2017 Hermitage, Ligne de Crête, Les Grandes Vignes, Delas Frères, Rhône
- Red
- Dry
- Full Bodied
- Syrah
- Anna Lee C. Iijima
- 95/100
- Joe Czerwinski
- 97/100
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Product: 20178151087
75 cl Bottle
Colour Red
Sweetness Dry
Vintage 2017
Alcohol % 14
Grape List Syrah
Body Full Bodied
Property Domaine Delas Frères
Critics reviews
Anna Lee C. Iijima 95/100
Layers of scorched earth, graphite, clove and peppercorn perfume this robust, almost meaty, Syrah sourced from a sunny amphitheater at the top of the Hermitage slope. Tasted at the end of 2021, the rich wine is packed with flavors of roasted plum and black-cherry compote, but dimensions of flora and earth are still yet to awaken. Cellar till 2023 at least. The wine should improve through 2050 and hold further.Anna Lee C. Iijima, WineEnthusiast.com (January 2022)
Drink 2023 - 2050
Joe Czerwinski 97/100
The 2017 Hermitage Ligne de Crete Les Grandes Vignes is a forceful, muscular brute. Blueberries and blackberries dominate the nose, allowing just hints of the wine's stony underpinning and oak aging to seep through. Full-bodied and monochromatic, it demands a good 4-5 years in the cellar. In any event, readers will want to put it away to allow some of the copious tannins to resolve. The long, complex finish of mocha, olives and roasted meat suggests good things lie ahead for the patient.Drink 2025 - 2045Joe Czerwinski, Wine Advocate (May 2021)
Drink 2023 - 2050
About this wine
Syrah/Shiraz
A noble black grape variety grown particularly in the Northern Rhône where it produces the great red wines of Hermitage, Cote Rôtie and Cornas, and in Australia where it produces wines of startling depth and intensity. Reasonably low yields are a crucial factor for quality as is picking at optimum ripeness. Its heartland, Hermitage and Côte Rôtie, consists of 270 hectares of steeply terraced vineyards producing wines that brim with pepper, spices, tar and black treacle when young. After 5-10 years they become smooth and velvety with pronounced fruit characteristics of damsons, raspberries, blackcurrants and loganberries. It is now grown extensively in the Southern Rhône where it is blended with Grenache and Mourvèdre to produce the great red wines of Châteauneuf du Pape and Gigondas amongst others. Its spiritual home in Australia is the Barossa Valley, where there are plantings dating as far back as 1860. Australian Shiraz tends to be sweeter than its Northern Rhône counterpart and the best examples are redolent of new leather, dark chocolate, liquorice, and prunes and display a blackcurrant lusciousness. South African producers such as Eben Sadie are now producing world- class Shiraz wines that represent astonishing value for money.