Ce vin est un assemblage provenant principalement de vignes de l'Hortus situées en bas de pente et en complément de vins soigneusement sélectionnés chez 4 confrères du Pic Saint Loup.
Données techniques
Cépages : Syrah 60%, Grenache 20%, Mourvèdre 20%
Terroirs : sol brun formé sur éboulis calcaire du Crétacé, altitude 150 à 200 m, exposition nord-est pour le cépage Syrah (sous la falaise du Pic Saint Loup), et intermédiaire pour le cépage Grenache. Climat méditerranéen humide et frais. Pente de 10 à 20%.
Rendement : 25 à 35 hl/ha suivant le cépage
Vendanges : en partie manuelles
Vinification : vendange éraflée et foulée, 25 à 30 jours de cuvaison
Élevage : sur 12 mois en cuve pour 80% de l'assemblage et en fûts anciens pour le mourvèdre.
Conservation: 4 à 5 années
Note de dégustation
Assemblage de Syrah 60%, grenache 20% et mourvèdre 20%, ce vin plaît au plus grand nombre, avec ses notes de cerises rouges, fruits noirs, épices et garrigues. Le tout soyeux et bien équilibré. Il accompagnera idéalement les volailles, les viandes blanches et l'andouillette.
About the winery
The Pic Saint Loup and Hortus mountains are at the cross-roads of Legend and History. According to a children’s story, they were born from the blow of a club given by a giant who had flown into a terrible rage. Since then the mountain weeps from the Mascla spring. Pic Saint Loup also evokes the name of the sainted knight Loup who, in memory of his lady, became a hermit, singing his undying love from the top of this rocky peak. These mountains were also the place where the Neanderthal men found refuge in the caves of the Hortus cliff. Overlooking the valley from their balcony, they were the first to barbecue caribou meat. Hortus was also the name given by the Romans when they discovered with astonishment so many gardens in this area. This valley was also the place where the bishops of Maguelone retired to their country homes when, tired of business, they came to recover in the peaceful hilly setting in the hinterland. This is a land of vines and olive trees, crossed by shepherds and coal makers of every origin supplying the cities on the sea shore with wool and charcoal.
Pic Saint Loup and Hortus are the first ramparts of the Cévennes hills, overlooking the Gulf of Lions, surveying the scene from the Mount Ventoux to the Canigou. This is a country with rocks and cliffs; with olive trees and broom scattered throughout and peonies and dandelions nestled in the fallen rocks; caves are a sanctuary for owls and eagle owls, fowl and game ; thickets of holm and pedunculata oak trees offer a festive setting to roe deers and wild boars; scores of rabbits and young partridges play in the branches of rosemary bushes among the scents of thyme, musk and cade.
Since the time when the first men settled, in the shelter of the Hortus cliff up to now, he has never ceased creating landscape in his own image: clearing the land for cattle and crops, building terraces to prevent the stones from falling down the hills, canalizing rainwater, building shelters: sheepfolds for the animals, houses or little sheds for men and tools. They have blazed trails linking villages to the vineyards and sheepfolds to the summer pastures; they have built castles and hermitages to the glory of our Lord. Landscapes have evolved along with man’s aspirations, his will being to turn the hostile garrigue into a place of good living. Indeed this country is characterized by a complex balance. Since the beginning of time, vineyards have been part of the continuity of the country, its climate, morphology and history and are the portrayal men had of themselves in their minds.
(Source: www.vignobles-orliac.com)
Non ci è la presentazione ancora per questo vino in italiano.