Lucien Crochet, Sancerre Pinot Rose 2023

France · Loire · Upper Loire · Sancerre Rosé · Still · wine-wine

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Vintages & packings

Vintage Packing Offers Bids Market price WA rating
2021 12 x 75cl 0 0
2021 12 x 75cl 0 0
2021 12 x 75cl 0 0
2022 12 x 75cl 0 0
2022 12 x 75cl 1 0
2022 12 x 75cl 0 0
2022 12 x 75cl 0 0
2022 12 x 75cl 0 0
2022 12 x 75cl 0 0
2022 12 x 75cl 0 0
2023 12 x 75cl 1 0

Critic ratings

robert_parker 2009

Rating: 88 –88

Crochet’s 2009 Sancerre Rose features fresh red raspberry and lime with chalky, saline, and even slightly Chablis-like chicken stock suffusion. While its full body (like that of most 2009s of this genre) would be more at home in Provence, a lip-smacking combination of juicy fruit and salinity certainly keeps this from burdening the palate. (Crochet’s ambitious, woody reds are his only relative weakness.) It should remain delightful for at least the next 18 months. After years of enjoying the wines made by Gilles Crochet and his father Lucien before him, I finally paid this estate a visit and was especially impressed by a much larger scope (encompassing around 80 acres) and facilities than I had imagined. This is one top-notch source for Sancerre whose principle wines are by no means rarities. Importer: Rosenthal Wine Merchant, Pine Plains, NY; tel. (800) 910-1990

robert_parker 2011

Rating: 87 –87

Copious ripe strawberry and watermelon scent and lusciously inform the palate of Crochet’s 2011 Sancerre Rose, whose sheer ripeness (assisted, perhaps, by relatively low acidity) engenders an impression of sweetness, even though the wine is analytically dry. Straightforward and simple, yet deliciously persistent, this should be enjoyed over the next 9-12 months. Lucien Crochet planned not to bottle any of his 2011s – save for the rose – until September, which considering the small size of the 2010 crop reflects notable restraint as well as dedication to what he thinks best for his wines, even if that puts him at slight commercial disadvantage. Several tank samples of Crochet’s 2011s required a shaking to liberate their scents and flavors from reduction, but that is, if anything, a positive, given the relatively late bottling in store for them and that 2011 is a vintage in which retaining freshness is especially important. He emphasized the advantages of hand-harvesting (routine for him), as well as those of strategic canopy management in largely avoiding the potential Scilla and Charybdis of under-ripeness or rot that he notes faced many growers in both 2011 and 2010. In his mission to craft from Sauvignon distinctly delicious reflections of his varied terroirs and varied artistic impulses, Crochet’s 2010s collectively represent a high point. But he is sure not to rest on his laurels, and indeed far out-performed all but a tiny minority of 2011s from his appellation. These Chavignol vines, incidentally, belong to a cousin of Crochet’s wife who is a pilot for Air France, and Crochet’s brother-in-law tends them in return for two-thirds of the crop, which becomes this bottling. (I re-tasted the inaugural 2009 alongside the 2010 and 2011, finding it still opulent as well as mineral-inflected, but already fairly evolved. And while less marked by its new oak than when I described it in issue 190, it now betrays as heat what Crochet acknowledges is 14.75% alcohol. The vineyard was new to him then, he points out; not right under his nose; and things were ripening too quickly everywhere in Sancerre that year.) Importer: Rosenthal Wine Merchant, Pine Plains, NY; tel. (800) 910-1990