
I’ll be writing a full report of these 2003s from the North and South Rhône and from some handpicked stars of the Languedoc for purple pages
very soon but for the moment, on the basis of the cask samples, I would
recommend all four 2003s in the offer from Domaine Daniel and Denis
Alary of Cairanne in the southern Rhône where son Denis, now in charge
of the domaine, has been introducing gentler extraction techniques and
a little bit of new oak to fine effect. And the best thing of all is
the price, still
delightfully moderate despite three short vintages in a row – 2001-2002
– in and around the village of Cairanne (where François and Frédéric Alary run another domaine altogether, L’Oratoire St-Martin).
The regular Côtes du Rhône 2003
is delicious – fresh, almost minty-fresh on the nose offering very
supple sweet, round fruit that you could already drink now, although
there is enough stuffing here to see it through the next couple of
years at least. This is proper wine (Jonathan Nossiter of Mondovino
fame would approve) based on Grenache but with about 25 per cent Syrah
and about 15 per cent Carignan. The in bond price is just £38 a dozen,
which at current UK duty rates will work out at around £62, or a fiver
a bottle – such a bargain that I have had to do the calculation several
times to be sure this is correct.
Côtes du Rhône Villages, Cairanne 2003
contains 25 per cent Syrah for added backbone to the obviously
carefully-farmed Grenache and this is a wine to be tucked away for two
or three years at least but has quite brilliant sweetness on the front
palate already – the taste of 2003? (There are many, many 2003s in
southern
Côtes du Rhône Villages, Cairanne 2003 Font d’Estevenas is very obviously Syrah-dominated with its 60 per cent of the
Côtes du Rhône Villages, Cairanne 2003 Jean de Verde
is the Alary’s answer to Châteauneuf-du-Pape – extremely rich and
glorious from the Alarys’ finest, presumably oldest, Grenache vines. So
vivid is the fruit that it is easy to overlook the well-managed tannins
lurking underneath to keep this wine going for many a year. Buy and
keep – not too painful at £104 a case in bond, less than £140 a case
including duty and VAT – extremely good value.
Genesis
Wines expect to deliver these wines over the next 12 months. I should
stress that the samples I tasted were not yet in bottle. Those who
would rather head for recommendations based on already bottled samples
should take a look at the Genesis offerings from Domaine Fondrèche in Côtes du Ventoux and Ch de la Négly in Coteaux du Languedoc.
Veritas Wines of Cambridge are offering the straight Côtes du Rhône by the single bottle, but for more than £8 each. If Genesis are indulging us in the classic manoeuvre of working on slim margins to get themselves noticed, then they have succeeded magnificently. Take advantage while you may.
Stockists of the Alarys’ wines elsewhere include Circle Wine & Liquor of



