While we were still noshing and schmoozing at a fund raiser at Our Lady of Redemption Melchite Catholic Church, sponsored by The Fine Wine Source, I was able to watch my Bride have fun. At normal wine tastings, she is rather demure, but get her in a crowd and her personality explodes.

We went to the French wine table and there were eight different wines being offered, and I will mention three. I shall begin with Domaine Pascal Aufranc Chenas En Remont 2023, which formerly was labeled as “Domaine Pascal Aufranc Chenas Vignes de 1939.” Pascal Aufranc began his estate with about two hectares of vines in Chenas, located on the En Remont hill which is 350 meters high. Chenas came from the “Chene” oak trees that were planted prior to the vines in the area. The vineyard is isolated from neighboring estates, and Pascal has made his stewardship unique and to his liking. Chenas is one of the smaller Cru appellations of Beaujolais. The estate is an old farm; hand planted on steep slopes lost in the woods of Chenas. He has since acquired one hectare in Fleurie and seven hectares in Julienas. The soil found in En Remont hill is a mixture of sand and granite. The wine is pure Gamay, and the fruit is manually harvested to take advantage of the perfect moment of maturity. The traditional winemaking that he uses requires a minimum of ten days of maceration with full grapes in concrete vats. Then after pressing, the wine is aged for nine months in concrete vats on fine lees. The wine is deep ruby-red in color and offered notes of black cherry, plum, blackberries, cassis, huckleberry, thyme and dried violets. On the palate this medium-bodied, well-balanced wine displays tones of blueberries, cherries and cranberries along with some black tea blending with “grippy” tannins and ending with medium-count finish of fruit, spices and florals.

We then enjoyed Famille Dupuy Chateau Beausejour Puisseguin-Saint Emilion 2022. The Dupuy family has roots in the village of Puisseguin since the Middle Ages. The family acquired the winery in 1934, and it is still in the family. The charterhouse was built in 1864 and houses the wines, and the estate is forty-nine acres of clay and limestone that is the soil of Saint-Emilion and all chemical free, and the vines are still grown in the traditional method. The wine is seventy percent Merlot and thirty percent Cabernet Franc. The fruit undergoes a forty-eight-hour cold soak, followed by almost three weeks of low-temperature natural yeast fermentation. Then the wine is aged up to twenty-four months in oak barrels, with thirty percent being new. The deep garnet color wine offered notes of strawberry and red cherry followed by some vanilla. On the palate this medium-bodied, well-balanced wine displayed tones of strawberries and cherries that have blended with tine tannins and baking spices and ending with a good medium-count finish of fruit, spices and terroir.

The third wine that I will discuss is J. Denuziere Crozes-Hermitage Rouge Rhone Valley 2022. J. Denuziere was founded in 1876 and located in the center of Condrieu. Crozes-Hermitage is the largest appellation in the Northern Rhone Valley and is rich in terroirs and exposures. The soil is composed of rocks and pebbles. The wine is pure Syrah, and the fruit is hand-harvested and destemmed. Initial Fermentation is done is Stainless Steel vats and truncated conical vats for three weeks with gentle extractions to obtain silky tannins and preserve the fruit. Malolactic Fermentation takes place in Stainless Steel vats and barrels, and the ageing continues in barrels on fine lees for about twelve months. A deep garnet colored wine that offered notes of plums, cherries and blueberries with olives, pepper, espresso and crushed stone. On the palate this medium-bodied, well-balanced wine displayed tones of red and black fruits, rich pepper and spices blending with silky tannins ending with a good medium-to-long finish of fruit, pepper and terroir.


























