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Single bottle of Red wine Chateau de Saint Cosme, La Claux, Gigondas, 2010 60% Grenache, 20% Syrah, 18% Mourvedre & 2% Cinsault

Chateau de Saint Cosme
Le Claux
Gigondas
2010

Regular price £89.00 £0.00 Unit price per
Including duty and VAT.

The producer

Having produced wine, and been in the hands of the Barroul family, since the 15th century, the modern history of Chateau de Saint Cosme doesn’t start until 1992, when Louis Barruol takes control and they start bottling their own wine.

The estate – today with 15 hectares of very old vineyards all surrounding the chateau – produces wines that have transformed the appellation. Saint Cosme makes four single vineyard wines in Gigondas – Valbelle, Le Claux, Hominis Fides and Le Poste - all reflecting different parts and soils on the estate and offering an extraordinary reflection on the complexity and beauty of the best of Gigondas. Valbelle and Hominis Fidis fruit is grown in sand and limestone soils whereas Le Claux is from centenarian vines in gravel and clay soil, and Le Poste from 50-year-old vines in limestone and marl soil.

Chateau de Saint-Cosme also runs a negociant business, making wine from other parts of the Rhone Valley, from purchased fruit. These are labelled “Saint Cosme” or “Domaine Saint-Cosme”.

The wine

One of Saint Cosme’s single vineyard wines, Le Claux is made from very old centenarian Grenache plantings growing in gravel and clay soils. The fruit is whole cluster fermented and following aged for 12 months in casks, 20% of which are new. Concentrated yet juicy red fruit, with elevated camphor and white truffle aromatics, are complemented by an elegant and long structure.

Type: Red
Vintage: 2010
Country: France
Region: Southern Rhone
Sub region: Gigondas
Grape: 60% Grenache, 20% Syrah, 18% Mourvedre & 2% Cinsault
Style: Rich and Intense
Sweetness: Dry
ABV: 15%
Drinking window: 2014 - 2034
Size: 750ml
Food match: Lamb


We choose our wines based on a range of criteria (see how we choose our wines) of which critic scores is just one. Rather than simply highlight the best score to promote a wine, our average critic score is calculated from the scores provided by several respected wine critics, who we follow for specific regions. They do not represent all critic scores and, wherever possible, we try and give more weight to more recent reviews. Where appropriate we consider market-based scores like Global Wine Score or Wine Searcher Average scores.

As a rule, we look to offer wines that achieve a 92/100 average critic score or better and frankly a lot of very good wines simply don’t make the cut. As a high-end provider we want to reflect that positioning in the quality of wines we offer. Such wines are only a tiny fraction of those generally on offer in the market. We believe that an average score is a more conservative and representative approach, but it is still subjective and only offered as a guide to our customers, who will (and should) do their own research. We will add individual critic scores to our website in the future. 

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