rieslaner, Scheurebe) on some 30 hectares in the world-renowned location Würzburger Stein. Its terroir being a rare combination of the micro-climate, soil and the slope inclination, direction and proximity to the river – offers wines of the very highest quality.

 

 

Bürgerspital wines have been awarded numerous prestigious national and international prizes and have won wine-tasting competitions held by celebrated sommeliers and wine journalists. This wine-growing estate is a founding member of the VDP (Association of German Top-Quality Wine-Growing Estates). The VDP is the elite of Germany´s wine producers. A distinguishing feature all VDP wines show is the eagle on the neck of the bottle.

 

But what has this to do with Ireland I hear you ask, well, St Killian, who is the Patron Saint of Wurzburg, hailed orginally from Ireland. Burgerspital sits in the heart of Wurzburg, in the shadow of St. Killian.

Saint Killian’s feast day is July 8 and he is usually portrayed, as in his statue at Würzburg, bearing a bishop’s crozier and wielding a sword. The Kiliani-Volksfest (two weeks in July) is the main civil and religious festival in the region around Würzburg.

 

07
Mar
10

A little background to the #twebt mystery bottle producer – pat neville of domaine aonghusa

cuvee laval 2005

cuvee laval 2005

 

Well folks, the #twebt mystery bottle has been revealed and I hope that you all enjoyed it. The Domaine Aonghusa Cuvee Laval ’05 one of my personal favourites. I first tried the 2003 vintage and loved it. The 2005 is also excellent. I hope you agree. 

Here is a little background information on Pat Neville and his wonderful Domaine Aonghusa. Pat is a native of County Wexford and together with his wife, Catherine McGuinness, they have followed their lifelong dream. Instead of wandering around Europe visiting vineyards tasting wine, they now work the land and make a beautiful range of handcrafted wines.  

The following has been reproduced from Pats website (http://www.domaineaonghusa.com/

Over to you Pat . . . . .  

Wine in all its variety has been a shared passion for us as long as we care to remember. After spending more than half our lives traipsing the wine regions of Europe exploring this variety, we finally decided to try our own hand at contributing to it. 

pat neville of domaine aonghusa

pat neville of domaine aonghusa

 

In 2001 we bought 8ha of vines, a cellar/house and some garrigue (limestone scrubland) in the tiny village of Fontjoncouse in the Haut Corbieres area of southern France. We immediately set about re-equipping the cellar, pulling out the least interesting grape varieties / least suitable locations and replanting with quality orientated clones of Syrah and Grenache on low vigour rootstocks. More vines and land have since been bought, the house made habitable and the cellar workable. From 2006 there are around 11 Ha in production: 3.7Ha Carignan (45-103 year old vines) 3.4Ha Grenache (2.4Ha of 20-50 year old vines, the rest young vines), 3.7Ha Syrah ( 0.7 Ha are 20 year old vines, the rest young vines). 

Apart from seasonal work such as harvesting, we carry out all work in the vineyards, cellar and marketplace, making us a family run business in the true sense of the expression. Our aim is to produce high quality wines that reflect their origins – soils, grape varieties, exposure, climate and owners’ passion – in a given year. We try to produce our wines in the most natural way possible, with minimal interventions in the vineyards and cellar to ensure the quality of our products, but our approach is rational, not quasi-mystical nor ideologically driven. 

Fontjoncouse (‘Source of the rushes’) is a small picturesque/dilapidated (take your pick) village set in a ruggedly beautiful, unspoiled chunk of garrigue in the Haut Corbieres. Despite it’s relative isolation, the area has long been settled, and Celts Romans, Visigoths and Cathars have left visible traces here. Not far from the village there is a dolmen, in the same area there are the remains of a Roman villa and Visigothic church, and it is not unknown for tombs and ancient artifacts to be uncovered when vignerons deep plough for planting. 

The vines are planted on fossil strewn slopes at between 200 and 250 metres altitude. Soils and textures are varied: clay limestone, shale, scree are most common and sometimes occur in the same vineyard. In places the vines are planted almost directly into the mother rock, and struggle to gain a foothold. 

The climate in Fontjoncouse is hot, dry mediterranean modified by altitude. The altitude and water retaining capacity of the soils mean a longer growing season with important day night temperature differences as the fruit reaches maturity. The grape varieties planted here are typically Mediterranean: Grenache, Carignan, Syrah, Cinsaut and Lledonner Pelut. Some of the vines were planted as early as 1903, some 100 hundred years later. 

Our vineyard work is geared to producing high quality fruit in the most environmentally friendly way possible and yields can be as low as 20hl/ha. Treatments are limited to what’s necessary to avoid disease but our approach is based on common sense. In well established vines natural fauna is left to compete / cooperate with the vines and is generally is controlled by mulching and strimming. This sometimes result in ‘untidy’ looking but living vineyards. 

The grapes are harvested in small fruit baskets and are sorted in the vineyards. They are destemmed and slightly crushed and depending on the year and the sugar levels, the fermentations are carried out by wild or selected yeasts. In general, we tend to use selected yeasts if the sugar levels are very high. The fermentations take place at their at their own pace in the relatively cool cellar with daily pumping over and or cap submersion. In general our wines are aged half in barrels of different ages and size, half in vat. Again the percentages depend on the year and vat. Bottling usually takes place 12 – 28 months after the harvest. Our wines are sometimes lightly fined but are not filtered. 
The local terroir tends to give wines whose structure and alcohol are tempered by a ‘fraicheur’ or acidity and whose fruit and aromatic characteristics begin to develop after two years. They are wines that can be drunk with pleasure on release but which evolve in bottle over time. They can be drunk on their own but are best in company at the table. They can be enjoyed with a wide variety of foods and benefit from a vigorous decanting or 12 -24 hours gentle airing).

 If you liked the Domaine Aonghusa Laval ’05, you can check the rest of Pat’s wonderful range here 

Thanks again everyone for taking part in #twebt and thanks also to @brianclayton and @kevatfennsquay for asking us to take part. Look forward to the next #twebt ! 





Because Life Is Too Short To Drink Boring Wine . . .

Karwig Wines are importers, wholesalers and retailers of selected and estate bottled wines from all over the world. Its all about the wine. We have one of the broadest selections of wine from quality Old World and New World producers.

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