96 Rayas

Steve Edmunds

Steve Edmunds
I got invited to dinner by a friend and colleague who just returned from his first visit to Chateauneuf du Pape, and seems quite smitten by it. He brought a couple of wines to share, one of which, the '96 Rayas, was really captivating.
I can't remember the last time I had Rayas, perhaps 18 or 19 years ago, and my memory of it isn't clear, because the context was a bit overwhelming (long story). I'd had a few vintages very early in my time in the wine business, when my sense of Chateauneuf felt entirely unformulated, and remember liking the '59, A LOT.
'96 was an odd, very cool vintage in the Southern Rhone; I spent some time there at mid-Summer that year, and was amazed at how cold it was. The '96 Rayas was lovely, quite restrained, and finely structured, seemingly the antithesis of the big wines I've come to expect from CdP. Almost muscatty-floral, and surprisingly youthful and fresh for what seemed like such a light wine. I found myself returning to it repeatedly with a kind of astonishment that it seemed so very unlike any other Chateauneuf in my memory. Such fun!
 
I love 96 CNP.

You should be drinking 86, 88, 92, 93, and 96...cool toned years that are lovely.
 
1996. the year of the acid. denise louis told me that all summer long, although wonderfully sunny, once the sun was down you needed a sweater to be outdoors. the crowning appellation of that year is champagne.
 
I agree with Levi on Piemonte and Muscadet for 1996. Though I am quite happy with several Champagnes from the vintage.

Very glad to hear that the Rayas has turned out well. You may recall 1996 was the first vintage for the nephew, having stepped in for poor Monsieur Reynaud who had recently departed this world.
 
originally posted by Jeff Connell:
I agree with Levi on Piemonte and Muscadet for 1996. Though I am quite happy with several Champagnes from the vintage.

Very glad to hear that the Rayas has turned out well. You may recall 1996 was the first vintage for the nephew, having stepped in for poor Monsieur Reynaud who had recently departed this world.

Jacques Reynaud died in the spring of 1997, so he vinified the 1996, though Emmanuel bottled it. I think people credit the 95 as his last vintage of Rayas because it has a loftier reputation and so was a better one to go out on.
 
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