Oswaldo Costa
Oswaldo Costa
Curiosity about this Foucaultphile winery, named after the founder of bossa nova (as pronounced locally), led me to assemble this rash of infanticides, taking four for the teamsters.
The winery claims to not chaptalize, and the alcohols are remarkably low.
2013 Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Blanc 11.5%
Entry level white. Vibrant white flowers and gunpowder. Astringent, intense citric acidity. Excellent mouth weight. Found the acidity a bit too much, but the better half didn’t. 2013 was a thankless vintages, but the 11.5% and the acidity suggest no attempt to correct. Bravo for transparency.
2011 Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Brézé 12.0%
Decanter shows spectacular minerality on a base of white flowers, with a bit of annoying oak. Glass is more circumspect, bringing out the wood and some lanolin. Acidity also tastes citric, but less intense than the preceding. Body and finish seemed somewhat unsatisfactory.
2011 Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Les Arboises 12.0%
From limestone mixed with clay, the most common soil of the region. Beautiful aroma, full of character: plums, herbs and coffee. Somewhat right bankish, like a 2008 Clos downed in November. Are Saumur CFs those that most resemble CF-dominated right bankers? Peehaps. Mouth weight surprisingly good for a 12 percenter, with no sign of wood, overextraction, or supermaturity. Typical varietal herbaceousness. Not the king of complexity, but conveyed a sense of great purity. Crystal.
2011 Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Les Motelles 12.0%
From locally anomalous gravel and sand over clay. 60 year old vines, their oldest. Pretty shut down, showing a bit of dark fruit, between plum and blackberry. Pronounced acidity, followed by unpleasant bitterness. Herbaceous notes at the end. Also no sign of wood, overextraction, or supermaturity. Went down well once I stopped looking, but nowhere near as likeable as the Arboises. At this point.
Conclusion (as far as possible with wine so young): the whites are aromatically spectacular, have pungent acidity, but the fancier cuvées may have too much wood. The reds reminded me of CF-dominant right bankers (White Horse, anyone?), with good acidity, light alcohol, and no taste of wood (a third to half the reds see new wood for 18 months). But would have to compare with a 2011 Clos to risk a prognosis. The recent 2008 Clos was in another league, but three years may have done the trick.
The winery claims to not chaptalize, and the alcohols are remarkably low.
2013 Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Blanc 11.5%
Entry level white. Vibrant white flowers and gunpowder. Astringent, intense citric acidity. Excellent mouth weight. Found the acidity a bit too much, but the better half didn’t. 2013 was a thankless vintages, but the 11.5% and the acidity suggest no attempt to correct. Bravo for transparency.
2011 Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Brézé 12.0%
Decanter shows spectacular minerality on a base of white flowers, with a bit of annoying oak. Glass is more circumspect, bringing out the wood and some lanolin. Acidity also tastes citric, but less intense than the preceding. Body and finish seemed somewhat unsatisfactory.
2011 Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Les Arboises 12.0%
From limestone mixed with clay, the most common soil of the region. Beautiful aroma, full of character: plums, herbs and coffee. Somewhat right bankish, like a 2008 Clos downed in November. Are Saumur CFs those that most resemble CF-dominated right bankers? Peehaps. Mouth weight surprisingly good for a 12 percenter, with no sign of wood, overextraction, or supermaturity. Typical varietal herbaceousness. Not the king of complexity, but conveyed a sense of great purity. Crystal.
2011 Domaine Guiberteau Saumur Les Motelles 12.0%
From locally anomalous gravel and sand over clay. 60 year old vines, their oldest. Pretty shut down, showing a bit of dark fruit, between plum and blackberry. Pronounced acidity, followed by unpleasant bitterness. Herbaceous notes at the end. Also no sign of wood, overextraction, or supermaturity. Went down well once I stopped looking, but nowhere near as likeable as the Arboises. At this point.
Conclusion (as far as possible with wine so young): the whites are aromatically spectacular, have pungent acidity, but the fancier cuvées may have too much wood. The reds reminded me of CF-dominant right bankers (White Horse, anyone?), with good acidity, light alcohol, and no taste of wood (a third to half the reds see new wood for 18 months). But would have to compare with a 2011 Clos to risk a prognosis. The recent 2008 Clos was in another league, but three years may have done the trick.