2011 Anjou Blanc Sec, 'Litus', Eric Morgat

2011 Anjou Blanc Sec, 'Litus', Eric Morgat

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2011 Anjou Blanc Sec, 'Litus', Eric Morgat

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Description

One’s struck by the wine’s purity, fragility, brittleness, lightness of foot, agility, floral, with white fruit stone flesh, very delicate as to be quasi invisible, precious, needs a few months to settle down, drinking from this autumn.
David Berry Green

Eric Morgat has been making Chenin Blanc since 2001, although his family’s roots go deeper as once owners of historic Chateau de Breuil. A chiselled, intensely focused young man who singly looks after the 6ha of vines, winery & office, he initially succumbed to the whims of the market, opting for more ripeness & (alcoholic) power, but has, since 2007 returned to more classically structured, more sinewy & briny wines from fruit clinging to the steep ancient volcanic & slate slopes of the Layon, some 150 miles east from the Atlantic ocean. 2007 is also when he turned organic in the vineyards, encouraging him to frame the wine’s purity, which he’s doing perfectly. His Anjou Blanc ‘Litus’ is more immediate while the Savennieres demands patience. The 2011 vintage produced bright, crunchy sunny wines with great salinity.

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About this WINE

Eric Morgat, Savennieres

Eric Morgat, Savennieres

Eric Morgat is a handsome young vigneron whose family own Château de Breuil in the Layon. Eric is representative of a number of growers from the Layon who, since the 1990s, have been either renting or purchasing land in Savennières.

Aged 25, he bought two hectares of existing vineyards (Domaine de la Monnaie) and made his first wine in 1995. At this time there were only six producers in the whole appellation, but with this renewed interest, vineyard plantings have now nearly tripled to 200 hectares.

Eric Morgat now has five hectares in production, which he works intensively, de-budding and de-leafing to keep yields well below the rendement at around 30hl/ha. Adopting la lutte raisonnée, Eric prefers to use techniques like homeopathic sprays and cover crop to minimise the use of chemicals.

In common with his fellow Layon wine producers, Eric is producing a richer, riper style of this famously dry and austere wine. In the main, this is due to harvesting in tris (selective pickings), on each occasion picking only very ripe golden (and sometimes passerillé or botrytised) grapes.

The contemporary style of Eric‘s Savennières L‘Enclos also owes much to its fermentation and maturation in oak, a new and controversial development in this very traditional appellation.

Having patiently restored the original domaine, Eric is now expanding the boundaries of Savennières itself. In 2004 he successfully lobbied to bring a one hectare plot in Épire into the appellation. Its south facing ‘vertical‘ slope overlooking the Loire together with its blue schist soils suggest it is destined for greatness. We are unlikely to see any wine from this vineyard until 2010, but we await with interest!

In 2005 Eric also purchased half a hectare in the renowned sub-appellation of La Roche aux Moines. He doesn‘t intend to take advantage of using its own appellation to create a separate wine, but rather to use it for bolstering his Savennières.

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Chenin Blanc

Chenin Blanc

Chenin Blanc is an important white grape variety planted in the Anjou-Saumur and Touraine regions of the Loire Valley and the most widely planted varietal grape in South Africa.

In the Loire it produces high quality dry wines in Savenniéres, and luscious sweet, dessert wines in Coteaux du Layon, Bonnezeaux and Quarts de Chaume. In Vouvray and Montlouis it can be dry, medium dry, or sweet, and still or sparkling. Whether dry or sweet, the best Loire Chenin Blancs possess marvellously concentrated rich, honeyed fruit together with refreshingly vibrant acidity. It is Chenin Blanc's high acidity that enable the wines to age so well.

In South Africa Chenin Blanc is easier to grow and is prized for its versatility. It is used as a cheap blending option with Chardonnay, Colombard, and Muscat but also bottled unblended. The best producers keep their yields low and produce impressive mouthfilling wines.

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