2012 Château Pédesclaux, Pauillac, Bordeaux
- Red
- Dry
- Full Bodied
Ready - at best
- Neal Martin MW
- 88/100
- 16.25/20
- James Molesworth
- 87-90/100
- Robert Parker
- 89-92/100
Product: 20128006781
Description
Appreciably Pauillac in weight and style, this has typical cedar-wood notes and all is in balance. This may never be graceful but it will prove to be a reliable glass of Claret.
Tom Cave, Cellar Plan Manager
Tom Cave, Cellar Plan Manager
Colour Red
Sweetness Dry
Vintage 2012
Maturity Ready - at best
Body Full Bodied
Producer Château Pédesclaux
Critics reviews
Neal Martin MW 88/100
The 2012 Pedesclaux has more complexity on the nose compared to the 2011 with blackberry, briary, sous-bois and pencil-box aromas, more Pauillac than the last three vintages. The palate is well balanced with a pointed entry, a little angular in style and perhaps needing more flesh and substance to develop on the finish. I like the tension here, though it needs more personality and more nuance to develop in bottle. Tasted March 2016.Neil Martin - 01/03/2017
16.25/20
Superb colour, fine fragrant nose with smoky/graphite/cassis Pauillac fruit, quite supple with good length, good medium-term.
James Molesworth 87-90/100
Features spice, blueberry and vanilla aromas, with a modest core of plum and anise. Shows good ripeness but lacks density, relying on the spicy toast.james_molesworth, Wine Spectator, April 8 2013
Robert Parker 89-92/100
The wine exhibits Pauillac’s classic note of creme de cassis intermixed with vanillin, espresso and white chocolate. Medium to full-bodied and rich, with 13% natural alcohol, this 10,000-case cuvee should drink well for 15-20 years. Perhaps the key here was that the Cabernet Sauvignon was picked relatively late, between October 10 and 14. That appears to have given the wine an extra level of intensity and richness. Given the fact that this property, purchased in 2009 by real estate entrepreneur Jacky Lorenzetti, for decades has been a candidate for the most disappointing classified growth of Pauillac, the 2012 Pedesclaux is a revelation. Certainly the finest Pedesclaux I have ever tasted, it was made from stunningly low yields of 22 hectoliters per hectare, and the final blend was 63% Cabernet Sauvignon, 32% Merlot and 5% Cabernet Franc. Finally, the 2012 reveals the potential of this vineyard which sits on the high Pauillac plateau adjacent to Pontet Canet and Mouton Rothschild. robert_parker - Wine Advocate - Apr 2013
About this wine
Chateau Pedesclaux
One of Pauillac’s less well-known estates, Ch. Pédesclaux is well situated in front of Mouton Rothschild and Pontet-Canet. The property’s history dates back to the early 19th century when Urbain Pédesclaux – a renowned trader on the Bordeaux marketplace – acquired some vineyards put up for sale following the Revolution and established the estate in 1810. Symbolising the bourgeoisie’s arrival in the Médoc (previously under aristocratic rule), Urbain Pierre Pédesclaux set about building the estate’s reputation. When the wines of the region were classified in 1855, Ch. Pédesclaux was granted the title of Fifth Growth. The estate was acquired by Françoise and Jacky Lorenzetti in 2009. Over the next few years they purchased new parcels, almost doubling the property’s footprint from 26 to 50 hectares. The vineyards underwent significant work with soil studies and replanting, and in 2014, Ch. Pédesclaux opened a new chapter, its vineyards fully restructured and an impressive new gravity-fed winery and cellaring facilities.
Find out more