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 Vintage2021 Label 1 of 840 
TypeRed
ProducerChâteau Margaux (web)
VarietyRed Bordeaux Blend
Designationn/a
Vineyardn/a
CountryFrance
RegionBordeaux
SubRegionMédoc
AppellationMargaux
UPC Code(s)607921015368

Drinking Windows and Values
Drinking window: Drink between 2033 and 2061 (based on 4 user opinions)
Wine Market Journal quarterly auction price: See Margaux on the Wine Market Journal.

Community Tasting History

Community Tasting Notes (average 95.8 pts. and median of 96 pts. in 8 notes) - hiding notes with no text

 Tasted by ggroebli on 4/26/2024 & rated 94 points: 94-95 Équilibré, féminin (284 views)
 Tasted by Ramonee Confit on 3/14/2024 & rated 95 points: 95-96/100 (737 views)
 Tasted by watcheslover on 3/11/2024 & rated 97 points: Hello everyone. I have almost completed my tastings of the 2021 in bottles. There will be no more big surprises (Petrus not tasted). Basically, even if this vintage is not at the level of 2016, 18, 19, 20 and 22. To my taste it is very often superior to 2014 and 2017 in any case. It is very particular with enormous finesse and above all a precision in defining each terroir that is rarely achieved. A school model if you want to introduce your future alcoholic children. And for old people like me :O), the advantage is that it will be drinkable much faster than its elders. Since I'm swamped with work these days, I only put my best notes. For a rating of a particular wine, do not hesitate to write to me;

1 Lafleur 98-99
2 Carmes H-B 98
3 Haut-Brion, Cheval Blanc, Vieux Certan, Margaux, Lafite 97
4 Montrose, Las Cases, Le Pin 96-97

And finally the Oscar for best value for money

Laroque 94-95 (1041 views)
 Tasted by vvWine.ch on 6/23/2022 & rated 97 points: (96-98 vvPunkte) 36% der Ernte. 87% Cabernet Sauvignon, 8% Merlot, 3% CF, 2% PV, Kräftiges Rubin. Die Nase ist tiefgründig und feinduftig, super floral, Veilchen, Rosen, ein Gemälde mit feinen Pixeln, rote und dunkle Beeren, auch Gräser, Kräuter, super komplex. Im Gaumen eine wahre Delikatesse, präzis, schlank und dennoch mit Druck, Top Struktur, die Säure ist frisch, die Tannine seidig, sensationelle Balance, kein Gramm Fett, einfach nur Frische, Harmonie und eine ausgezeichnete Länge. 2028-2055+ (Verkostet "En Primeur" im April 2022. Château Margaux) vvWine.ch (6892 views)
 Tasted by PanosKakaviatos on 5/31/2022 & rated 95 points: Selections of Bordeaux 2021 from barrel: This blend of 87% Cabernet Sauvignon and 8% Merlot gives off lovely floral lead pencil and juicy mid palate blackberry aspects: quite special in 2021. The finish has slightly strict tannin, which should be resolved with barrel aging. The IPT index of 75 is the same as in 2019, but the difference is greater luminosity from the 2019 vintage. Still, a very strong effort here! Solid job as well from the second wine, Pavilion Rouge. (95-96) (2682 views)
 Tasted by Jeff Leve on 5/20/2022 & rated 97 points: Deep garnet in color, the wine opens with lilacs, spice, black currants, tobacco leaf and a hint of cedar in the perfume. On the palate, the wine is elegant, polished, silky, fresh and reserved in character. Classic, (In a good way) there is lift, vibrancy and poise to the fruit on the mid-palate, leaving you with a supple, refined, discreet, almost formal finish. Give it 5 years or so and it will be even better. Clearly, this is one of the wines of the vintage! The wine blends 87% Cabernet Sauvignon, 8% Merlot, 3% Cabernet Franc and 2% Petit Verdot, 13.1% ABV, pH 3.64. The Grand Vin was produced using only 36% of the harvest. Picking took place September 24 - October 13. Drink from 2029-2060. 96-98 (2941 views)
 Tasted by LiteItOnFire on 4/28/2022: No notes due to 400 wines at EP. This is the red wine of the vintage at least based on current rendition due to only ~6/7 months in barel - for this wine as well as all the others. With another year to go, things can always change. Wine is beautiful, whether it’s for this vintage or any other. Depending on price this is a for sure buy for me. There is another wine from the left bank that is a top wine of the vintage and over delivers for its price point. (2227 views)
 Tasted by chatters on 4/25/2022: En-Primeur campaign for the 2021 vintage; 4/25/2022-4/29/2022 (Bordeaux): Meaty, savoury, slight funky over black hued fruits; berries and currants, a little fruit tea, polished oak but contained by the fruit (on the nose at least). Medium plus intensity acidity, black fruits again but showing brambles, blackcurrant, there is a sense of wetness, and the oak lends a certain plushness but that is balanced by the fruit. Well managed tannins are persistent, woody but more about support. Wine of the day so far. A class apart. (2986 views)

Professional 'Channels'
By Jeb Dunnuck
JebDunnuck.com, Bordeaux 2021 From Bottle (4/3/2024)
(Chateau Margaux) Login and sign up and see review text.
By Antonio Galloni
Vinous, 2021 Bordeaux: L’Enfant Terrible (Feb 2024) (2/1/2024)
(Margaux Château Margaux Red) Subscribe to see review text.
By Chris Kissack
Winedoctor, January 2024 (1/1/2024)
(Château Margaux Margaux Red) Subscribe to see review text.
By Georgina Hindle
Decanter, Bordeaux 2021: In bottle report (11/30/2023)
(Château Margaux, Cabernet Sauvignon, Margaux, Bordeaux, France, Red) Subscribe to see review text.
By Jeb Dunnuck
JebDunnuck.com, 2021 Bordeaux: A Challenging Yet Good Vintage (6/2/2022)
(Chateau Margaux) Login and sign up and see review text.
By James Suckling
JamesSuckling.com (5/18/2022)
(Château Margaux Margaux, France) Subscribe to see review text.
By Antonio Galloni
Vinous, 2021 Bordeaux En Primeur: Back to Classicism (May 2022) (5/1/2022)
(Margaux Château Margaux Red) Subscribe to see review text.
By Neal Martin
Vinous, Enticingly Fallible: Bordeaux 2021 En Primeur (May 2022) (5/1/2022)
(Margaux Château Margaux Red) Subscribe to see review text.
By James Lawther MW
JancisRobinson.com (4/20/2022)
(Ch Margaux Margaux Red) Subscribe to see review text.
By Georgina Hindle
Decanter, Bordeaux En Primeur 2021 (4/1/2022)
(Château Margaux, Cabernet Sauvignon, Margaux, Bordeaux, France, Red) Subscribe to see review text.
By Chris Kissack
Winedoctor, April 2022 (4/1/2022)
(Château Margaux Margaux Red) Subscribe to see review text.
By Neal Martin
Vinous, 2+2=5: Bordeaux 2021 In Bottle (Feb 2024)
(Margaux Château Margaux Red) Subscribe to see review text.
NOTE: Scores and reviews are the property of JebDunnuck.com and Vinous and Winedoctor and Decanter and JamesSuckling.com and JancisRobinson.com. (manage subscription channels)

CellarTracker Wiki Articles (login to edit | view all articles)

Château Margaux

Producer website - Read more about Chateau Margaux

Their second wine is Pavillon Rouge du Château Margaux

Red Bordeaux Blend

Red Bordeaux is generally made from a blend of grapes. Permitted grapes are Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc, Merlot, Petit Verdot, Malbec and rarely Carménère.Today Carménère is rarely used, with Château Clerc Milon, a fifth growth Bordeaux, being one of the few to still retain Carménère vines. As of July 2019, Bordeaux wineries authorized the use of four new red grapes to combat temperature increases in Bordeaux. These newly approved grapes are Marselan, Touriga Nacional, Castets, and Arinarnoa.

Wineries all over the world aspire to making wines in a Bordeaux style. In 1988, a group of American vintners formed The Meritage Association to identify wines made in this way. Although most Meritage wines come from California, there are members of the Meritage Association in 18 states and five other countries, including Argentina, Australia, Canada, Israel, and Mexico.

France

Vins de France (Office National Interprofessionnel des Vins ) | Pages Vins, Directory of French Winegrowers | French Wine (Wikipedia)

Wine Scholar Guild vintage ratings

2018 vintage: "marked by a wet spring, a superb summer and a good harvest"
2019 vintage reports
2021: "From a general standpoint, whether for white, rosé or red wines, 2021 is a year marked by quality in the Rhône Valley Vineyards. Structured, elegant, fresh and fruity will be the main keywords for this new vintage."
2022 harvest: idealwine.info | wine-searcher.com

Bordeaux

Bordeaux Wine Guide

Vins Bordeaux (Conseil Interprofessionnel du Vin de Bordeaux)

History of Bordeaux

History of 1855 Bordeaux Classification

"2009 is all about ripeness, with wines impressively packed with ripe fruit and high alcohol levels. They are showy, in-your-face, and full of pleasure. The 2010s have the fruit and alcohol levels of the 2009s, but with a compelling freshness on the finish that balances the fruit and provides a perfect sense of structure." - Ben Nelson

"2016 is a landmark vintage in certain spots of Bordeaux and it should be remembered as one of the most inspired campaigns of the last 40-50+ years." -Jon Rimmerman
"The quality of red Bordeaux in 2016 was universally lauded – although the response to the en primeur campaign was muted. Quantity was high too, with the equivalent of 770 million bottles of wine produced. An exceptionally dry summer with cool nights eventually, thanks to mid September rain, resulted in small, thick-skinned, ripe grapes, and the wines are marked by high tannin and acidity, with superb aromatic fragrance." - Jancis Robinson

"2017 was complicated, but there are some excellent wines. Expect plenty of freshness and drinkability from wines that will offer excellent value, and others that will rival 2016 in terms of ripeness and ageability. But they are likely to be the exception not the rule, making careful selection key." - Jane Anson

"In the past, a vintage such as 2022 may have been overripe, raisined and low in acidity but 2022 had a sneaky little reservoir in its back pocket - a near perfect marriage of cool/cold/rain the previous winter and the previous vintage that literally soaked the soils (a key to why 2022 is not 2003...or 1893)." - Jon Rimmerman

Médoc

Vins du Médoc (Conseil des Vins du Médoc) - Read More about the Medoc

VdB

The eight precisely defined appellations of the whole of the Médoc (from Blanquefort Brook to the north of the Bordeaux built-up area, almost to the Pointe de Grave) may claim the Médoc appellation. But there is also a specific territory in the north of the peninsula which produces exclusively wines with this appellation. In the great majority, the Médocs come from the north of the peninsula. The great individuality of this region is that the number of vines has increased more recently here than elsewhere, apart from a few isolated spots where vines have grown for many years. Today, the size of the small estate has brought about the development of a powerful co-operative movement. Four co-operatives out of five belong to the group called Unimédoc which ensures aging, bottling and marketing a large proportion of their wines.

Margaux

Read more about Margaux and its wines As with a large part of the Bordeaux vineyards, vines first appeared in Margaux during the Gallo-Roman period.
In 1705 a text mentions Château Margaux . But we have to wait for the end of the eighteenth century and the coming of the earliest techniques in aging for the concept of wines of high quality to develop. The confirmation of this was the famous 1855 classification which recognized 21 Crus Classés in the Margaux appellation. One hundred years later, the Viticultural Federation and the Margaux appellation of controlled origin were born. The appellation, which stretches out over five communes, is actually unique in the Médoc in that it is the only one to contain all the range of wines, as rich as they are vast, from First Great Cru Classé to the Fifths, not forgetting its famous Crus Bourgeois and its Crus Artisans.

In Margaux there is a predominance of Garonne gravel on a central plateau of about 4 miles in length and one and a quarter wide. To the east-south-east, it overlooks the low lying land by the estuary. Its east side is marked by gentle, dry valleys and a succession of ridges.The layer of gravel in Margaux was spread out by a former Garonne in the early Quaternary. Rather large in size, it is mingled with shingle of average dimension and represents the finest ensemble of Günz gravel in the Haut-Médoc. It is on this ancient layer on a Tertiary terrace of limestone or clayey marl that the best Médoc crus lie. All the conditions for successful wine are present : a large amount of gravel and pebbles, poor soil which cannot retain water and deep rooted vines.

It is customary to say that Margaux wines are the "most feminine" in the Médoc, thus stressing their delicacy, suppleness and their fruity, elegant aromas. This does not affect their great propensity for aging; just the opposite, for the relatively thin terroir imparts tannins which give them long life. The other characteristic of these wines which combine an elegant vitality, subtlety and consistency, is their diversity and personality. Over and above the flavour which is their "common denominator", they present an exceptional palette of bouquets, fruity flavours which show up differently from one château to another.

Production conditions (Decree dated August 10 1954)
In order to have the right to the Margaux appellation of controlled origin, red wines must:

- come from the commune of Margaux, Cantenac, Soussans, Arsac and Labarde, "excluding the land which by the nature of its soil or because of its situation, is unfit to produce wine of this appellation".
- satisfy precise production conditions: grape-varieties (Cabernet-Sauvignon, Cabernet-Franc, Carmenère, Merlot Noir, Petit Verdot, Cot or Malbec), minimum of sugar (178 grammes - 6.27 oz. - per litre of must) degree (an acquired 10°5) base yield (45 hectolitres per hectare).

Vins de Bordeaux:
Grape Varieties: Cabernet Sauvignon, Malbec, Petit Verdot, Merlot
Soil: Gravel and silt plateau on a layer of limestone or silt on clay
Surface Area: 1,530 ha

 
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