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Our Growers:Alain Lalanne Domaine Alain Lalanne | ||
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The 50-hectare Domaine Alain Lalanne is in the village of Ramouzens in the eastern portion of Bas-Armagnac, a region of sloping green hills, an oceanic climate, and sandy soils.. Alain Lalanne's father (and his grandfather and great-grandfather) only made wine in order to distill it into Armagnac, but his retirement and Alain's assumption of responsibilities in 1970 coincided with a progressive and lasting decline in the global market for Armagnac. Consequently, Alain and the other growers in the region faced the
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need to sell the region's white wine as white wine. To accomplish this, they imported a grape variety, the Gros Manseng, from the neighboring historic Appellation of Jurancon in order to balance the Ugni Blanc and Colombard traditionally grown in Gascogne.
Alain Lalanne was possibly the first one in his region to plant Gros Manseng, in 1978, and he has continued to expand his plantings since then. In his view, the wines of his region, and French wines in general, are vins d'assemblage that owe their balance and complexity to the blending of multiple c?ages. In the case of his Cotes de Gascogne blanc that means: Ugni Blanc, traditional to the region, picked late, from strong or gravelly soils to produce pale wines with delicate aromas that marry well with Colombard; Colombard, the oldest and noblest variety in the region, which produces wines with aromatic power and a roundness that is nicely balanced by the freshness of Ugni Blanc; and Gros Manseng, a late ripener which does best in cooler and lighter soils and in humid, not too hot, summers. As Lalanne puts it, "Gros Manseng does not accommodate hot summers, the smallest hailstone ruins it, and nevertheless, what class! Powerful in alcohol, strong in acidity, long in the mouth and with persistent aromatics, it transcends the Cotes de Gascogne. Only a foie gras suits it." Note that this variety balances the others by an addition of alcohol, length, power and fat.
The Vin de Pays de Gascogne is a zesty and lively white wine with a nose of white fruits and a clean, crisp finish. The assemblage is mostly Colombard with Gros Manseng and a little Ugni Blanc added for freshness and delicacy. It is bright and refreshing and goes well with fish, appetizers or with white meat.
Nuit d'Automne: Gros Manseng is the only grape variety Lalanne will consider bottling alone, in the rare annee d'exception, but only in very small quantities from his oldest vines, and only for a very specific purpose: to demonstrate to his clientele the special qualities that this variety contributes to the assemblage. Lalanne's Gros Manseng vines average 10 years of age, with the oldest approaching 20 years; his Ugni Blanc 25-28 years; and his Colombard 15 years. The wine is both rich and sweet, long in the mouth. It goes well with dessert or with a foie gras. Or pair it with Asian food or a salad or even a patisserie.
Lalanne's grapes are machine-harvested, de-stemmed, pressed using an old-model continuous press set for an extremely slow speed of rotation that yields 70% clear juice (the jus de presse is not used; it is given to the government to fill the quota of wine destined for distillation for industrial purposes). The juice is cold-settled at
> 5o C. over 4-8 days. The fermentation lasts around 2 weeks at 17o- 18o C. Besides the addition of Gros Manseng, there is one further trick of the trade that serves to compensate the wine's acidity: 6-7 grams/liter of residual sugar that usually remain in the finished wine.
Lalanne emphasizes that these are fragile wines that cannot be shipped in tanker-trucks. They must be bottled at the property at low temperature and with great care. Given the residual sugar in the wine, and the presence of malic acid that will under the right conditions begin a second fermentation, the wine must be cold stabilized and sterile filtered if it is to remain stable and fresh. According to Lalanne, a particular bottling of his wine will normally conserve its freshness and aromatics without any decline for about 12-15 months. There is an interesting evolution in the successive bottlings: the later ones will have a bit more Gros Manseng, because its aromatics have more longevity and evolve more than the other varieties. Thus, the early bottling of a vintage will show extremely fresh, bright fruit. The last bottlings will show an evolution towards increased suppleness, dried flowers, ripe and dried fruits, with hazelnut and citrus notes. With time, the evolution of the fruit, says Lalanne, is often stunning and complex.
Website: http://www.sandeguilhem.com/ | ||