originally posted by robert ames:
originally posted by Christian Miller (CMM):
originally posted by mark e:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Roger Sabon Olivets, Les Cailloux, Mont-Olivet Mt Papet, Font de Michelle, Deus-Ex Machina St Jean, Vieux Donjon, Rotem Mounir aouma Omnia, Texier VV, Vieux Telegraphe La Crau, etc., etc.
. . . Pete
Caillloux, Mt. Olivet, Clos St. Jean (and especially the special curves named here), and Vieux Donjon are all Cambie wines. Font Michelle definitely sees new oak. These wines have their fans but they are not what Mark was asking for. I have no experience with Clos Saouma, which is what I think Pete means by Rotem etc.Texier makes a great CdP and is also worth seeking out. I don't have enough experience with Roger Sabon to say one way or the other.
I was curious about Cambie, not really knowing much about him. He seems to be omnipresent in the Southern Rhone. Reading an interview, I noted that he favors full ripeness (or should I read surmaturité?). In any case, his own Les Halos de Jupiter Chateauneuf-du-Pape 2014 is >16.5% ABV.
On a slightly related note, I know that in California - at least in the past - winemakers needed to use selected yeasts to restart stuck fermentations, particularly in musts with very high Brix. I had asked a number of people whether they thought that it might be possible to select a yeast with a very poor conversion ratio for such musts, but they had no idea. Alas, the yeasts that get to the finish line (say up to 17% or so) are very efficient converters of sugar to alcohol. Perhaps Comrade Brézème could comment on this?
My impression from one chemistry prof/winemaker I knew was that the range of conversion ratios feasible for yeasts was fairly limited.
it's been a while, so things may have changed, but the word on the street was that cultured yeasts as a rule are more efficient than wild yeasts in converting sugar to alcohol.
I knew that, but the wild guys probably can't take a must with a potential alcohol of 17 to dryness.
not sure what you mean by cambie being omnipresent, but it would be wrong to suggest that all cndp vignerons use him or seek the surmaturite that he espouses.
I mean that he consults for quite a few estates. Is surmaturité universally espoused in the Southern Rhône? Of course not.