Two Ventoux producers for the price of one in fact, no relation (other than I tasted their wines at the London Wine Fair in a special Grenache-themed room) but it seemed like a good idea to combine them into a duet of Ventoux-tastic-ness. This wine region lies in the Vaucluse département to the east of the River Rhone and Avignon nudging up against that eponymous and somewhat awesome mountain...
Clos de Trias (above, shadowed by you know what: www.closdetrias.com)
Founded in 2007 (although the vines go way back) by Norwegian Even A. Bakke, who spent 14 years in the California wine business, and his French wife, Trias is now 25 ha (62 acres) lying at the foot of Mount Ventoux. I guess
the name comes from the geological term Triassic (stifle that yawn please!), which is the era the soils around these parts date from, apparently.
Grape-growing here is biodynamic with the philosophy and vineyards in the process
of switching over to this way of life for good, man. 2008 was a tricky
vintage in the region, which required a fair amount of sorting in the field
and winery to pick out the best grapes. 2007 was a more successful year, and
their old-vine red sampled here was made from selected 60+ year-old parcels called Champ Paga, L'Aube, Le Jas and Les Grand Terres (sic.), undergoing "a long
maceration on the skins" and using "minimal sulphur dioxide."
2008 Clos de Trias (75% Grenache, 15% Syrah, 8% Carignan, 2% Cinsault) -
quite soft and 'light' (although still 14% alcohol) with enticing maturing
aromas, has a bit of grip still vs nice 'sweet' fruit, developing tobacco/leather edges and a has wild herby side too; drinking well now. €4.50
ex-cellars.
2007 Clos de Trias vieilles vignes (96% Grenache, 4% Syrah; 14.5% alc.) -
smoky maturing nose with liquorice vs tobacco edges, extracted firm and
punchy palate vs lovely spicy 'sweet/savoury' fruit, big mouthful of
flavour. €9.55 ex-cellars.
Marrenon
These guys are actually a 1200-grower strong co-operative set up over 40 years ago; the members' vineyards spread right across the Ventoux and Luberon wine regions with their winery, offices and posh-looking shop based in La Tour d’Aigues in the southeastern corner of the Vaucluse. So they obviously make a big range of wines, although, if this one is pretty typical, they deserve to be investigated further... www.marrenon.com.
2010 Ventoux Classique red (Grenache, Syrah) - vibrant ripe berry fruit, juicy 'sweet'
and tasty palate with savoury and tobacco edges, quite elegant actually on
the finish; very nice red.
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