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Château Les Valentines Rosé 2023

AOC Côtes de Provence, 750 ml

Exclusivity Baur au Lac Vins
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Gift box available!
In stock
Article nr. 29001723
Items available in the stores
8 Stück
>12 Stück
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Last update 17.7.2024 03:37. To make a reservation, please contact your desired shop.
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Gift box available!

Description

The flagship of the château with Provençal soul! Mediterranean terroir with fragrant pine forests, garrigue shrubs and the maritime proximity to St. Tropez characterise this fresh and inviting rosé. The fragrance transports you straight to the Côte d'Azur with its dried herbs, white peach and red berries. On the palate, it is beautifully round, full- bodied, harmonious and aromatic. A refined and delicate rosé that is great fun at any time of year and the perfect accompaniment to entire menus. No wonder, with every sip you feel a little closer to the enchanting Provence! This vintage was awarded 91 points by Wine Enthusiast.


«Lux Vintage Les Valentines» ice bucket as a gift! 

With the purchase of 12 bottles of Château Les Valentines rosé – no matter which variety and mix possible – you will receive a Lux Vintage pink or white ice bucket worth CHF 39.00 free of charge. Please don't forget to enter your preferred colour in the comments field! Valid until 31.7.24 or while stocks last.

Attributes

Origin: France / Provence / Côtes de Provence
Grape variety: Cinsault, Grenache, Syrah, Mourvèdre
Label: Certified organic or biodynamic wine
Ripening potential: 1 to 4 years after harvest
Drinking temperature: 8 to 10 °C
Food Pairing: Grilled fish, Fish terrine, Meat salad, Giant crevettes, grilled langoustines, Vegetable flan, quiche
Vinification: fermentation in steel tank, fermentation at low temperatures
Harvest: in small boxes
Maturation: in steel tank
Bottling: filtration
Volume: 13.0 %
Note: Contains sulphites
Producer

Château Les Valentines

Lux Vintage Les Valentines wine cooler as a gift!


When buying 12 bottles of rosé from Château Les Valentines, Provence (mix of bottles possible), you will receive an ice bucket worth CHF 39.00 in pink or white for free for a limited time*. The ice buckets offer space for two bottles or a magnum bottle.

 

And this is how it works: Simply add 12 bottles of rosé of your choice from Château Les Valentines to your shopping basket and specify «pink» or «white» in the ice bucket comment field.

 

*Valid until 31.7.24, online and in shops.

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Gilles & pascale NB
Grape variety

Mourvèdre

Hot-blooded Spaniard

It cannot be hot enough for the Monastrell grape. It grows around the Mediterranean, where the summers are long and hot and the winters mild. At only 200 metres in elevation, or 80 kilometres from the coast, its grapes have problems ripening. It was likely born in the Valencia region. According to written records, it was already counted among the most important varieties in 1460. Its exact origin is thought to be the Camp de Morvedre area. From there, it migrated in the 17th century to Provence, where it was christened Mourvèdre. Its wines are deeply dark, with intense blackberry aromas, rich tannins and moderate acidity. They enter into the most beautiful harmonies with other varieties from the south, such as Garnacha, Carignan or Syrah. The Mourvèdre is the main ingredient of red wines of Bandol; it also flows into the Châteauneuf-du-Pape. On the Spanish Levante coast, it is also pressed solo.

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Mourvedre

Cinsault

Sun in a glass

The southern French Cinsault, also written Cinsaut, is a curiosity among the grape varieties. It belongs to the so-called “dyer grapes”. These are red grapes in which the pigments sit not only in the skins but also in the flesh. That means, when the Cinsault is pressed, pink juice results, rather than the white you see from other grapes. Previously, the Cinsault was used to spice up lighter-coloured Burgundy. But now it has become emancipated. With a soft, fruity style, seductive raspberry and strawberry aromas and good aging potential, it mixes with the most renowned growths from the southern Rhône, around the Châteauneuf-du-Pape. Solo, it yields wonderfully aromatic rosés.

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Cinsault

Syrah

A hint of pepper

The legend stubbornly persists that the Syrah variety came from the Persian city of Shiraz. Yet, researchers have shown that it is a natural crossing of two old French varieties: the red Dureza from the Rhône Valley and the white Mondeuse blanche from Savoy. Wines from Syrah are gentle and concentrated. They smell of dark berries, violets and liquorice, and amaze with a piquant touch of white pepper. As varietal wines, they are found on the northern Rhone, as in the Hermitage or Côte Rôtie appellations, as well as in Swiss Valais. In the southern Rhône Valley, Syrah is often wedded with Grenache and Mourvèdre. In 1832, a Frenchman brought the variety to Australia, where it became the emblem of the national wine industry. There, the weightiest versions develop with typical notes of tar and chocolate.

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Syrah

Grenache

Grenache seldom comes alone

Spaniards and Sardinians make the Grenache contentious: both claim it originated from their country. In fact, it had already appeared in both places by the 16th century. But a large number of mutations in Spain indicates that it has deeper roots on the Iberian Peninsula. The Grenache is meaty and spicy, with a wonderful, fruity sweetness and rich aromas of blackberry, cassis, plums and pepper. Under the name Garnacha, it contributes fullness to the Rioja. In Sardinia it is called Cannonau, where it yields strong, expressive wines. But its stronghold is in France. Grenache is the star in Châteauneuf-du-Pape and streams into many other assemblages from the south. Its preferred partners are Syrah and Mourvèdre. This blend is also very popular abroad. In Australia, these wines are simply called "GSM".

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Grenache
Country

France

France – Philosophy in a bottle

According to French philosophy, wine should be an expression of the soil and climate. They use the word “terroir” to describe this. Terroir makes every wine different, and many especially good. French wine is regarded worldwide as an expression of cultural perfection. The French believe that humans are responsible for the quality of the berries, the vine variety for their character, and nature for the quantity. This philosophy can be expressed succinctly as: “the truth is the vineyard, not the man.”

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Frankreich S

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