2022 Les Inséparables

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2022 Les Inséparables
2022 Les Inséparables

 

94 pts JebDunnuck.com Logo

93 Pts 

Sustainably Farmed from Napa Valley, Paso Robles, and San Ynez Vineyards, a trio of YUM — the palate is very giving and luxurious with a sensual and exotic finish. Medium light gold color, with aromatics of apricot, peach, and Bosc pear, vanilla bean, cinnamon and just a touch of minerality (Petrichor) that really give the wine pinpoint focus and lift. The palate is very giving and luxurious while showcasing both dried peach and apricots, but a touch of lime that brings freshness to the mid-palate that is both sensual and exotic to a lengthy finish. 

The blend: 43% Grenache Blanc, 30% Roussanne, 27% Viognier. In the Cohn Zone: drink now - 2033.

Production notes

The oak / concrete treatment for this wine is: 35% Concrete Egg Grenache Blanc, 49% New French Oak Grenache Blanc + Roussanne, 16% Neutral Oak Viognier

Vintage2022
VarietalBlend
AppellationCalifornia
Alcohol14.00%
Volume750 ml
Country of OriginUNITED STATES
State of OriginCalifornia

 

94 pts JebDunnuck.com Logo

Its medium gold hue is followed by a medium-bodied, elegant, yet richer wine from Cohn that has a gorgeous nose of ripe lemons, honeysuckle, toast, and white flowers. It brings some classic Cohn richness, but this stays pretty and elegant, with a terrific sense of freshness.

93 Pts 

This white blend of Rhone grape varieties has a charming floral, peachy quality that's almost like Alsace instead of the Rhone. Honeysuckle, honey, almond and white peach notes with good balance and freshness. Complex, layered, delicious and easy to sip. Drink now.

Jeff standing next to concrete egg fermentorEGG VATS: Concrete Evidence 16th May, 2011 

Winemakers from Austria to Chile are going to work on an egg to add complexity to their wines, reports Sally Easton MW.

The first egg vat was commissioned in 2001 by Michel Chapoutier, following discussions and design between Chapoutier and French vat manufacturer Marc Nomblot, whose company has been making concrete wine vats since 1922. The shapely historic connection to Roman amphorae was not coincidental.

The vats are made without using chemical additives, according to Nomblot, from washed Loire sand, gravel, non-chlorinated spring water, and cement. The concrete is unlined and must be treated with tartaric acid solutions before use. Since 2001, Nomblot has sold some 800 of the vats, which are usually 6hl or 16hl in size.

Concrete has been used successfully since the 19th century for winemaking, but the egg shape itself is new. Regardless of shape, temperature fluctuation is quite small, although the concrete is liable to crack if temperatures get too high.

A critical factor is the continuous flow of liquid. Biodynamic farmer Werner Michlits, of Meinklang in Austria, observed a temperature difference of around 1°C between the top and bottom of his eggs, which Michlits said enhances the slow, continuous flow of the liquid.

Gilles Lapalus of Sutton Grange Winery, who was the first to import egg vats into Australia in 2005, points out: “With this sort of shape there are no dead corners, so there is a better uniformity of the composition of the liquid, in terms of temperature especially.” And he adds: “The fermentation kinetics seem more regular, and it’s less reductive than stainless steel.” However, he was quick to point out that he has made no strict comparisons.
 

Early adopter

Eben Sadie in South Africa was an early adopter and has been using eggs for his white wines for eight years. He uses the 6hl size, in which he says the fermentation temperature is stable. Sadie explains that, in an ambient cellar temperature of 16°C, “My white fermentations are about 20°C without any cooling. I do not inoculate and natural ferments are cooler than yeast additions.”

Explaining the effect of the circulation, he says it “adds more depth and structure to the wine but does not let wines go flabby; they stay linear, dense, and tight. It is finer stitching.”

Lapalus agrees, saying: “In my experience with Viognier, we can have long time on lees with a good control on reductive character, giving a lot of texture to the wine. And I do not see any effect on the acid profile.”  

A similar result has been seen at California’s Spottswoode, which has been using egg vats since 2006 to create a blending component for its Sauvignon Blanc. Winemaker Jennifer Williams said she wanted “to increase minerality and weight in our white wines. Concrete preserves the natural character of Sauvignon while also adding richness and body. The [eggs] act like oak barrels in creating texture, [but] without imparting vanillin, spice, etc. They preserve fruit flavors and aromas like stainless does.”  

Another often-cited benefit is micro-oxygenation akin to that seen with oak, without imparting oak flavor, and avoiding the reductive conditions of stainless steel. Sadie says: “I tried to find an alternative vessel to wood that could breathe, but that does not give taste of wood, which is not part of terroir. Concrete allows a higher level of purity, site, and place.”

Back in Australia, Julian Castagna has also started maturing his Viognier, which is used in the flagship Genesis Syrah. He says: “Concrete had a freshness that surprised me and I thought was really interesting.” And for him this was enough to do his own experiments: “At the level of wine we make, to try and increase quality by even 1% is worthwhile. My gut tells me it will add another level of complexity.

For reds, maturation is the main use. Inevitably, Alvaro Espinoza was the first in South America to buy egg vats, in 2009. He has two 6hl vats, saying he is experimenting with the smallest ones because it is extremely expensive to move them from France.

He is working with Carmenère, saying: “I wanted to age the wine on its lees after malo. The lees are always in movement, like a continuous batonnage, because of the shape of the egg.” However, Espinoza adds, it can nonetheless be difficult to clarify the wines, so he puts the wine in tank for three to four weeks afterwards, before racking.

“We did a tasting a few weeks ago. An egg tank can age better than a barrel,” he says. “It shows very nicely with a lot of fruit flavors, without oak. But we also get an exceptionally good mouth development, round, and soft.

Making the comparison with stainless steel, he adds: “The wine evolved in terms of tannin structure. The wine increases in volume, mouth feel and softness, and I prefer the sweetness of the wine. And, he says: “You don’t have reduction in concrete – I haven’t racked all year.”

Michlits has also found that there is “nearly no evaporation of wine” in egg vats. Comparing Sankt Laurent in stainless steel, oak, and concrete, he says: “Concrete had the best texture and mouth feeling; it was fuller, rounder, and with more complex, darker fruit. Wood gave more tannin structure; stainless steel was the lightest.

Apart from the cost, much of which is spent on transportation, the main drawbacks include the need to protect against acid corrosion. Castagna says: “Concrete is more work, but if you prepare it correctly it forms a skin. I can see that in our eggs already – a layer of tartaric acid which is forming on the inside. Within two to three seasons, the wine will not be in contact with concrete, it will be in contact with tartaric acid. The shape will be the most principal element of it. “  

As to science, the Geisenheim Institute has been leading the field with one experiment to date, which Dr Maximilian Freund calls neither representative nor science, comparing Rheingau Riesling in a 900-litre concrete egg (made by Michlits) and in a 900-litre stainless steel tank.

The experiment concluded that Rheingau Riesling in 2008 was not particularly well suited to concrete, as its pH was too low for unlined concrete, meaning the wine acids corroded the concrete. However, the concrete did not affect the sensory properties of the Riesling.

Two considerations

Freund explains that there are two considerations with egg vats: namely the concrete itself, and the egg shape.

Of the concrete he said that in regions with a higher pH and lower acidity, such as the southern part of Europe where mostly red wines are made, wine is not so corrosive.

On the shape, Freund says the single experiment did not “see any difference in fermentation” between stainless steel and the egg vat. He also found no difference in yeast cell numbers and biomass between stainless steel and egg but found the length of fermentation in egg was longer, with a little higher residual sugar.

While eggs may be über-trendy and fun to look at, they are not the new wonder-drug of wine. Lapalus draws us back to reality: “I do not want to create an ‘egg’ wine – it is too much of a fashion. It is just a tool, not a magic trick. The important work is in the vineyard, then not to miss or destroy the potential in winemaking. The entire process is important – not only one element.”

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