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Thank you for visiting Wine Camp. I created Wine Camp to promote the discussion of terroir driven wines in a points free environment. I believe the current addiction to the 100 point scale pulls many consumers away from wines with grace, complexity and a true sense of place. Here you will find no rankings and all of the wines in my wine notes are recommended. The only exception you’ll find is if I think a particular brand is a consumer rip-off that needs exposing as in this post.

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« The People That PIck | Main | Dog (liani) Gone Good »
Thursday
10Sep2009

Fleur de Savagnin

This is a wine outside of your (and almost everyone’s) comfort zone. Slightly oxidized and dry-as-a-bone, you’d be hard pressed to find a white wine more outside today’s popular profile. First of all it’s from the eastern part of France in the Jura region, home to wines loved by only the geeky-ist of wine geeks, on top of that it’s an oxidized style of wine like the great Fino and Manzanilla wines of Spain’s woefully under-appreciated Sherry region. Unlike those great wines, it is not fortified, which makes it even more confusing as it just does not fit into any easy marketing category.

The 2006 Domaine de la Tournelle Fleur de Savagnin Arbois from vignerons Evelyne et Pascal Clariet is an extraordinary white wine. It is such an interesting and compelling wine that almost everyone you let taste this wine will hate it. However, if like Steve Martin in LA Story you, “let your mind go and your body will follow” - or in this case let your palate go and your body will follow, you will be treated to a wonderful glass of wine. Nutty and layered with endless layers of complexity, the firm dryness of this wine is almost jarring to palates numbed and dumbed by extremely fruity wines or those that claim dryness, but actually have significant residual sugar.

Just in case this wine needed something to confuse the drinker even more it’s made from the Savagnin variety, which as nothing to do with Sauvignon Blanc and may (or may not) be related to the traminer variety, more recently of Gewurz fame.

None of that matters for this is wine at its best: compelling, interesting, delicious and, most of all, unique and distinct to its variety, vineyard and tradition. What else matters?


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Reader Comments (4)

I have been studying this region for my upcoming somm test. I had never known it existed until a couple of months ago and I' ve been dying to try some. , I currently live in Italy and cant really find this stuff here, unfortunately. Your review is making my mouth water, excellent! Any food pairing ideas?

September 11, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterFrancesco

Craig, thanks for writing about this wine! It's great to still be able to find wines that really make you think about what you're tasting. Although I've never had the wine you talk about, it sounds similar to an amazing Rose I love from the esteemed Rioja producer, Lopez De Heredia. Made only in the best years, the current release is 1998.

These wines are unpopular (when tasted) as they are unknown, but they are also unconventional, unique and a reminder of a different time in wine taste.

September 13, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterCathy Mantuano

Craig - what's extraordinary about your description of this unusual, tasty wine, which I know, is that it's actually made in the non-oxidative (what they call over there ouillé or topped up) method. Yet, something about Jura terroir and winemaking traditions make people perceive that they taste some oxidized flavours. True, it finishes fermentation and ages in relatively old barrels and has lots of lees contact and stirring. The technical sheet (only in French) is at http://www.domainedelatournelle.com/fleur-de-savagnin.htm

Pascal and Evelyne Clairet have a lovely tasting room right in the middle of Arbois with an outside wine bar/café behind it by the river in summer - well worth a visit.

September 14, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterWink Lorch

White wine, my favorite without a doubt, I am more fond of it than of red wine because I think it is much softer and has a better taste, specially these type of high quality white wines

September 17, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterJaco Beach

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