Loïc
Roure acquired 6½ hectares of vines (16 acres) while taking over the
abandoned co-op winery building in Lansac back in 2003, which needed
a thorough clean-up and refit with new equipment and now also houses
a top-floor apartment and art studio. The first plots he found
were/are in Latour-de-France followed by a few more in neighbouring
Rasiguères, Bélesta, Cassagnes and Lesquerde; and another four ha
were purchased more recently in Caudiès-de-Fenouillèdes a dozen
kilometres to the wild west on the Aude 'frontier'. Which must be a
handful to manage spread out over a fairly wide area, and especially
perhaps since these vineyards have been certified organic since 2007.
The varietal breakdown is 4.5
ha of Carignan (some over 100 years old), 2.6 ha Grenache, 1.3 ha
Syrah and some Mourvèdre
too; and for whites (coming to just one ha although averaging 50+
years), mostly Macabeu with a little Carignan gris, Grenache blanc
and Grenache gris.
Loïc's
background is both atypical and typical, in the sense of how some
young winegrowers who've settled in the Roussillon over the past five
to ten years don't have the 'classic' wine industry CV. After a long
stint at Amnesty International in Lyon, he decided he'd like to open
a wine bar so started by working in a restaurant, which led him to
doing a sommelier course including a work-placement at Thierry
Allemand's winery in Cornas (northern Rhone Valley), which convinced
him this was what he really wanted to do. Jump forwards through time
to those aforementioned treasured vine parcels and disused cellar in
deepest Fenouillèdes country, where he was also “inspired by Cyril
Fhal (Clos du Rouge Gorge) and Jean Louis Tribouley
(both in Latour-de-France),” who'd established their own
estates just before he did.
Loïc's
views on a 'natural' approach to vineyards and winemaking seem
level-headed enough. He says he was “more militant about this (not
using 'chemicals') in the beginning,” and being “completely
opposed to using any sulphur. But you evolve: I wanted to make wine,
and I wanted it to be good! So now I use a bit of sulphur if I have
to... The more experienced you are, the better you get at things...
I've become less of a fundamentalist but also have got better at
using less sulphur!” If SO2 is added at bottling, he uses less than
10mg/l for reds and 20mg for the white (which is in-line with other
'naturalists', about less than 10% of what is/was traditionally
used). He applies certain plant-based preparations as well, claiming
to be “very open minded in experimenting in the vines... I like the
idea of biodynamics but in no way claim to be part of it.”
Loïc
prefers to label his wines as Côtes du Roussillon, as he believes it
fits them, and the area he finds himself in, better than the 'Cotes
Catalanes' designation for example. Their names show a friendly play
on words, such as the Franco-Shakespearean 'Tout Bu or
Not Tout Bu' (ho ho). I met him at last year's Real Wine Fair
in London, where his wines are sold by Roberson Wine (prices cited below in
£: photo above from www.robersonwine.com/blog).
And Louis/Dressner Selections is his New York City agent (see
louisdressner.com
where I borrowed a few choice quotes from an interview with him). Our
tasting paths also crossed back in 2005, on my first proper visit to
the Fenouillèdes wine-lands when I tried what must have been his
first or second vintage, a vat sample of the pretty decent and wild
fruity 2004. To
go and see Loïc at the winery: the address is the same as Edouard Laffitte below; phone 04 68 92 52 78 and loic.roure@laposte.net.
2010
Cours Toujours white (Macabeu, Carignan gris) – appley nutty
and intense nose, creamier more rounded palate with lovely hazelnut
flavours vs crisp mineral bite. £16.95
2011
Le Fruit du Hasard (Carignan and Syrah from Caudiès) – lively
spicy fruity Nouveau-styled red, tasty quaffer with a bit of length
and depth too. £14.95
2011
Tout Bu or Not Tout Bu (“mostly Syrah I buy from friends...”)
- minty dark cherry, more structured and powerful wine with delicious
fruit and length. £14.95, €10 (France on-line).
2011
C'est Pas La Mer à Boire (majority Grenache +
Syrah, Carignan) – juicy spicy berry with liquorice, fuller
punchier style with smoky rich fruit vs tight and firm; nice wine,
needs food. £17.95
2011
L'Herbe Tendre Pet Nat rosé (Grenache & Syrah, lightly
sparkling from second fermentation in bottle without being disgorged
= it's cloudy too!) - delicious light red fruits with intense
yeasty/toasty flavours and crisp lively finish. Different! £13.80,
€11
2011
Charivari (Carignan) – quite rustic nose but has lively berry
fruit too lending a little bite, a tad 'soupy' and rustic but it just
about works. £12.50, €11.50
2010
Couma Acò (mostly Syrah) – light coconut flavour and
texture underlined by lush dark fruit with smoky edges, powerful
grippier and more 'serious' finish.
2004 Domaine du Possible (vat sample) - Pretty forward on the nose showing ripe and rustic liquorice fruit, nice grip and length on the palate. From my first trip to Fenouillèdes country in 2005 (link goes to report on that)...
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