2007 Mas de Daumas Gassac Rouge
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Product:
73818B
Bottle Size:
Bottle
(75 cl)
Case Size:
12
Cellared Case Size:
6
Maturity:
Ready, but will keep
Vintage:
2007
Producer:
Mas de Daumas Gassac
Grape Variety:
Other Varieties
Style:
Medium-Full Bodied,
Dry,
13% alcohol
Eco Information:
| The Wine Advocate |
| 86 - 87+/100 |
|
The 2007 Mas de Daumas Gassac red includes a combined total of around 20%
Cabernet Franc, Merlot, Pinot Noir, Malbec, and Tannat, and a 10% mixture (like
its white counterpart) of assorted, at times exotic varieties. A rather
reductive overlay to a nose initially dominated by pungent herbs and smoked
meats blows off to reveal mulberry, huckleberry, cedar, iodine, and white
pepper. In the mouth, this is firmly textured, juicy, bright, and somewhat
youthfully tart and angular. Wet stone undertones add to a sense of austerity,
but the wine’s energetic brightness and focused black fruits gain the
upper hand in a surprisingly refreshing finish. I don’t perceive this as
achieving much richness, but it is likely to become more interesting while
retaining its kinetic personality for at least 6-8 years.
When Languedoc pioneer Aime Guibert planted his first vines in 1972 and crushed his first Mas Daumas Gassac red in 1978, he was convinced that, improbable though it must have seemed to virtually any other observer at the time, his property and wine would gain worldwide renown. And it did. But a lot of even less predictable changes including grands vins have come to the Languedoc in the last thirty years which Guibert never imagined.
Today, the property his children help him to farm has spawned a few experimental cuvees and a parallel line of inexpensive wines from purchased grapes (under the umbrella “Moulin de Gassac,” with several labels), but the flagships remain a Cabernet-based red and (since 1986) a white consisting of Chardonnay, Petit Manseng, Chenin Blanc, and (up to 20%) grapes from a multi-national collection of varieties more diverse than you would find in many a commercial vine nursery.
(David Schildknecht - Wine Advocate - Jun 2009)
When Languedoc pioneer Aime Guibert planted his first vines in 1972 and crushed his first Mas Daumas Gassac red in 1978, he was convinced that, improbable though it must have seemed to virtually any other observer at the time, his property and wine would gain worldwide renown. And it did. But a lot of even less predictable changes including grands vins have come to the Languedoc in the last thirty years which Guibert never imagined.
Today, the property his children help him to farm has spawned a few experimental cuvees and a parallel line of inexpensive wines from purchased grapes (under the umbrella “Moulin de Gassac,” with several labels), but the flagships remain a Cabernet-based red and (since 1986) a white consisting of Chardonnay, Petit Manseng, Chenin Blanc, and (up to 20%) grapes from a multi-national collection of varieties more diverse than you would find in many a commercial vine nursery.
(David Schildknecht - Wine Advocate - Jun 2009)
| The Wine Advocate |
| 86 - 87+/100 |
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