It’s hard to know where to start with this wine. It is from one of my all time favorite producers, and from one of my all time favorite places. I think I’ll start with the place, because it’s pretty neat.
Domaine Gauby is located about 20 Kilometers northwest of Peripignan, in far northwest of Roussillon, close to Spain. The climate here is dry, and the soil is particularly infertile. Imagine the set of one of Clint Eastwood’s Spaghetti Western’s and you can get a good approximation of what it looks like. The soil is poor, and vines are old, and the result is that they have very low yields, and make very intensely flavored wines. In the bad old days of French wine, before there were laws protecting appellations, the wines from this area were the preferred strengtheners for the much less sturdy Bordeaux and Burgundy that were being shipped to Great Britain and the New World. After this became illegal, it was said that blending one barrel of wine from Fennouillide (the area is named after the fennel plants that grow like tumbleweed) would give 50 barrels of non-descript plonk enough character to make an enjoyable wine.
About thirty years ago, the current generation of vineyard owners began to realize that their parents had wasted an incredible resource, and started to keep their grapes for themselves and make wine. Gerard Gauby is widely credited with starting this movement, and his wines have become the standard for wines from all over Roussillon. Part of what makes them great is that he continues, after thirty years of success, to evolve and improve: he now boasts entirely biodynamic farming, and entirely natural winemaking (he doesn’t add ANYTHING to the wines). His wines have a depth, and power that only comes from very special places that are very carefully farmed (low yields, no chemicals, and utmost respect for the vines). The results are really spectacular.
This wine is made from 50% Syrah, 25% Mourvedre, 10% Carignan and 15% Grenache. 20% of the wine is aged in Barrique for 10 months, to round and soften the wine, and the wine is not fined, filtered nor cold stabilized. Les Calcinaires is a powerful, with layers of deep flavor, but feels very elegant on the palate, with freshness and acidity to spare. I recommend decanting this wine for 5 or 10 minutes before you drink it, the aromas really benefit from the air. 6,000 bottles of this wine were made (I said bottles, not cases).
This is a great pairing with fish (really, especially sea bass, halibut and salmon), any type of beef, root vegetables, and just about anything else. Just don’t serve it with anything sweet. This wine already has a bit of bottle age, and is drinking well now, but will continue to drink well at least through 2012.