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Côte Rôtie La Turque 1993 75cl

AOC | Côte Rôtie | Rhône | France
CHF 378.35
Critics scores
87 Robert Parker
The great glories of this house are its Cote Roties, of which there are now five separate offerings. The 1993s, which have just come on the marketplace, are from a troublesome vintage for everyone in Cote Rotie, rivaling 1984 in difficulty. Nevertheless, the single-vineyard wines have turned out well. As for the single vineyard wines, they are all excellent in 1993, but more herbaceous and clearly marked by the green pepper smells of slightly underripe Syrah. I thought the 1993 Cote Rotie La Turque to be good, with a deep ruby color, and an intense olive, vanillin, sweet black fruit character. Dry tannin, green pepper aromas, and some toughness in the finish (which should dissipate with another year or two of bottle age) are obvious. The wine displays a healthy dark ruby/purple color, good sweetness on the attack, and a compressed finish because of the astringent level of tannin. This wine should round out with another 1-2 years of bottle age, and last for a decade. Guigal is one of the cellars where the wines always taste better after they are bottled than they do from cask, although as the scores in this segment indicate, some profound wines can be found in the 1994, 1995, and 1996 vintages
87 Robert Parker
The great glories of this house are its Cote Roties, of which there are now five separate offerings. The 1993s, which have just come on the marketplace, are from a troublesome vintage for everyone in Cote Rotie, rivaling 1984 in difficulty. Nevertheless, the single-vineyard wines have turned out well. As for the single vineyard wines, they are all excellent in 1993, but more herbaceous and clearly marked by the green pepper smells of slightly underripe Syrah. I thought the 1993 Cote Rotie La Turque to be good, with a deep ruby color, and an intense olive, vanillin, sweet black fruit character. Dry tannin, green pepper aromas, and some toughness in the finish (which should dissipate with another year or two of bottle age) are obvious. The wine displays a healthy dark ruby/purple color, good sweetness on the attack, and a compressed finish because of the astringent level of tannin. This wine should round out with another 1-2 years of bottle age, and last for a decade. Guigal is one of the cellars where the wines always taste better after they are bottled than they do from cask, although as the scores in this segment indicate, some profound wines can be found in the 1994, 1995, and 1996 vintages
Producer
Domaine Guigal
Three generations of the Guigal family have worked on this plot of land in the Côte-Rôtie that is over 24-centuries-old. As one of today’s most famous wine producers in France’s northern Rhône, the Guigal Estate was created in 1946 by Etienne Guigal in the village of Ampuis. His son Marcel took over the maison in 1961, expanding the family’s vineyard holdings. He also simultaneously bettered their overall reputation. Marcel was named Decanter Man of the Year in 2006, while his son, Philippe now acts as the operating oenologist for the domaine. The E. Guigal brand represents a rather broad collection of wines from the Rhône Valley, as the largest producer in Côte-Rôtie the firm also works as a négociant, buying grapes for some of their labels. Their three single-vineyard Côte-Rôtie productions, La Landonne, La Mouline and La Turque stand out worldwide as consistent red models from the appellation. E. Guigal also offers a large lists of other wines, the dense and concentrated Hermitage, the refined St. Joseph, as well as the famous Condrieus, just to name a few.