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Fontenil 1998 75cl

AOC | Canon Fronsac | Bordeaux | France
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Critics scores
90 Wine Spectator
Dark color. Lots of dark fruit and wet earth on the nose. Full-bodied, with chewy tannins and a berry, chocolate aftertaste. Very drinkable now, but a little bottle age will mellow it still more.?'88/'98 Bordeaux blind retrospective (2008). Best after 2009. 4,165 cases made. ?JS
90 Wine Spectator
Dark color. Lots of dark fruit and wet earth on the nose. Full-bodied, with chewy tannins and a berry, chocolate aftertaste. Very drinkable now, but a little bottle age will mellow it still more.?'88/'98 Bordeaux blind retrospective (2008). Best after 2009. 4,165 cases made. ?JS
88 Robert Parker
A serious vin de garde, the dense ruby/purple-colored 1998 offers abundant quantities of blackberries intermixed with licorice and coffee. Structured, dense, and concentrated, it requires 1-2 years of cellaring. Anticipated maturity: 2002-2014.
88 Robert Parker
A serious vin de garde, the dense ruby/purple-colored 1998 offers abundant quantities of blackberries intermixed with licorice and coffee. Structured, dense, and concentrated, it requires 1-2 years of cellaring. Anticipated maturity: 2002-2014.
Producer
Château Fontenil
Owned by Bordeaux's most prominent oenologist, Michel Rolland, and his oenologist wife, Dany, since 1986, Château Fontenil may be Fronsac's most known estate. It is famed not only for its owners, but also for a special cuvée that was born out of bureaucratic frustration, Défi de Fontenil. In 2000, in order to prevent rain from diluting his grapes, Rolland placed plastic sheeting between the rows of a parcel of his vines so that the water would collect into ditches on the side of his vineyard. As this is a forbidden practice for vintaged appellation wines, the authorities forbade Rolland from producing his normal Fronsac and only gave him the right to produce a non-vintaged Vin de Table, the lowest wine category. In defiance, he continued forward and created Défi de Fontenil, an annual yet non-vintaged production created from this same parcel (and grown with plastic sheeting intact). In addition to this more infamous and micro-bottling, they also produce a flagship wine called Château Fontenil from the majority of their 9 hectares, a blend of 90% Merlot and 10% Cabernet Franc, and a wine that benefits from the Rolland's blending expertise.