The year is 1978, and disco is at its absolute zenith. As you walk under the neon lights of Studio 54, the Bee Gees are rewriting pop culture history with “Stayin’ Alive” and “Night Fever” simultaneously locking down the number one and two spots on the Billboard charts. It was a year of monumental gravity across the globe, and in the wine world, it yielded a mythological, structure-driven vintage for Barolo and a legendary, razor-sharp crop of White Burgundy. But while those European giants were crafting wines built to age for decades, deep in the sun-drenched, pebble-strewn terraces of Roussillon, the Cazes family was harvesting old-vine Grenache Blanc and Noir for a true liquid time capsule: the 1978 “Cuvée Aimé” Rivesaltes Ambré. Welcome to the pleasure dome.
This isn't your typical heavy-handed fortified wine; it is a glorious, ethereal elixir that exists in a stratosphere all its own. Lighter and more agile than a dense Vintage or Late Bottled Vintage Port, and far more fragrant and lifted than a heady Banyuls or Amarone, the secret lies in its traditional Vin Doux Naturel craftsmanship. The fermentation was stopped early with a touch of neutral spirit to lock in natural grape sugars, but the real magic happened next: it was tucked away to slumber in 100-year-old giant oak barrels for an astonishing 22 years. Decades of slow, deliberate oxidation—where a portion of the wine evaporated each year to the "angels' share"—concentrated the liquid down into a complex, mahogany-hued masterpiece before it spent another two decades evolving in bottle.
We tasted this exact bottle at a recent importer’s tasting in San Francisco, and to be completely honest, we were sold on the very first sip. For fans of deeply complex, old-vine Châteauneuf-du-Pape, collectors of rare, historic fortified stickies, and any seeker of the truly otherworldly, this is a non-negotiable addition to your cellar. It pours a deep copper-amber, bursting from the glass with a kaleidoscope of Seville orange peel, dried apricots, walnut rancio, toffee, and warm baking spices that float effortlessly on a frame of vibrant, preserved acidity.
Serve this brilliant piece of liquid history slightly chilled alongside a rich pâté of foie gras, toasted brioche, and a bitter orange marmalade reduction.
Santé!
Critical Acclaim:
94 Points, Wine Advocate:
“It boasts complex aromas of smoke, grilled nuts, maple syrup, walnuts, orange zest, clove and cinnamon. Medium-bodied, it somehow takes all those dark, sweet notes and keeps them light and refreshing on the palate.”