René Gabriel
François Mitjavile keeps fine-tuning his wine. Not a change of style, he claims, but evolutions in the service of quality. For the 2001 vintage, he immediately put as much particularly cloudy wine as possible, along with part of the press wine, into barriques. <div style="font-style:italic;color:#990033">It is important that the wine is clear in the end. However, I believe it would be wrong to force a very rapid clarification too early. Some estates even filter before filling the barriques. That is a mistake, because there are still many aromas and tannins in the lees that the wine can make good use of during élevage.</div> As we were about to leave the cellar, we discovered a kind of wine pump about two meters long: <div style="font-style:italic;color:#990033">This is also an innovation. It’s a sort of turbine that I place directly in the vats during fermentation. The wine is drawn up from below and sprayed over the cap from above, which perfectly moistens the fermenting grape skins and allows the aromatic compounds to integrate even more easily into the wine.</div> 02: Barrel sample (18/20): dark garnet-purple; dense at the core. Powerful, gently jammy bouquet; cassis and Damassine plums, many Burgundian notes, light dates and violets. Elegant palate with a soft, again prune-like aromatics, smooth, rich tannins with fine, sandy supporting contours; despite its massive body, the wine remains elegant, with a toasty coffee note on the long finish. 03: When I tasted the 2002, François was keen to show the 2001 again: gingerbread scent, plums, noble black tea, many fine herbal notes, dark malt and cooked plum purée. Absolutely soft and charming on the palate; despite the volume, the wine remains elegant and juicy; dreamy sweetness in the extract, which also shows chocolate and again Irish Moss. A great, Burgundian-style Saint-Émilion. 18/20 2006 – 2018