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Who Likes This Wine(12)

  1. NiklasW

    NiklasW

    2,561 Tasting Notes

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    wee pat

    1 Tasting Note

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    toussaints

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Community Tasting Notes (13) Median Score: 88 points

  • Decanted for an hour. Very nice red cherries and pomegranate on the nose with a tiny hint of green paprika. The palate shows fine tannins, excellent red fruit, minerality and a bit of bitter chocolate. Very tasty and savoury!

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  • I find it amazing that this wine - Jouget's cheapest and least "age-worthy" wine is still absolutely gorgeous at 10 years old and in fact better on day 2 so presumably still improving...
    Classic Chinon, slightly rustic but I only mean that in a good way - dusty tannins, cherry, pencils, forest floor/compost, hint of green pepper but not excessive, slightly spicy, just gorgeous... there can't be many wines that offer this much complexity for so little money

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  • Had this one next to the 2016 Couly Dutheil Clos l'Olive. Sure, vintage mismatch but also believe the winemaking and terroir plays a role here. Where the Couly delivered a more complex albeit closed drinking this wine was a lot more fruit forward. Red fruits and a slight harsh if not bitter note. Felt "simpler" - shorter aftertaste, almost an off taste on the palate - but price difference also needs to be taken into account. Missed some bell pepper and tobacco. Missed the opportunity to try Joguets more exclusive cuvees (Dioterie and Varenne) but perhaps I'll get the chance in the future. For now Couly rules.

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  • Bright red color. The nose is dominated by green bell pepper. The taste is smooth, mild tannins, easy drinker for the summer. I would highlight that after some time in the glass, the red fruits appear on the taste and the green pepper fades. The wine drinks much better on the second night, there were cherry, strawberry and floral notes on both the nose and palate. In my opinion, really enjoyable, nothing complex, but an easy drinker.

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  • Not bad. My comparable is the Baudry chinons. This has red fruits, some dustiness and earth. But there’s a bit of a green streak. It’s ok, but doesnt have that crunchy fruit that’s so good with Baudry.

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WineAlign

  • By Steve Thurlow
    5/30/2018, (See more on WineAlign...)

    (Charles Joguet Les Petites Roches, Chinon red) Login and sign up and see review text.

Winedoctor

Full Pull

  • By Paul Zitarelli
    Full Pull Joguet, 7/21/2017

    (Charles Joguet Chinon Les Petites Roches) Hello friends. As we expand our international offers at Full Pull, we’re always in search of the best bang for your buck. Yes, we all know tales of hundred thousand dollar bottles of 50 year old Cheval-Blanc and Thomas Jefferson’s 1787 Chateau Margaux, but unless you are all living drastically different lives than team Full Pull, those wines are not an option for a random Tuesday night. So, we explore the world for wines that work. We’ve recently dabbled in the alpine freshness of Savoie, the rhone-esque reds from Languedoc, and the exceptionally funky wines from Jura—and today’s offer is from the Loire Valley. Bottles from the Loire are truly some of the great values in wine, from white to red and everything in between. Rarely will you be steered wrong, when perusing a restaurant wine list, by choosing a Vouvray, Quincy, Bourgueil, or a Chinon. The wines of Charles Joguet are a fine introduction to Chinon (see map; we’re in region #22). Joguet took control of the family vineyards in 1957, and soon stopped the practice of selling to negociants, instead choosing to vinify different pieces of the family terroir separately and bottling a series of single-vineyard Chinons. Fifty-five years later, Charles is mostly retired (he stopped in 1997 after working forty vintages), but his vision continues. Today we have a white, rosé, and red to offer, showing a full spectrum of the low-price, high-caliber wines Joguet provides. Joguet’s wines are divided into two lines: those meant for aging and the “precocious cuvées.” The three we are offering are all from the precocious line, coming from the younger vines of the vineyard and meant to be consumed young. Of course “younger” is relative: average vine age is between 20-30 years for all three of these wines. And a quick note: While the reds from Joguet usually arrive to Seattle in some quantity, their white and rosé counterparts are scarce. That’s why we haven’t have a Joguet offer in over five years, and have never offered a white or rosé. These wines, the reds included, get gobbled up before we have the chance. Knowing this, we pre-purchased the blanc and the rosé for our list because they are that good . And good thing, because they are now sold out throughout the rest of Seattle. Given this, there will probably be no reorder potential.Seekey for # of bottles currently available.

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