Petite Immortelle, Famille Bousquet, Cotes du Roussillon, France 2022

Petite Immortelle Rouge 2022.jpg
Petite Immortelle Rouge 2022.jpg

Petite Immortelle, Famille Bousquet, Cotes du Roussillon, France 2022

£14.95

When we discover a wine like this, a wine we know will be enjoyed by both parsimonious princes and discerning paupers, it gives us a real lift and feels like that moment when the wind suddenly picks up, the spinnaker balloons out and the boat lurches forwards under full sail. It’s a wine that really should cost a fair bit more than £14.95, if only for the fact that it has already had the softening influence of time in bottle and is already showing some tertiary aromas and flavours, but there is real integrity to its upbringing too (100 year-old vines, 7th generation grape growers, barrels sourced from Chateau Margaux, hand-made vinification - literally) and it shows in the quality of the wine, which we think is splendidly under-priced.

It’s a blend of old-vine Syrah (60%), Grenache (20%), Mourvedre (10%) and Carignan (10%), made by English ‘Master of Wine’, Liam Steevenson, and has a lovely settled character, with none of the squeaky, juvenile fruit of a wine without any meaningful bottle age, displaying bloomy orchard fruits like damson, d’Agen plum and blueberry as well as wild herbs, soft tobacco leaf and scuffed leather. It tastes similar to one of those ambitious Cote du Rhones - I’m sure you know the ones - with aspirations to be a Chateauneuf-du-Pape despite being just outside the appellation zone. Pair it with rustic foods like shin of beef stew, wild boar sausages, duck liver paté, wild mushrooms, chestnuts, olives, garrigue herbs etc or take it to a barbecue and you will immediately be presented with the tongs of respect.

It underwent a long maceration of 5 weeks in open top barrels with regular pigeage. It then went through malolactic fermentation (another softening effect where harsh malic acid is transformed into the gentler lactic acid) before being aged in bottle to mature slowly, so that it’s ready to drink on release. 13.5% alc. Drink now-2028.


Customer comments:

“Special shout out to the Petite Immortelle which proved to be a delightful “it’s late, but there’s cheese” wine.” - Ms C.R.

“Please could I have another 12 bottles of the Petite Immortelle. I’m rather enjoying it.” - Mr N.M.

“I was really impressed with the Petite Immortelle - spectacularly good value.” - Mr G.R.

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