Domaine Martinelle, Ventoux Rouge
Domaine Martinelle, Ventoux Rouge

Domaine Martinelle, Ventoux Rouge

Southern Rhône Valley, France 2018 (750mL)
Regular price$23.00
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Domaine Martinelle, Ventoux Rouge

If you take a quick 30-minute jaunt slightly northeast of Châteauneuf-du-Pape, you’ll enter the outskirts of Lafare, located in the northern section of Beaumes-de-Venise (the southern half is known for its naturally sweet, fortified Muscats). This tucked-away commune is home to Domaine Martinelle, a winery founded and run by a one-woman show, Corinna Faravel, who is the wife of Thierry Faravel, co-owner of acclaimed Domaine Bouïssière in Gigondas. Corinna embodies what this blossoming region needs: she’s impassioned, energetic, wise beyond her years, and shows a delicate, hands-off approach so as to let the terroir sing and the wine create itself. She acquired her first plot in 2001, bottled her first vintage solo in 2004, and built a cellar in Lafare in 2009—which made her a fully-functioning domaine.


Ventoux is cooler than most Southern Rhône appellations. It is a blended mountain and Mediterranean climate that is protected from the harsh elements of Mont Ventoux by the sweeping Dentelles de Montmirail, an outcrop of the larger Alps. Corinna’s first purchase of slow-ripening, low-yielding vines came from these foothills, and the majority of grapes in today’s 2017 Ventoux bottling are atop a broad-shouldered slope within them. The soils here are a mixture of clay and iron-rich limestone with ancient volcanic footprints, although her Syrah plantings are at the base of the hill, where soils are poorer and looser. 


The blend is predominantly Grenache, with healthy portions of Syrah and Mourvèdre, and a splash of Counoise. Her vines range from 10-50 years of age and altitudes can reach nearly 1,000 feet (Châteauneuf-du-Pape is about a third of that). She’s been an organic practitioner since the birth of Martinelle and uses an old-fashioned horse and plow in the vineyards. Grapes are hand-harvested and shuttled into cement vats via gravity, where only indigenous yeasts are used. The wine also ages underground in concrete vats and is bottled unfined and unfiltered. 


Martinelle’s 2018 Ventoux Rouge shines with a dark crimson-purple core with brilliant magenta hues on the rim and releases classic Southern Rhône descriptors: ripe black cherry, currant, wild strawberry, dried garrigue, black pepper, raspberry, crushed stone, candied violets, turned earth, and a touch of olive. In the glass, it harnesses the freshness and balance you find in great red Burgundy while exploding with dense, high-toned Châteauneuf-du-Pape notes. This wine consistently delivers everything I love from the South of France: It's soft, elegant, perfumed, full of rich flavor, and extremely easy to drink. While it can certainly age over the next five years, I say drink this now with no shame! Just decant briefly for 15-30 minutes and make sure your drinking partners don’t cheat you out of an extra glass. Cheers!


 

Domaine Martinelle, Ventoux Rouge
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France

Bourgogne

Beaujolais

Enjoying the greatest wines of Beaujolais starts, as it usually does, with the lay of the land. In Beaujolais, 10 localities have been given their own AOC (Appellation of Controlled Origin) designation. They are: Saint Amour; Juliénas; Chénas; Moulin-à Vent; Fleurie; Chiroubles; Morgon; Régnié; Côte de Brouilly; and Brouilly.

Southwestern France

Bordeaux

Bordeaux surrounds two rivers, the Dordogne and Garonne, which intersect north of the city of Bordeaux to form the Gironde Estuary, which empties into the Atlantic Ocean. The region is at the 45th parallel (California’s Napa Valley is at the38th), with a mild, Atlantic-influenced climate enabling the maturation of late-ripening varieties.

Central France

Loire Valley

The Loire is France’s longest river (634 miles), originating in the southerly Cévennes Mountains, flowing north towards Paris, then curving westward and emptying into the Atlantic Ocean near Nantes. The Loire and its tributaries cover a huge swath of central France, with most of the wine appellations on an east-west stretch at47 degrees north (the same latitude as Burgundy).

Northeastern France

Alsace

Alsace, in Northeastern France, is one of the most geologically diverse wine regions in the world, with vineyards running from the foothills of theVosges Mountains down to the Rhine River Valley below.

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