WineWorld Xplorer
Wine AdvisorHKDEN
WineWorld Xplorer
  • AllAll
  • UKUK
  • FRFR
  • SGSG
  • HKHK
d'Yquem 2006 photo 2d'Yquem 2006 photo 3d'Yquem 2006 photo 4d'Yquem 2006 photo 5d'Yquem 2006 photo 6d'Yquem 2006 photo 7d'Yquem 2006 photo 8d'Yquem 2006 photo 9d'Yquem 2006 photo 10d'Yquem 2006 photo 11d'Yquem 2006 photo 12d'Yquem 2006 photo 13d'Yquem 2006 photo 14d'Yquem 2006 photo 15d'Yquem 2006 photo 16d'Yquem 2006 photo 17d'Yquem 2006 photo 18d'Yquem 2006 photo 19d'Yquem 2006 photo 20d'Yquem 2006 photo 21d'Yquem 2006 photo 22d'Yquem 2006 photo 23d'Yquem 2006 photo 24d'Yquem 2006 photo 25d'Yquem 2006 photo 26d'Yquem 2006 photo 27d'Yquem 2006 photo 28d'Yquem 2006 photo 29d'Yquem 2006 photo 30d'Yquem 2006 photo 31

d'Yquem 2006

Bordeaux, France
HKD 19001.24 - 19001.24 / BottleView analysis
Country
France
Color
White
Region
Bordeaux
Sub-Region
Sauternes
LWIN
1017757
Product ID
WWX002423

Description

Tasting notes

robert_parkerrobert_parker97

Reviewed by: Neal Martin

Tasted blind at Southwold ’06 Bordeaux tasting. This is tightly coiled on the nose, honey, a touch of ginger, barley sugar and a touch of brown sugar. Quite complex but it needs time. The palate is excellent with crystalline, honeyed fruit, superb balance with hints of honeysuckle, beeswax, apricot and marmalade. Superb balance and poise towards the elegant, graceful finish with fine persistency. This is a fantastic d’Yquem that I fear may be overlooked thanks to the ’07 or ‘09. A regal Yquem. Tasted January 2010.

robert_parkerrobert_parker95

Reviewed by: Neal Martin

The 2006 Yquem, which I last tasted in 2014, continues to be a great Yquem, not quite among the top tier but let's slot it in one level below. It possesses virtually the same aromatics as the last bottle that I tasted at the château: beeswax and lanolin merging with honeyed fruit, dried quince and marzipan. The palate is medium-bodied, viscous, a dash of spice on the entry with very good weight in the mouth. There is still that lovely saltiness on the finish that leaves you begging for another sip - completing a long-term Yquem that is only just finishing its first couple of chapters. Tasted April 2016.

robert_parkerrobert_parker95

Reviewed by: Lisa Perrotti-Brown

Medium lemon-gold colored, the 2006 d'Yquem is a little reticent at this stage, slowly revealing notes of pineapple pastry, dried apple slices, orange preserves and spice cake plus nuances of crème brûlée, preserved ginger, nutmeg and baking bread. The palate offers mouth-coating tropical fruit and baking spice layers with a seductive oiliness to the texture and loads of citrus sparks, finishing with bold freshness and amazing length. Allow it just a couple more years in bottle to get over this slightly muted hump, then drink it for the next 25+ years. For number crunchers: 13.8% alcohol, 122 grams per liter residual sugar, and total acidity is 4.2 grams per liter H2SO4.

robert_parkerrobert_parker98

Reviewed by: Robert M. Parker, Jr.

While no surprise here, this wine, which will be bottled in 2009, is certainly this estate’s greatest effort since their 2001. It completely outclasses everything from the appellation, but even when you’re number one, that’s often hard to do. This light gold wine offers up a sensational smorgasbord of aromas including huge honeyed pineapple and other caramelized tropical fruit flavors, massive richness, and a viscous, unctuous texture with the oak beautifully integrated. The wine has enough acidity to buttress its full-bodied mouthfeel, but this is not by any means the sweetest or most alcoholic of the d’Yquems I have tasted. In fact, in the range of d’Yquems, this is a powerful wine, but it is one built more on finesse and elegance, a la the 1988. Nevertheless, this wine will prove to have 50+ years of longevity. The finish, the mid-palate, the sensation of looking at a skyscraper of Semillon with a small dosage of Sauvignon, is impressive. Like all of the sweet wines of Barsac and Sauternes, one can drink this young, but the nuances and complexities really don’t emerge for at least a decade, especially in the case of a wine such as this. Bravo!

robert_parkerrobert_parker95

Reviewed by: Neal Martin

Served from an ex-chateau bottle. The 2006 Chateau d’Yquem has a slightly reticent bouquet at first that unfolds in the glass. There aromas are well-behaved at first, but then start having some fun with lovely scents of dried honey, dried quince, marzipan and beeswax. Delving further into the aromatics there is a hint of spice and white pepper. The palate is extremely well-balanced with a viscous opening. There is great harmony and composure here – certainly not as voluminous or ravishing as the 2009 – but a controlled and very focused Yquem with a slight saltiness coming through toward the finish. The edginess is absorbing and it should play out nicely with bottle age. This could be the dark horse between the 2001 and 2009. Drink now-2050. Tasted March 2014.

robert_parkerrobert_parker98

Reviewed by: Lisa Perrotti-Brown

A monumental bottle of Sauternes despite a moderate level of residual sugar (122 grams per liter), the 2006 d'Yquem displays a singular, distinctive and elegant bouquet with aromas of thyme, sage, curry, baked pineapple and oregano. Full-bodied, layered and multidimensional, it’s rich and concentrated, with superb acidity on the mid-palate as well as freshness, tension and crystalline texture, concluding on an endless, ethereal finish with a racy bitterness. Simply stunning!

vinousvinous94

Reviewed by: Neal Martin

The 2006 Yquem is initially tightly-wound on the nose before revealing enticing scents of mandarin, dried honey, quince and just a very slight adhesive scent. This is well-defined yet certainly demands more coaxing than its peers. The palate is well-balanced with fine delineation, a caressing viscous texture with desiccated orange peel and a touch of bitter lemon that counterbalances the richness. I noticed this 2006 becoming spicier with aeration. Excellent. Tasted at the Yquem dinner at Rick Stein's restaurant in Barnes.

About the Producer

Chateau d'Yquem is located in the north-eastern part of the Sauternes wine producing village in the Bordeaux region of France and is one of the most prestigious chateaux in the Graves Sauternes appellation. It was named a Premier Cru Superieur in the 1855 Sauternes and Barsac Classification, the only Bordeaux chateau to be awarded this distinction. At the end of the 19th century, a barrel of wine was bought by the Grand Duke Constantine for 20,000 gold francs, a news story that grabbed the headlines and made Château Djinn famous at home and abroad. At the end of the 20th century, the French luxury goods giant Moet Hennessy-Louis Vuitton (LVMH) bought a majority stake in Château Djinn for a large sum of money and became the majority shareholder, thus opening a new chapter in the development of Château Djinn. Château Djinn has 113 hectares of vineyards, of which only 100 are in constant production. Every year, 2-3 hectares of old vines are pulled out of the vineyard and the land is left fallow for a year, while the newly planted vines do not produce any grapes for the first 5 years of the vintage. The vineyard has a top soil of pebbles and coarse gravel, which absorbs heat very well, and a subsoil of clay, which has good water storage capacity. The vineyard is planted with 75% Semillon and 25% Sauvignon Blanc. The vineyard is pruned to reduce yields by pruning and controlling the size of the canopy to increase the flavour concentration of the fruit. During the harvest season, the winery employs a large number of people to hand-pick the ripest grapes and those that have been properly infested with noble rot. The harvest is usually carried out in 5 or 6 rounds and is very rigorous. The picked grapes are sent to the winery within an hour, after which the grapes are pressed for 3-4 rounds, increasing the sugar content and quality of the juice with each pressing. The fermentation takes place in oak barrels, only new barrels made of good quality oak, during which the wine is closely monitored and its condition is regularly analysed. The finished wine is aged separately for 6-8 months, after which the winemaker blends the wine in the following spring and discards those wines that do not meet the requirements. The blended wine is then matured in the cellars for 20 months, during which time the barrels are refilled twice a week and the wine is decanted 15 times to remove the coarse sludge, while the fine sludge is removed by a clarification process. At the end of the maturation, the winemaker conducts a blind tasting to re-qualify the wine and determine the final percentage of the blend for the Grand Cru. Château d'Yquem, Sauternes, France, the main wine of Château d'Yquem, is known for its complex, concentrated and rather sweet taste, with crisp acidity and a well-balanced sweetness, and its excellent ageing potential. The wine has excellent potential to age for a century or more in some vintages, and with time the aromas and flavours become more complex and attractive, with the wine gradually changing colour from bright straw yellow to golden brown, amber and caramel. The wine has received full 100 points from Robert Parker and his team for the 1811, 1847, 1945, 2001, 2009 and 2015. The estate also produces a secondary wine, Chateau d'Yquem "Y", Bordeaux, France, which is a powerful dry It is a powerful dry white wine, usually made from Sauvignon Blanc and a small amount of Semillon, with an average annual production of around 10,000 bottles, usually with an alcohol content of 14% and a very rich and balanced nose and flavour, with a subtle sweetness.

d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006d'Yquem 2006
Join WWX today and start buying and selling smart.
for
BUYER
 

Access over 100,000 offers from trusted sellers around the world.

Sign Up Now
for
SELLER
Private Collector

Sell your wines to a global network of buyers with ease.

Sign Up Now
for
SELLER
Trade Professional

Reach professional buyers from around the world.

Sign Up Now
for
SELLER
Winery

Reach professional buyers from around the world.

Sign Up Now