Rouge de Chasse

Description (detail)

The "Rouge de Chasse" is a registered trademark. It has been developed since 1997 and is a unique blend of Gamaret, Galotta, Merlot and Syrah. A wine with an intense purple color, it was specially created to accompany game specialties. However, it also goes wonderfully with grilled meats, especially lamb, and braised meats.

Red wine
Red assemblage
Prozent
13.9
Option 1: Beschrieb
1dl
Option 1: Jahrgang
2023
Option 1: Preis
CHF 8.50

Matching mood

cheerful & sociable

Characteristics

Aromen (Nase)
Bouquet of blueberry, blackcurrant, elderberry, with peppery notes.
Aromen (Mund)
Invigorating, tonic and structured on the palate.
Medium-bodied & balanced
Dry
Game
Stewed dishes
8 years

Our story

What connects us with this winery...

Domaine Cornulus SA

What started out small over 20 years ago is now one of the Valais' flagship wineries and stands for work in harmony with nature as well as top wines that emphasize the individual terroir.

The Valais cousins Stéphane Reynard and Dany Varone are perfectionists who love what they do. They pay attention to their vines, which grow above Sion in the village of Savièse, as if they were their own children. Thanks to the precise and competent cellar work of Dany Varone, they create terroir wines of the highest quality. The winemaking duo - now part of the Valais elite - laid the foundations for their successful Domaine Cornulus project in 1986. The two founded the "Buteo" wine cellar and started out as the "Garage Winery". They bought their first harvests directly from the vines of various winegrowers in Savièse and initially pressed them in a garage. The following year, they leased their first vines in the vineyards above Sion (less than 1 hectare).

In 1989, they created the Sélection Cornulus, after which their winery was named. A few vintages later, in 1995, they acquired the first plots of Clos de Mangold. Little by little, their dream of founding their own estate began to take shape. "Because without terroir, there are hardly any good wines," say Stéphane and Dany. In 1999, they acquired the "prime piece", the famous Clos des Corbassières, which crowned the domaine. Over the course of the noughties, they successively acquired various Grand Cru parcels between Sion and Sierre as well as the Clos Chamaray, St-Charles and La Follie. Finally, the magnificent Clos des Monzuettes rounds off the rich palette of exquisite growths.

More about the grape variety

Red assemblages and cuvées

«Married wine»

It is up to the cellar master to compose a complex, finesse-rich but balanced taste experience from wines of different characters. Often, colourful, full-bodied and tannic wines are blended with lighter, fruit-intensive wines to achieve a more complex, intense harmony of aromas. The aim is not to conceal the weaknesses of a wine, but to combine strengths; the cuvée should be of higher quality and taste better than the single-varietal wine. In order for a cuvée to present itself as a harmonious composition, characteristics such as fruitiness, acidity, tannin content, alcohol content and residual sweetness have to be very precisely sensory assessed during preliminary tastings. It is an art that requires a great deal of knowledge, skill, sensitivity and experience to finely match complementary varieties to create a particularly round and harmonious wine.

The terms assemblage and cuvée sometimes cause more confusion than clarity. This is because they are used differently in French than in German. In German-speaking countries, the term cuvée and the synonym assemblage are used for a blend of different grape varieties, vintages or sites. Not so in France. Cuvée comes from the French Cuve (vat or wine container) and actually refers to a certain amount of wine in a vessel. Accordingly, in French, each separately bottled wine is called a cuvée - in the sense of bottling. The composition of the cuvée is called assemblage in France. If simple wines are blended, the French speak of a coupage.

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