Pinot Noir 2020

GREYWACKE

119,70 €
39,90 € / item

Un pinot noir qui incarne l’élégance et la complexité du terroir de Marlborough

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New Zealand

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Vin Red

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13.5%

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5-10 years

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100% Pinot Noir

Idéal en accompagnement de viandes grillées, de volailles rôties ou de plats à base de champignons.

Let's talk little, let's talk wine

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Kevin Judd is one of the region’s pioneering winemakers who have helped establish New Zealand wines. In 2009, he established his own winery, which he named Greywacke , after the bedrock (sandstone) that gives rise to the vineyards around the Wairau River. Based in the Omaka Valley, Kevin and his small team craft fine, complex wines. The low-intervention winemaking methods aim to produce wines with distinctive character. Among them is his signature wine, Wild Sauvignon, a new-wave Sauvignon, fermented in old barrels with indigenous yeasts, which plays as much on the purity of the fruit as on the creaminess of the texture.

Grapes are sourced from a variety of vineyards in the southern valleys and central Wairau plains, particularly Woodbourne, Renwick and Rapaura. Soil types vary from alluvial deposits, marine sedimentary rocks and dense clays.

Where are we traveling?

Marlborough

Marlborough is New Zealand's largest wine region, with 24,000 hectares located in the north-eastern corner of New Zealand's South Island, bounded by the Pacific Ocean to the east and towering inland mountain ranges to the north and south. A broad alluvial plain extends from the coastline and gradually rises to a landscape of narrow valleys and gently sloping hills. Although it has one of the sunniest and driest climates in New Zealand, Marlborough's heat is tempered throughout the summer months by easterly sea breezes. Sauvignon Blanc remains the region's flagship wine, but other grape varieties also perform well here. Among the white varieties, Chardonnay, Pinot Gris and Riesling are the most common. In recent years, the region's first Pinot Noir vines have reached maturity and are now producing top-quality wines.

The little history of the country

New Zealand

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Introduced in 1819, the cultivation of vines was greatly developed by Jean-Baptiste Pompallier, a French Marist missionary. Sent to Oceania in 1837, he settled in January 1838 to develop the New Zealand vineyards. The first quality vineyards were established in the Hawke's Bay region in the 19th and early 20th centuries. After the production hazards first due to Phylloxera and then to the First World War, this vineyard began to expand again during the Second World War when its surface area doubled. Today, New Zealand has 10 major wine regions spread between the North and South Islands, the largest of which is Marlborough. Most of New Zealand's wine regions have a maritime climate. The long, thin shape of the country means that vineyards are never more than 120km from the coast and most are even much closer than that (with the exception of the semi-continental region of Central Otago). A spine of mountains running through the center of the country protects most of the major wine regions from the strong westerly winds from the Tasman Sea known as the "Roaring Forties". Due to these winds, there are few wine growing regions on the west coast of New Zealand. The quality and reputation of New Zealand wines is well established. Indeed, this country produces some of the best and most recognized Sauvignon Blanc in the world. And it is no coincidence that New Zealand has succeeded in making Sauvignon blanc its symbol, just like its sheep, its kiwi and its legendary haka!

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