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An opened bottle of of  2011 Saint-Estèphe Château Calon Ségur, showcasing 2011 Saint-Estèphe, Château Calon Ségur, a renowned Bordeaux wine known for its exceptional quality and rich characteristics.

2011 Saint-Estèphe, Château Calon Ségur

About Producer

The most northerly grand cru classé in the Médoc, Calon Ségur’s 55ha vineyards are mostly walled and sit on gravel, sand and clay over limestone subsoil. The name Calon is derived from the ancient word 'calones' which refers to small boats used in the Middle Ages for transporting timber up and down the estuary. The heart on the label is a reference to the 18th-century owner Nicolas-Alexandre Marquis de Ségur, aka the Prince of Vines, who famously declared ‘I make wine at Lafite and Latour, but my heart belongs to Calon’. The modern era of this estate started in 1894 when it was acquired by the Gasqueton family. Following Madame Denise Gasqueton’s death in 2011, Calon Ségur was sold in 2012 to Suravenir, an insurance company. The new owners have conducted large-scale renovation works with an extensive restructuring of the vineyard to give more prominence to cabernet sauvignon. For long considered as a good but not stupendous cru classé, Calon Ségur has now joined the top flight of Médoc estates thanks to a string of stylish wines produced in recent vintages.

Varietals

Blend of 78% cabernet sauvignon, 20% merlot and 2% petit verdot.

About Appellation

With 1,229ha of vines, and roughly equidistant from the city of Bordeaux and the Pointe de Grave, the northernmost tip of the Médoc peninsula, Saint-Estèphe is the second largest AOC communal appellation of the Médoc. Though the first vines dated back to Roman times, the expansion of vineyards started in the 14th century with the creation of estates that still exist today. The soil is a mix of gravel, clay and sand, with a slightly higher proportion of clay than elsewhere in the Médoc. Hence Saint-Estèphe has a unique ability to hold water reserves. The best vineyard sites are the gravelly mounds facing the Gironde estuary where cabernet sauvignon is the majority varietal. In recent years, there has been a shift by some estates toward merlot which performs better on clay-rich soils. Saint-Estèphe is home to 5 grands crus classés in the 1855 Bordeaux classification.

Tasting Notes

Fragrant nose of red and black fruits, cedar, tilled soil and floral scents, smooth mouthfeel with silky texture, beautiful precision and excellent fruit purity, oodles of flavours of red currant, black cherry, strawberry, baking spices and forest floor notes interlaced with subtle mineral undertones, well-judged acidity and resolved tannins carrying through a long, persistent finish. Having shed the tautness of its youthful years, this is a delightful wine with understated elegance, fine balance and, atypical of St-Estèphe, entrancing finesse. Though not having the complexity and backbone of 2009 and 2010, it’s a well-crafted wine brimming with graceful charm and there are waves of vibrant freshness on the palate that add an exquisite overlay to the lingering aftertaste. A commendable effort for the uneven 2011 vintage indeed. (08/2023)

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