Chateau de L'Ou Red - 2022 (750ml)
Chateau de L'Ou Red - 2022 (750ml)
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$19.99
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Severine Bourrier is the owner and winemaker of Chateau de L’Ou in France’s Rousillon region. All of her wines are farmed biodynamically and organically on schist soils. The small estate has driven the quality movement for natural Rousillon wines. This Côtes de Roussillon Rouge is composed of 60% Syrah and 40% Grenache. Concentrated and complex dark fruit aromas and flavors burst from the glass.
Schneider's of Capitol Hill
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Severine Bourrier is the owner and winemaker of Chateau de l’Ou in France’s Rousillon region. All of her wines are farmed biodynamically and organically on schist soils. The small estate has driven the quality movement for natural Rousillon wines. This Côtes de Roussillon Rouge is composed of 60% Syrah and 40% Grenache. Concentrated and complex dark fruit aromas and flavors burst from the glass.
Depending on where it's grown and how it's made, the variety has two names. In France, where it goes by Syrah, it makes a huge contribution to the red wines of the Rhone Valley. In the southern Rhone villages of Chateauneuf-du-Pape, Gigondas, and Vacqueyras it is blended with a number of varieties but mainly Grenache. It is in the northern Rhone, including Hermitage, Crozes-Hermitage,Côte-Rôtie, St. Joseph, where it most often stands out on its own, and is only occasionally blended with the region's white grapes. More recently, in the late 20th Century, Shiraz has put Australian producers such as Penfolds and d’Arenberg on the fine wine map, with cult wines like Grange and The Dead Arm. Generally speaking, the style from the old world is more savoury, expressing aromas of pepper, cured meat and leather. The hotter climate experienced in Australia results in more upfront, dense and even jammy fruit. The grape has also taken off with rapid success in California and Washington, as well as South Africa and New Zealand. Producers in these regions often name their varietal wines according to the style they intend.
The Languedoc and Roussillon are two adjoining but distinctly separate wine regions in southern France. The Languedoc consists of two main regions: The Aude, home to the sub-regions of Limoux, Corbieres, Fitou, Minervois, and the Herault, which includes Picpoul de Pinet and the vin doux naturels producing regions of Banyuls, Frontignan, Lunel and Mireval.