1. Home
  2. Wine
  3. Pouilly-Loché Monopole

Pouilly-Loché Monopole 2016

In stock - delivery within 24 hours on working days for Sofia.
Art. # 0574
Blend between two plots with grape age of 30 and 70 years. Soils are predominantly rocky. Most of the wine ages in oak barrels, and the number of bottles is extremely limited - only about 2000 bottles.
Alc. 13 %

Profile

  • Fruit
  • Body
  • Dryness
  • Freshness
  • Alcohol

Variety

Chardonnay

Flavours

  • Apricot Apricot
  • Citrus Fruits Citrus Fruits
  • Mineral Flavors Mineral Flavors
  • Apple Apple

Glass

For white wine

Serving Temperature

Cold Cold

Food pairing

  • Vegetables Vegetables
  • Fish Fish
  • White Meats White Meats

Maturity

Ready, but will improve

More about this wine

Clos des Rocs

Clos des Rocs

Olivier Giroux was born and developed an early interest in wine in the Mâconnais region of southern Burgundy. After graduating as an oenologist and spending ten years honing his skills with major producers in the Rhone Valley, he decided to return home to pursue his dream of bottling White Burgundy wine. Olivier became the owner-agronomist-winemaker-marketing-seller of Domaine du Clos des Rocs - 6 hectares of impressively diverse plots of old Chardonnay vines. He switched to organic farming and repaired the cellar. With the American debut of its wines in 2014, it immediately became clear that the Clos des Rocs deserves a place among the highest category of mansions in southern Burgundy. These are nuanced and classic style wines that perfectly articulate the unique and inimitable character of the region. Carefully monitor its development. There are many more winique harvests of this manufacturer.

All wines of the same producer
Burgundy

Burgundy

In this area, red wines are produced from one variety - Pinot Noir, but the wines actually vary in quality from light and ordinary to rich, complex and truly majestic. Burgundy is famous for its small vineyards and it is generally believed that the smaller the area of ​​the vineyard, the better the wine. The best Burgundy wines come from Côte d'Or, a strip of only 30 miles, divided in the center into 2 separate parts; Côte de Nuit to the north and Côte de Beaune to the south. The fame of Cotê de Nuits is in the red wines - 95% of Pinot Noir grapes are produced here. Of course, here are some of the best, able to age, the most exotic and expensive wines. The Côte de Beaune produces approximately 38% white wine, 60% red wine and 2% sparkling wine. The white wine variety is exclusively Chardonnay, and the quality varies from the best, Montrachets and Corton Charlemagnes, Meursault, Puligny and Chassagne to the more ordinary Macon Blanc. The former are traditionally aged in small oak barrels, while Macon wines are usually lighter in character and have a good value for money. The red wines from Beaune do not have the fame of their "brothers" from Côte de Nuit, with exceptions here are those who come from Pomard, Corton and Volney. In general, they are lighter in style, but depending on the harvest they can show potential that successfully competes with the Côte de Nuits and beyond.

More wines of this region
Chardonnay

Chardonnay

Chardonnay is the world's most famous white-wine grape and also one of the most widely planted. Of course, the most highly regarded expressions of the variety are those from Burgundy and California, but many high-quality examples are made in Italy, Australia, New Zealand and parts of South America. Describing the flavours of Chardonnay is not easy. This is not thanks to the complexity of the varietal itself but usually due its susceptibility to winemaking techniques - such as Malolactic fermentation which gives distinctive buttery aromas or Fermentation or maturation in oak barrels which contributes to the wine with smokey notes of vanilla, honey and even cinnamon, and not last the lees contact while in barrel imparts biscuity, doughy flavours. And all these incorporated with the varietal aromas of tropical (banana, pineapple and guava) to stone fruits (peach, nectarine and apricot), sometimes even citrus and apple notes. Climate plays a major role in dictating which fruit flavours a Chardonnay will have - warm regions (California, Australia ) make more tropical styles; temperate zones (southern Burgundy, New Zealand) - stone fruit notes, while the very coolest (Chablis, Champagne) lean towards green-apple aromas.

More wines of the same variety

Customer reviews

No reviews available

Be the first to review