Description
Detailed Description
Fine, very delicate bouquet: graphite, leather, a hint of charcoal, behind which the forest fruit is expressed, also plum compote. Cool and firm structure on the palate, silky, aristocratic tannins, very juicy, very drinkable.
Producer Information
Ch√¢teau L√©oville Barton is a well-regarded estate in the Saint-Julien region of Bordeaux, ranked a second growth in the 1855 Classification. Quality has soared since the 1980s, and it is considered one of the most dependable wines in Bordeaux, gaining regular praise for its reasonable pricing. L√©oville Barton is Cabernet Sauvignon-dominant, tannic and austere when young but develops intense blackcurrant and cassis notes, as well as classic Saint-Julien cedar characteristics. The vineyard, which has gravel soils over clay, is planted 74 percent to Cabernet Sauvignon, 23 percent to Merlot and 3 percent to Cabernet Franc. After a manual harvest, fermentation takes place in large temperature-controlled wooden vats, and then the wine is aged in 50 percent new oak barrels. There is no ch√¢teau building; that which features on the label belongs to Langoa-Barton, L√©oville Barton’s sister estate. In 1821, Anglo-Irish wine merchant Hugh Barton bought Ch√¢teau Langoa Barton and a portion of the L√©oville estate which became L√©oville Barton (the other sections are now L√©oville-Poyferr√© and L√©oville-Las Cases).
A second wine, La R√©serve de L√©oville Barton is produced from younger vines and lots which lack the quality and depth of the grand vin. Anthony Barton inherited the two properties from his uncle Ronald in 1983 and guided them through much of the region’s growth in prosperity throughout the late 1980s, 1990s and into the 21st Century. The estate is now run by his daughter Lilian Barton Sartorius and her children M√©lanie and Damien.
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