Decanter Magazine - the route to all good wine

Latest issue
Subscribe
Renew online
Buy Decanter:
In the UK
In the US
Find your nearest
UK newsagent

News Alerts
Keep up to date with news alerts and newsletters including decantertrade
Enter your email address:
Shopping Mall

Retailers
UK and Europe
Worldwide
Shopping
Property
Recruitment
Books
Accessories & Gifts
Storage & Refrigeration
Tourism

Learning Route
Free tasting kit
Links
Wine courses
Wine clubs
The basics
Wine terminology - grapes
How do they taste?
Glossary
Wine Investment
Features
2007 Harvest reports
Book reviews
Richard Mayson's Alentejo diary
Am I a great vintage?
Bordeaux En Primeur
Burgundy 2006
Other Features
Events reports
Events slideshows
Decanter contributors
RSS Feed
Latest News

Latour's Engerer buys in the Rhone
June 3, 2008

Jane Anson in Bordeaux

Chateau Latour director Frederic Engerer has invested in his own wine property in the Rhone Valley.

The property, Fort Boneau, is located at an altitude of 350m in the Drome Valley, on the eastern boundary between the northern and southern Rhone, where most vines grow on the steep slopes of the Vercors Mountains.

Fort Boneau has 18ha of vines near to the reputed Domaine Gramenon, on a property totalling 44ha. It contains Grenache vines that were planted in 1944, together with a few hectares of Syrah.

Engerer has bought the estate with friend and fellow wine maker Jérôme Malet from Domaine Sarda-Malet in Perpignan, one of the star estates in the southern corner of the Cotes de Roussillon.

Among his best known wines are the Syrah and Mourvedre cuvée Terroir Mailloles and a Rivesaltes vin doux naturel. Engerer and Malet are childhood friends and have been making a Cabernet Sauvignon together in Roussillon for the past three years.

'We need to build cellars and a winery, and will be performing test vinifications this year,' Engerer told decanter.com.

He stressed it was not 'just about wine – it's a family investment. The location is magical; there are olive trees, we'll be planting lavender, creating a place that is perfectly in balance with the surrounding country.

'The whole region has great potential – slightly wild and undeveloped, and with the altitude that Rhone wines need to keep freshness and balance.'

The first bottled vintage of Fort Boneau is due in 2009, with Sophie Mage, who has just finished a year at Chateau Latour, as winemaker.

Have your say...
To post your comment on this story, email us at news@decanter.com, making sure the relevant headline is in the subject field

Register on decanter.com absolutely free for news alerts delivered direct to your email inbox, and our fortnightly newsletter with advance notice of what’s coming up in Decanter magazine, offers, competitions and more.

PLUS registration is a one-stop shop for the Decanter magazine Archive and Decanter Fine Wine Tracker.

Search for similar news stories

Back to index

Advertisements
Shopping directory
Poll
Boisset has decided to ship all of its Beaujolais Nouveau destined for the US market in plastic bottles. So, would you buy wine in a plastic bottle?
To comment on this month's poll email editor@decanter.com

Members Log in

Username
Password
keep me signed in unless I sign out

Register free Forgot password?

Decanter worldwide

Chinese
Hungarian

Sister sites

House to Home
Country Life
Horse & Hound
The Field
Shooting UK
Homes & Gardens
Ideal Home
Yachting and Boating World
All IPC Media sites

Contact Us

Editorial...support...
sales...marketing...
Decanter media pack

Contact us | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy | Sitemap | Trusted Reviews
© Copyright 2007 IPC Media Limited, All rights reserved