Winemaker Notes
The wine is clear and crystal-like pale gold color with silver reflections. The initial scent is quite expressive and evokes floral notes and white fruit. As it opens up, ripe and juicy yellow fruit notes blend with delicate touches of sweet spices. On the palate, there is a sensation of refreshing minerality, complemented by a pleasing round texture.
Blend: 58% Bourboulenc, 26% Vermentino, 14% Clairette, 2% Grenache Blanc
Professional Ratings
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Wilfred Wong of Wine.com
COMMENTARY: The 2022 La Verrerie Méditerranée White Wine is expansive and nicely textured on the palate. Pair its aromas and flavors with savory spices, ripe lemons, and chalky notes with spicy chicken wings. (Tasted: May 26, 2024, San Francisco, CA)
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Wine Enthusiast
A creamy, open, charming style, this wine has ripe melon, apple and nectarine notes that glide through the finish. A baking spice note lingers, inviting you for more.
Full-bodied and flavorful, white Rhône blends originate from France’s Rhône Valley. Today these blends are also becoming popular in other regions. Typically some combination of Grenache Blanc, Marsanne, Roussanne and Viognier form the basis of a white Rhône blend with varying degrees of flexibility depending on the exact appellation. Somm Secret—In the Northern Rhône, blends of Marsanne and Roussanne are common but the south retains more variety. Marsanne, Roussanne as well as Bourboulenc, Clairette, Picpoul and Ugni Blanc are typical.
A long and narrow valley producing flavorful red, white, and rosé wines, the Rhône is bisected by the river of the same name and split into two distinct sub-regions—north and south. While a handful of grape varieties span the entire length of the Rhône valley, there are significant differences between the two zones in climate and geography as well as the style and quantity of Rhône wines produced. The Northern Rhône, with its continental climate and steep hillside vineyards, is responsible for a mere 5% or less of the greater region’s total output. The Southern Rhône has a much more Mediterranean climate, the aggressive, chilly Mistral wind and plentiful fragrant wild herbs known collectively as ‘garrigue.’
In the Northern Rhône, the only permitted red variety is Syrah, which in the appellations of St.-Joseph, Crozes-Hermitage, Hermitage, Cornas and Côte-Rôtie, it produces velvety black-fruit driven, savory, peppery red wines often with telltale notes of olive, game and smoke. Full-bodied, perfumed whites are made from Viognier in Condrieu and Château-Grillet, while elsewhere only Marsanne and Roussanne are used, with the former providing body and texture and the latter lending nervy acidity. The wines of the Southern Rhône are typically blends, with the reds often based on Grenache and balanced by Syrah, Mourvèdre, and an assortment of other varieties. All three northern white varieties are used here, as well as Grenache Blanc, Clairette, Bourbelenc and more. The best known sub-regions of the Southern Rhône are the reliable, wallet-friendly Côtes du Rhône and the esteemed Châteauneuf-du-Pape. Others include Gigondas, Vacqueyras and the rosé-only appellation Tavel.