Chateau La Cardonne Medoc 1998
Product Details
Your Rating
Somm Note
Winemaker Notes
Other Vintages
2010-
Parker
Robert -
Suckling
James
-
Spectator
Wine
Often referred to as ‘Bordeaux’s most charming wine.’ This former Lafite-Rothschild vineyard is now managed by Andrew McInnes, and Magali Guyon, who are constantly searching for finesse and harmony, to produce truly memorable wines that fully express the nature of their unique little plots of land that sit on the highest plateau in the Médoc.
“At Château La Cardonne, it’s not simply a marriage of soil and climate. It’s the gentle slopes offering themselves to the sun, the hare that leaps happily over the vines, the birds who nest in their trees, the bees who come to visit in search of wild flowers, and the sea of clouds that float past us in the early morning.
It is the communion with these surroundings that allow us to compose their wines, embracing it all, and bottling it for others to love.” Most importantly they have the patience required to leave the wines gracefully ageing in their magnificent underground ‘cathedral’ for 5 years and more, until they’re ready to be truly enjoyed by wine lovers all around the world.
Wine-growing at Chateau La Cardonne began in the 17th century, when its gravel and clay-limestone soils in the northern Medoc commune of Blaignan, five miles beyond the St-Estephe appellation, was first planted with vines. After many years of ownership by Chateau Lafite-Rothschild, who completely restructured the vineyard in the 1980's, the estate was fortunately acquired by the Charloux family in 1990. Their first step was to install state-of-the-art winemaking facilities, and build the largest underground bottle cellar in the Médoc, locally known as "The Cathedral".
The vineyard is planted with a grape mix of 50% Merlot, 45% Cabernet Sauvignon and 5% Cabernet Franc, and the vines average 30 years of age. After vinification specially adjusted to suit each varietal, Chateau La Cardonne wines are blended and aged for 12-14 months in French oak barrels, after which they are bottle-aged in the chateau's spectacular underground cellar.