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2015 Clos Rougeard (Foucault) Saumur Champigny Le Bourg

Minimum Bid is $400
Ends Sunday, 7pm Pacific

ITEM 9540514 - Removed from a professional wine storage facility

Bidder Amount Total
$400
2015 Clos Rougeard (Foucault) Saumur Champigny Le Bourg

RATINGS

96Vinous / IWC

...unbelievably complex Cabernet Franc. An incredibly beautiful nose of spice, cigar box, licorice, kirsch, fresh cherry and berry in the mouth, seamless and supple. An amazingly long finish.

93+ The Wine Advocate

...coolish and fresh on the toasty nose. Generous, intense and salty on the palate, with fine tannins and lots of cherry aromas, this is a ripe, round and juicy Champigny with firm tannins...

PRODUCER

Clos Rougeard (Foucault)

Clos Rougeard (Foucault) is a legendary Saumur-Champigny estate with a cult following. Three star restaurants in France compete for small allotments of the Clos Rougeard’s Cabernet Franc and Chenin Blanc, and in the U.S. the wine is rarely available. Clos Rougeard’s 25-acre estate in Chacé has been in the Foucault family for eight generations. It is today run by brothers Charly and Nadi Foucault who took over management when their father retired in 1969. The fact that the AOC of Saumur-Champigny is now considered a hotbed of young winemaking talent owes much to the influence of the Foucaults, who insisted on organic farming, low yields and deeply traditional winemaking during the decades of the 1970s and 1980s when such methods were falling out of fashion. Because of the extraordinary reputation of Clos Rougeard wines, decade in and decade out, the Saumur-Champigny appellation now attracts young winemakers who hope to replicate the Foucaults’ success. Robert M. Parker Jr. is a fan, and has noted that “their remarkable wines indeed demonstrate the heights of vinous complexity and ageability to which Cabernet Franc and its growers can aspire along the Loire…”

REGION

France, Loire Valley, Saumur

The Loire Valley in central France is home to numerous important appellations and sub-appellations. Its 185,000 vineyard acres include 87 appellations in Anjou, Samur, Touraine and Chinon, among other areas. The Loire River, which stretches from Nantes on the Atlantic Coast to Orleans, about 80 miles south of Paris, has been a boon to winemaking in the region ever since the Romans planted vineyards some 2,000 years ago. The river moderates the climate in the Loire Valley, which in the 11th and 12th centuries produced wine that was more prized than the wines of Bordeaux or Burgundy. Today the Loire Valley is best known for its white wines, though it actually produces as much red and white wine. The prestigious white wines of the region are Sancerre, Pouilly-Fumé, Muscadet and Vouvray. The white grapes most frequently grown are Chenin Blanc, Sauvignon Blanc and Melon de Bourgogne. The best red wines are typically Cabernet Franc or Gamay. Though Loire Valley wines are widely admired in France, outside of the country they suffer from a lack of recognition. In writing about Loire wines, Hugh Johnson has noted that the “classic word for them is charming; the classic mystery that they are not more appreciated outside of France.”