Sep
10

vin de pays des côtes catalanes masia m château la casenove 2005

By David Moore

The Domaine de la Casenove is located at the base of Mt. Canigou near Apres, just outside the village of Trouillas, about 12 kilometers from Perpignan. The village of Trouillas takes its name from the Latin torcular, or “press,” an indication that winegrowing has been a part of the local culture for nearly 2,000 years. The newly created designation, Vin de Pays des Côtes Catalanes covers the vineyards inland and south of Perpignan.

Etienne Montès harvests grapes at the peak of maturity and produces concentrated, fuller bodied wines that retain great clarity. Carefully selected Grenache is the basis of this immediately pleasing wine, which has wonderfully extracted, full-bodied, red fruit flavors, smooth and supple on the palate and clean and exuberant in its youth.

region

Regional History
The Languedoc-Roussillon on France’s Mediterranean coast forms an arc beginning west of the Rhône to the Spanish border. France’s first vineyards were planted here in what is now Narbonne.

By the late 1800s, the area produced 44% of France’s total output of wine. Greed (and the region’s relatively quick recovery from the devastation of phylloxera), transformed the region into a “wine lake,” known for producing huge amounts of thin wine-often pumped up with richer, imported wines from Algeria and southern Italy.

In the 1970s and early 1980s, smaller, high-quality farms began producing substantial, traditional wines, and the trend continues today. The Vin de Pays des Côtes Catalanes covers an area rich in Spanish influence – the parallel Catalan culture in Southern France extends from Nîmes, just southwest of Avignon to south of the Spanish border. The hot, wind-blown, sun-drenched climate and harsh soils are ideal for olives, vines and little else.

Regional Foods
Perpignan and the small towns to the south are distinctly Catalan in their culture – natives still speak the Catalan dialect, signs are posted in French, Spanish, and Catalan, and the pungent, salty food often combines meat and fish-typical dishes include lamb with cuttlefish, and paella.

Excellent produce, proximity to the sea for fish, olives and olive oil, hot pepper, local tomatoes, oranges and garlic are some of the ingredients typically grown in the region. The many styles of wine produced here are indicative of the broad variety of foods available.

Muscat Rivesaltes, is the local aperitif, drunk chilled. Rosés accompany the langoustine and even lighter meat dishes. The powerfully flavored red wines accompany everything from paella to lamb. The local sheep milk cheeses, foie gras, and Roquefort are served with the delicious, sweet wines of Maury, Banyuls and Rivesaltes.

© 2007 Moore Brothers Wine Company

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