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2014 Château La Gaffeliere, 375ml

Not Currently In Auction

Latest Sale Price

March 10, 2024 - $28

Estimate

RATINGS

94James Suckling

...berry, sliced mushroom and flower characters. Full body, yet so tight and refined. Beautiful length and focus.

93Wine Spectator

A lovely blackberry puree note leads this off, followed by hints of fig and plum. Alluring licorice and juniper flavors start to fill in, backed by an accent of smoldering tobacco. The structure is persistent but very fine-grained.

92Jeb Dunnuck

...beautiful wine that’s more supple, elegant and classic... Pure, seamless, and beautifully textured...medium to full-bodied...impressive intensity and depth in its ripe blackcurrant, black cherries, spring flowers and mineral aromas and flavors.

91The Wine Advocate

...nose is perfumed and slightly floral, certainly well defined with neatly integrated oak, dark fruit emerging with aeration in the glass...palate is medium-bodied with slightly edgy, chalky tannin on the entry, shrouded by plenty of dusky black fruit and a potent, graphite-tinged finish.

16Jancis Robinson

Plum and leather on the nose. Broad and sweet across the palate with leather notes again. Tannins firm behind but slightly drying on the finish.

PRODUCER

Château La Gaffeliere

Château La Gaffeliere is a Premier Grand Cru Classe B estate in St.-Emilion. The 54-acre estate is just west of Château Pavie and south of the town of St.-Emilion. For more than four centuries the estate has been owned by the de Malet-Roquefort family. The estate is planted to 65% Merlot, 30% Cabernet Franc and 5% Cabernet Sauvignon. About 85,000 bottles are produced annually. The second wine is Clos La Gaffeliere. Robert M. Parker Jr. has written that La Gaffeliere exhibits “a style of its own (and) it will surprise tasters used to New Wave flamboyant St.-Emilions, but it is seductive in its own way…"

REGION

France, Bordeaux, St.-Émilion

Saint-Émilion is on the east side of the Dordogne River. At 13,400 acres it is one of Bordeaux’s largest appellations, and perhaps its most picturesque. It is also home to what has been called “the garagiste” movement of upstart, tradition-defying winemakers who produce artisanal wines in styles that are unconventional for the appellation. The village of Saint-Émilion dates from the middle ages and it sits on low hills, surrounded by ancient walls. Like its neighbor Pomerol, Saint-Émilion was not included in the famous Bordeaux classification system of 1855. But a century later a ranking system was put in place, and unlike the classification system for the Medoc, the Saint-Émilion system is reviewed every ten years, meaning that estates can be upgraded or downgraded. There are three rankings: Grand Cru Classé, Premier Grand Cru Classé B and Premier Grand Cru Classé A, with the final ranking being the best. Such legendary Saint-Émilion estates as Châteaux Ausone and Cheval-Blanc are Premier Grand Cru Classé A, along with Châteaux Pavie and Angélus, both added to the classification in 2012. Wines in this appellation are primarily Merlot, mixed with Cabernet Franc and Cabernet Sauvignon.