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DECANTER FEB 2012 - France’s Top10 Names for Value
Cahors was almost a ghost wine, trembling on the edge of extinction, as the
1960s dawned. It’s now producing such impressive reds that investors
are sniffing the land agents’ books, encouraged by the fact that some
of the greatest terroirs in the region are still unplanted. Prominent among
the reference bottles, I suspect, are those of Pascal and Jean-Marc
Verhaeghe at Château du Cèdre, and those of other properties (such as
Haut-Monplaisir and les Croisille) for whom Pascal consults. Best value is
probably Le Château du Cèdre (formerly “Prestige”: my
half-bottles of the 2000 vintage, bought in 2003 for £5,35 each, are still
going strong), but his purest and noblest wine is Le Cèdre: a pure-Malbec
selection. It’s the appellation’s gold standard, year after
year.
One to try: Château du Cèdre, Le Cèdre, Cahors 2007 **** 17,5/20
Scents of black plum, bay leaf, summer-evening tree bark and dry forest
floor. On the palate, it’s deep, spicy, warm and accessible, despite
its great depth and power. The black fruits pack out the wine’s core,
rippling with meaty flesh, but there’s plenty of fragrant tobacco and
spice to add extra enchantment. Drink: 2012 – 2028.
By Andrew Jefford
28/02/2012
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