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2009 Clos Rougeard, Saumur-Champigny

Vinous

91

CellarTracker

91
Regular price $335
/

2009 Clos Rougeard, Saumur-Champigny

Vinous

91

CellarTracker

91
Regular price $335
/

Saumur-Champigny "Les Clos" is a blend of three vineyards 50-70 years of age within Chacé, with a mixture of clay and limestone soils. After native yeast fermentations in concrete, the wine will age 18-24 months in neutral barrique.

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The Foucault family ran the Clos Rougeard for 8 generations, and for long were more famous for being groundbreakers in the region by bottling their own wines rather than selling to negociants. Everything changed after a famed tasting in 1993, where a 1990 Le Bourg was the victor above Bordeaux chateaux like Petrus and Le Pin which were more expensive by a factor of at least ten. Charly and Nady Foucault ran the estate from 1969 until Charly's untimely passing in 2015, which led to the famed estate's sale in 2017 to the owners of Chateau Montrose. The brothers did set an impressive foundation to build upon, and left behind some of the greatest wines the world has ever known.

Clos Rougeard

Clos Rougeard stands as the absolute apex of the Cabernet Franc grape, owing in part to the tremendous vineyards, planted to vines largely in excess of a half-century of age, located within the greatest vineyards in Saumur-Champigny. The singular white Breze is just as highly sought-after and of tremendous quality, the Montrachet of the Loire. All of the vineyards are entirely tended organically, and never had chemicals used dating back all eight generations of ownership, and continuing into the first era of non-Foucault reign.

The Breze Chenin Blanc vines are 60+ years of age, and the wines are aged in 20% new oak. They will rarely finish their malo-lactic conversion, so are taut in their youth but absolutely stunning with age.

Three Cabernet Franc wines are created - Les Clos is a blended wine from three terroirs in the villages of Chacé, Varrains and Dampierre, an average of 50-70 years among them. Les Poyeaux is from 50+ year vines in Chacé, adjacent to the cellars where the tuffeau (limestone) is topped with eroded sandstone, allowing a bit softer, bright style in contast to Le Bourg; also in Chacé, these are 80+ year old vines in clay soils that are quite thin before you hit tuffeau, resulting in a dense, structured wine.

The wines were made with the same methods for as long as records were kept - 18-24 months aging in barrel following a native yeast fermentation in cement, with a small percentage of new oak used for Poyeaux, and the Bourg entirely in new oak to balance the tannin structure. Les Clos sees only neutral oak. One key to the elegance of the wines was that the press wine was always sold off, meaning that the Clos Rougeard wines resulted only from the free-run juice, not the harsher, more tannic juice that results from squeezing every drop from the grapes' skins. This is expensive, but was a must for the family (pardon the pun).

Early returns from the new ownership are exquisite, as they follow the Foucault mantra: “The only revolution at Clos Rougeard is that we have not changed anything!”

Meet the Producer

Clos Rougeard

The Foucault family ran the Clos Rougeard for 8 generations, and for long were more famous for being groundbreakers in the region by bottling their own wines rather than selling to negociants. Everything changed after a famed tasting in 1993, where a 1990 Le Bourg was the victor above Bordeaux chateaux like Petrus and Le Pin which were more expensive by a factor of at least ten. Charly and Nady Foucault ran the estate from 1969 until Charly's untimely passing in 2015, which led to the famed estate's sale in 2017 to the owners of Chateau Montrose. The brothers did set an impressive foundation to build upon, and left behind some of the greatest wines the world has ever known.

Clos Rougeard stands as the absolute apex of the Cabernet Franc grape, owing in part to the tremendous vineyards, planted to vines largely in excess of a half-century of age, located within the greatest vineyards in Saumur-Champigny. The singular white Breze is just as highly sought-after and of tremendous quality, the Montrachet of the Loire. All of the vineyards are entirely tended organically, and never had chemicals used dating back all eight generations of ownership, and continuing into the first era of non-Foucault reign.

The Breze Chenin Blanc vines are 60+ years of age, and the wines are aged in 20% new oak. They will rarely finish their malo-lactic conversion, so are taut in their youth but absolutely stunning with age.

Three Cabernet Franc wines are created - Les Clos is a blended wine from three terroirs in the villages of Chacé, Varrains and Dampierre, an average of 50-70 years among them. Les Poyeaux is from 50+ year vines in Chacé, adjacent to the cellars where the tuffeau (limestone) is topped with eroded sandstone, allowing a bit softer, bright style in contast to Le Bourg; also in Chacé, these are 80+ year old vines in clay soils that are quite thin before you hit tuffeau, resulting in a dense, structured wine.

The wines were made with the same methods for as long as records were kept - 18-24 months aging in barrel following a native yeast fermentation in cement, with a small percentage of new oak used for Poyeaux, and the Bourg entirely in new oak to balance the tannin structure. Les Clos sees only neutral oak. One key to the elegance of the wines was that the press wine was always sold off, meaning that the Clos Rougeard wines resulted only from the free-run juice, not the harsher, more tannic juice that results from squeezing every drop from the grapes' skins. This is expensive, but was a must for the family (pardon the pun).

Early returns from the new ownership are exquisite, as they follow the Foucault mantra: “The only revolution at Clos Rougeard is that we have not changed anything!”


Vinous

Vinous

91

Dark ruby with a hint of garnet. Lovely violet lift to the aromas of ripe plum, black olive and licorice. Fresh and aromatic on the palate, showing noteworthy verve to the enormously rich flavors of sour cherry, wild flowers, smoky spices, licorice and mint. Finishes long and lively in spite of its concentration, with firm but smooth tannins. Nady believes this will evolve along the lines of the great warm vintages of the past like 1959 and 1947.

What the Critics are Saying

Vinous

Vinous

91

Dark ruby with a hint of garnet. Lovely violet lift to the aromas of ripe plum, black olive and licorice. Fresh and aromatic on the palate, showing noteworthy verve to the enormously rich flavors of sour cherry, wild flowers, smoky spices, licorice and mint. Finishes long and lively in spite of its concentration, with firm but smooth tannins. Nady believes this will evolve along the lines of the great warm vintages of the past like 1959 and 1947.