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Bordeaux 2011 – Pomerol, Lalande-de-Pomerol and Fronsac

Monday 23 April 2012
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For a wealth of tasting notes and articles related to the 2011 vintage, see our Bordeaux 2011 guide.

Red
Bright cherry red. Gently floral cherry. Attractive on the nose but a bit severe on the palate, though there's some juicy fruit trying hard to escape the straitjacket of the tannins. (JH)
Drink: 2017 – 2024
Red
Very ripe black fruit and very toasty. Mocha too – and even more so on the palate. Lots of oak char, well-rounded tannins, fresh on the finish. Just a bit too oaky but it is lively in the middle so maybe it will settle? (JH)
Drink: 2017 – 2026
Red
100% Merlot. Rich dark fruit laced with vanilla sweetness but again that attractive floral note. Delivers less on the palate, rather slight in the middle but not lean because the tannins are rounded and gentle. (JH)
Drink: 2014 – 2019
Red
Smudgy cherry crimson. A little dusty but plenty of cherry fruit. Violet notes, too. Dense, chewy but the balance of fruit and structure is better than some. Spicy, thick finish. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2024
Red
Dark cherry colour. More intensity on the nose than any in the line up so far. Sweet oak and bright, pure fruit with a light earthy note adding a savoury dimension. Same earthy dry quality on the palate with a light leafiness on the finish. Powder-fine tannins and lovely restraint. (JH)
Drink: 2017 – 2028
Red
Inky black cherry. Floral and sweet dark fruit. Firm and a bit flat in the middle. Flat and powdery dry on the finish, too. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2024
Red
Vineyard encépagement: 70% Merlot, 20% Cabernet Franc, 10% Cabernet Sauvignon. Deep dark crimson. Violets and cedary oak on the nose, just a hint of unripeness on the nose. Likewise on the palate, a little bit herbaceous and tannins are fine grained but a bit drying on the finish. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2024
Red
100% Merlot. Deep crimson. Chocolate and cherry but fresh too. Very very fine, dry tannins, fresh and minerally on the palate. Completely unshowy but long and just a touch of chocolate coming back on the finish. More depth in the mid palate. (JH)
Drink: 2017 – 2028
Red
80% Merlot (9-16 September), 20% Cabernet Franc (19 September), 30% new oak. Deep greyish crimson. Subtle dark cherry fruit. Lively and so fresh. The oak shows a little just now but in balance for this stage. Fresh sour cherry finish. Lively, bright and juicy but not overly sweet. Dry but not drying on the finish. (JH)
Alcohol: 13.3%
Drink: 2016 – 2022
Red
Warm, spicy damsons on the nose. A bit dusty. Pretty ripe on the palate, the fruit more raisined. Dense, dry and quite juicy, thick in the mouth. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2024
Red
Black as the ace of spades. Charry dark fruit. Oak dominates for now at least. Really oaky on the palate too. There's juicy freshness that just manages to escape the oak but I fear it really has the upper hand. Firm dry tannins compete with the acidity and make the whole a bit jagged. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2024
Red
70% Merlot, 30% Cabernet Franc. Rich cherry crimson. Generous and open on the nose. More savoury on the palate. Good fruit depth and well balanced by the velvety thick tannins and just enough freshness. Big and wholehearted. (JH)
Drink: 2017 – 2026
Red
80% Merlot, 20% Cabernet Franc. Black core, deep purple rim. Very slight greenness on the nose though it well hidden by riper dark fruit too. Tannins are pretty dry as there's a lack of fruit depth in the middle and lightly bitter on the finish. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2025
Red
100% Merlot. Chocolate damsons on the nose lifted by a light dustiness and some brighter cassis. Pretty light on the mid palate. Soft and gentle but disappears rather quickly. (JH)
Drink: 2014 – 2018
Red
Deep black cherry. Aromatic, ripe fruit with a leaning toward cough linctus. Lovely freshness on the palate, juicy and fresh and lively and leaves your mouth revitalised. One of the most attractive Pomerols I've tasted so far in this vintage. Tannins well judged. (JH)
Drink: 2017 – 2029
Red
Deepest black cherry. Interesting nose – quite spicy and peppery dark fruit. Much darker and more coaly on the palate. Dry, fine grained, nothing in excess but not particularly exciting. A bit drying at the end. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2026
Red
5% Cabernet Franc, 95% Merlot. Deep inky core and purple rim. Lifted nose, a touch volatile. Tastes a bit bretty too. It does at least have fresh acidity. (JH)
Drink: 2015 – 0
Red
90% Merlot (5-12 September), 10% Cabernet Franc (19 September), 50% new oak. Red fruit freshness on the nose. Fragrant mix of fruit and graphite. There's a dark firmness but the wine is fluid through the middle. Dark rather oaky finish. 50% new oak seems a little too much to me. Less fragrance than the Chenade, and very dry on the finish. (JH)
Drink: 2015 – 2021
Red
Inky black cherry colour. Ripe and intense and rich on the nose. Lots of sweet fruit but very fresh too and so rounded. Deep fruit pie. Structured and still so smooth. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2024
Red
100% Merlot (picked 16 September). Dusty dark fruit, just a touch leafy. But then a fluid freshness in the middle. Not particularly dense but pretty dry, and seems to lack fruit generosity. Layers of dry texture build to more depth. Not trying hard to please. No roundness at all. Very linear. Severe. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2024
Red
90% Merlot (12-15 September), 10% Cabernet Franc (24 September), 80% new oak. Lots of toasty oak on the nose. On top of ripe red plums, spicy too. Juicy fruit on the mid palate. Richer but still pretty dry overall. There's a slight bitterness from the oak char on the finish. Needs a lot of time. Very tight, closed and not wanting to make friends. (JH)
Drink: 2018 – 2027
Red
Jean-Pascal Vazart, second in command to Charles Chevallier, describes the wine as fruity and expressive. It does have plenty of fruit but I found it more expressive on the palate than on the nose at the moment. 6% Cabernet Franc, 94% Merlot. Very dark crimson with dark cherry rim and black core. Dark and savoury – both fruit and oak flavours – and the tannins are fine but pretty dense. Quite unexpectedly juicy in the middle (like a dark chocolates with a liquid fruit centre) but then markedly dark fruited on the finish. Lively though dark. Good length, too. Nice balance between density of tannins and liveliness. Finishes fresh. (JH)
Drink: 2020 – 2033
Red
90% Merlot, 10% Cabernet Franc. Black core and dark cherry rim. Rich, dark and exotic on the nose. Finest of tannins and lots of fresh juicy fruit in the middle. Firm tannic build; not dry just pretty embryonic. (JH)
Drink: 2018 – 2030
Red
33 months in new French oak. Black core, dark cherry rim. Smoky black fruit. Like sucking charred wood. Dark and bitter. No pleasure here at the moment and hard to know how much fruit will be there when the oak recedes. (JH)
Drink: 2017 – 2024
Red
Deep black cherry colour. Lots of oak char on the nose, a touch smoky, though the cassis peeks through. Charred oak is all I can taste at the moment though there is clearly some decent fruit weight in the middle. There's fresh acidity but the oak is overpowering the fruit. Bitter finish. (JH)
Drink: 2017 – 2025
Red
Vineyard encépagement: 80% Merlot, 20% Cabernet Franc. Smells riper and darker than the Hosanna but still with the Cab Franc freshness showing through. More obviously oaky on the palate than some in this Moueix line up but has the richness of fruit to handle. Good fruit depth with a dry, moreish finish. (JH)
Drink: 2018 – 2030
Red
Inky crimson. Intensely sweet plummy fruit. Very sweet and juicy though there's plenty of acidity too. Full flavoured but a bit crude at the moment. Firm, dense and will please those who seek fruit first. Acidity needs to settle down a bit. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2024
Red
90% Merlot, 10% Cabernet Franc. Deep cherry crimson. Dark and fragrant. Red cherry fruit aroma. Nicely aromatic. Already supple. Fine and fresh and gently handled. Shorter vatting than usual. Moreish and harmonious. Really fresh and scented on the mid palate. More friendly than La Violette. Silky. Smooth, rounded and finely textured. Relatively lightweight. (JH)
Drink: 2017 – 2025
Red
Ripe dark fruit with violets and chocolates. Pretty intense on the nose. Very floral. Leaner on the palate than I expected but has just enough flesh for the structure. Not overly generous. Drying finish. (JH)
Drink: 2017 – 2026
Red

Vineyard encépagement: 85% Merlot, 15% Cabernet Franc.
Mid to deep crimson, less dark than the St-Émilions in the Moueix stable. Cherry fruit, not quite linctus but heading that way. Then dry and powder-fine tannins on the cedary palate. Restraint throughout but a lingering finish. (JH)

Drink: 2016 – 2027
Red
Bought by Catherine Pere-Vergé in 2002. 100% Merlot. Bright red cherry fruit. Lively red fruited and fresh. Lively. Juicy and bright. (JH)
Drink: 2015 – 2022
Red
Vineyard encépagement: 70% Merlot, 30% Cabernet Franc. Lovely restrained purity of dark fruit with the clarity and graphite note of Cabernet Franc singing out. Lovely mineral tension and freshness. Fine, fine yet smooth dry tannins. Vivacious in a conservative sort of way. Like well-cut cloth. A beautiful wine. (JH)
Drink: 2018 – 2030
Red
Deep dark black cherry. Fine, just ripe cherry fruit and just a little minty. Silky fine tannins. delicate, somehow both lacy and a little austere = elegant. Spicy aftertaste from the Cabernet, dark and mineral on the finish. Really mineral. The tannins are dry but the whole wine is so fluid. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2024
Red
Jacques Guinaudeau describes the 2011s as more 'secret' than the exuberant 2009s and the exceptional 2010s. 47% Merlot (31 August, 12 September), 53% Cabernet Franc (22-23 September). The best Merlots were those they picked on 31 August. Very small berries and they had to limit the height of the canopy to reduce the water stress.
A little note of mint here too, from the Merlot, but there's also a dark-fruited sweetness and a note of red cherry, small berries, and a hint of something floral. Fragrant. And a dusty minerality. Utterly fresh, so fleeting, it seems, on the palate but then it goes on and on. Starts dry and grows softer on the finish. There's a dark but lightweight minerality. So, so long. (JH)
Drink: 2019 – 2030
Red
Vineyard encépagement: 80% Merlot, 20% Cabernet Franc. Deep crimson. Bright cherry fruit. Delicate but lovely fragrance. Dry, fine texture, attractively dry tannins. Finesse and harmony without any unnecessary show but more evident fruit on the finish. (JH)
Drink: 2017 – 2027
Red
100% Merlot. The more recently replanted vines. Dark cherry fruit. Some sweet oak. Really silky and fresh. Not a big wine but all in harmony. The tannins are present but so supple it is easy to overlook them. Gently handled. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2022
Red
80% Merlot, 20% Cabernet Franc. Vinified at Le Gay in wooden vats. Intense but subtle red cherry fruit. Very inviting and fragrant then more austere with some oak spice on the palate, fine and subtle tannins though there is plenty there. Long and well balanced and just fresh on the finish. (JH)
Drink: 2017 – 2027
Red
Vineyard encépagement: 95% Merlot, 5% Malbec. Sweet, ripe and spicy on the nose. Ripe damson fruit. Then a strange dusty dryness on the finish. A bit cardboardy. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2022
Red
90% Merlot, 10% Cabernet Franc. Black core and dark cherry rim. Seductive dark fruit and floral aromas with a touch of chocolate. Really perfumed. Richer on the mid palate than the Vieux Taillefer but soft rather than deep. Fine grained and smooth and easy. (JH)
Drink: 2014 – 2019
Red
Driest vintage of the decade and nearly the warmest of the decade (overall), says Jean-Hubert Delon. 88% Merlot, 12% Cabernet Franc. (More Cabernet Franc has been planted so they will soon have 25% Cabernet Franc in the blend.) 15% new barrels. Bright cherry red. Fragrant, graphite and red fruit. Zippy and fresh. Less alcohol and more acid than in 2010. Has that lovely Cabernet Franc freshness that stands out in 2011. Slight and attractive grain to the tannins. (JH)
Alcohol: 13.7%
Drink: 2016 – 2025
Red
22% Cabernet Franc, 78% Merlot. 25% new oak. Intense black cherry colour. Again that graphite fragrance but really juicy and alive and fluid. Bright and full of life. 'Médoc style of Pomerol' suggests Steven Spurrier and that's quite a good description. Upright and tight and fresh. Very scented on the palate, long but elegant too. (JH)
Alcohol: 13.7%
Drink: 2016 – 2028
Red
19% Cabernet Franc, 72% Merlot, 9% Cabernet Sauvignon. 65% new oak. Deep greyish crimson. Interesting orange aroma in addition to spicy cassis. Such a contrast with the Pauillacs tasted at Pichon Longueville. Orange pekoe tea. Seductive without being opulent. Cleaner cut than may Pomerols this year. Fine and polite tannins but with a disguised grip. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2024
Red
Another property with a cellar under construction (Jean-Claude Berrouet looked very smart in his personalised hard hat). Harvested 12-22 September, a week earlier than in 2010. 'We were very gentle in 2011', says Olivier Berrouet, since small berries meant that the tannins were actually higher than in 2010 and less ripe (lack of sunshine), so they wanted to extract the tannins earlier, before the alcohol started to climb, leading to the extraction of tougher tannins. The acidity very slightly higher, the alcohol lower. It could evolve to be like the 2001.
Deep glossy dark crimson. Warm, restrained hedgerow fruit, a little biscuity note, a little spicy. Really tangy and so full of energy and life, the fruit sings. Very expressive and the oak firmly in the back seat. Juicy and soft at the front and mid palate, though there is a density under there, a firm foundation, an underground concentration. Very very long and real volume building in the mouth. Builds and builds in the mouth. Caressing and long. (JH)
Drink: 2022 – 2040
Red
First vintage in the new, neat and architecturally simple but elegant cellar, all sun-reflecting limestone and reassuring oak doors, attractive angles within and without. Just in time for the 2011 vintage. Harvested 12-13 September (early ripeness on gravel allowing retention of freshness, says Fiona Morrison MW, aka Mrs Jacques Thienpont). Yield 35 hl/ha. Pumping over only in the early part of fermentation, again to retain freshness, then the wine was left alone.
Deep rich black cherry colour. Gently toasty nose, essentially red fruited and just a little perfumed. Fine, seemingly gentle tannins. Marked by scented freshness, making it hard not to make some reference to burgundy, though the tannins are denser. As with so many in 2011, alcohol was almost 1% lower than in 2010, changing the balance and increasing the wine's approachability. (JH)
Alcohol: 13.3%
Drink: 2018 – 2030
Red
Dark cherry crimson. Fine minerally dark fruit, delicate. Hint of coffee. Richer on the palate than the St-Émilions. A little flat on the finish, stony, earthy aftertaste with a slight herbaceousness that gives freshness. Smooth and fine tannins. (JH)
Drink: 2017 – 2025
Red
Sweet, perfumed dark and ripe and chocolatey. Deep dark fruit, not overly ripe with a more savoury freshness on the palate. Big but showing more restraint in the structure than many. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2026
Red
Vineyard encépagement: 90% Merlot, 10% Cabernet Franc. Fresh and lively red fruit on the nose. Cedary and mineral freshness. Really dry finesse and length. Balance and harmony with a nice earthy aftertaste. (JH)
Drink: 2018 – 2030
Red
Slight reductive note. Beyond that, bright blackcurrant. Not very welcoming on the palate. Dry and quite dark fruited. A bit hard on the palate and perhaps overworked. Dry and dense, lacks lift. Tough finish. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2023
Red
Vineyard encépagement: 90% Merlot, 10% Cabernet Franc. Very different from Hosanna. Deep crimson. Lovely pure rich fruit, both red and black. A touch floral too and a hint of oak sweetness over all that. Restrained but very persistent and refined to the finish. Earthy mineral aftertaste. (JH)
Drink: 2018 – 2032
Red
Alexandre Thienpont says happily, 'De retour a Bordeaux' – back to Bordeaux after the last two atypical vintages, clearly delighted with the way Cabernet Franc has performed this year. He has included 28% in 2011 compared with 5-6% in 2009 and 2010. It's a variety that copes quite well with lack of water but not with extreme heat.
Rich purple crimson. Camomile (though I am not sure I would have spotted this if Alexandre hadn't mentioned it) plus fine dark fruit and graphite freshness. Closed on the nose but scented on the palate. Very fine tannins. Crunchy. Fresh and long. Great purity and line and length. Absolutely lovely. (JH)
Alcohol: 13.6%
Drink: 2020 – 2035
Red
80% Merlot, 20% Cabernet Franc. Inky crimson. Pure ripe dark plums with a light touch of chocolate. But the fruit wins out. Harmonious and polished. Not terribly long but a nice whole and creamy texture. (JH)
Drink: 2016 – 2026
Red
100% Merlot. Destemmed by hand and fermented, after cold maceration, in 100% new oak barrels. Sweet and chocolatey. Much more savoury and dense than Le Gay. Richer but less giving and needs more time. Tannins are dense but very polished. Long and rich. (JH)
Drink: 2020 – 2030

 

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