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2022 Chateau Thivin Côte de Brouilly

Removed from a professional wine storage facility

Ends Sunday, 7pm Pacific

RATINGS

92The Wine Advocate

Simultaneously opulent and sophisticated...wafts from the glass with aromas of black tea, sweet soil, lilac petals, grilled cherries and blueberries. Medium to full-bodied...lush and energized, maintaining freshness thanks to vibrant acidity that lends animation to its concentrated licorice and blue-fruited flavors, accented by hints of smoked sea salt.

91Vinous / IWC

...precision on the nose and the fruit is a little darker on the palate, with more richness on the finish.

PRODUCER

Chateau Thivin

Chateau Thivin is Beaujolais and Cote de Brouilly. It was founded in 1877 by Zaccharie Geoffray and it has been in the Geoffray family ever since. Thivin calls itself the oldest estae on Mount Brouilly and is today run by Claude Geoffray and his wife. The estate grows Gamay Noir and a small amount of Chardonnay. The estate produces both Beaujolais and Cote de Brouilly wines. In 2008 the estate began conversion to organic viticulture and it expects to be 100% organic by 2020.

REGION

France, Beaujolais, Côte de Brouilly

Côte de Brouilly is a Beaujolais Cru appellation carved out of the hillsides of Mount Brouilly, a 1,585-foot-high extinct volcano. Côte de Brouilly has 720 acres of vineyards and, like virtually all of Beaujolais, the only grape grown is Gamay. Some 200,000 cases of wine are produced here annually. Because the vineyards rise up the slopes of Mont Brouilly, the grapes grown in this appellation mature more quickly and become sweeter than those of the Brouilly appellation around the mountain. Appellation regulations demand that Côte de Brouilly wines therefore have a slightly higher minimum alcohol content of 10.5% than the wines of Brouilly, which must have minimum levels of 10%.

TYPE

Red Wine, Gamay, Cru Beaujolais

The Gamay grape produces a light, versatile and food-friendly wine. It is best known for making Beaujolais Nouveau, but it is also grown in Loire and Tours. Thankfully the 14th C. Duke of Burgundy’s degree to ban the grape did not spread through all of France.