Last year I read an
article on the online edition of Bibenda about the (only) wine producer on the
island of Jersey. Searching on internet I realized that I couldn’t buy those
wines online, as expedition out of the island is forbidden by law … what a
shame!
But, as last summer I
went to visit Brittany, I could finally arrange a trip to the island and look
for those unreachable wines!
It took quite a long
trip to find the winery but, once there, the first impression, the hospitality
of the staff was simply delighting. I couldn’t do the tour of the domaine and
its vines but I had a nice tasting and a full immersion in their shop. After
almost an hour I went out with three bottles, representing a wide panorama of
the production. Here it is the white one!
Domaine and vineyard
La Mare Wine Estate was established in 1972 by Robert Blayney and was
purchased by the new owner in 1997 when Mr Blayney retired. The estate itself
is a fascinating combination of history and tradition. Comprising of historic
buildings and beautiful gardens; extensive vineyards and orchards; function
rooms, a winery, distillery and estate kitchens which produce a wonderful array
of genuine jersey produce.
The first building of the actual estate was built in 1600 and two
centuries after, in 1797, is dated the construction of the central farmhouse.
The Second World War, due to the German occupation of the island, meant abandon
and poverty for the property. Only in
1968 the restoration of the estate started, with the slow transformation in the
actual touristic attraction, as well as the keeper of the jersey’s traditional
gastronomy.
Of the 25 acres of the domaine only 6 are dedicated nowadays to the
vines, resulting in a limited production.
The wine
A medium dry white
wine made from a blend of Orion and Seyval Blanc grapes. The wine was carefully
fermented using a Burgundian yeast strain, in stainless steel tanks under cool
conditions. This combination has created a wine that displays ripe citrus and
herbaceous aromas, delicate pome fruit flavours and well structured acidity.
Over all it displays the tipicity of the site similar in character as the fresh
North West winds that prevail.
Tasting Note
Date
|
18 December 2014
|
|
|
Wine name
|
SAINTE MARIE
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Vintage
|
2011
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Nation
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United Kingdom
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Region
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Jersey Island
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AOC-DOC
|
//
|
Grape Varieties
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Orion, Seyval Blanc
|
Serving temperature
|
10-12° C
|
Alcohol
|
11,5
|
Price (in euro)
|
12
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SO2 (in mg/l)
|
//
|
Visual Examination
|
Taste analysis
|
||
Limpidity
|
Brilliant
|
Body
|
Weak
|
Color
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Straw yellow
|
Balance
|
Balanced
|
Consistency
|
Scarcely consistent
|
Soft sensations
|
Scarcely Warm – Scarcely Soft
|
Effervescence
|
//
|
Hard sensations
|
Quite Fresh
|
|
|
Flavors intensity
|
Scarcely Intense
|
Olfactory analysis
|
Flavors
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Citrus fruits, hints of balsamic
|
|
Aroma intensity
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Quite Intense
|
|
|
Complexity
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Scarcely Complex
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Finish/Persistence
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Scarcely Persistent
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Quality
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Quite Fine
|
Overall evaluations
|
|
Aromas
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Herbal, Citrus fruits
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Development
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Ready
|
|
|
Harmony
|
Harmonious
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Food pairing
The typical locally
caught scallops or chancre crab.
I was not expecting much from this wine. It remains a niche product that has as its main commercial vehicle the particularity to come from an island suspended between France and the UK, with the two souls who try to coexist. In addition, the very fact of having imported clones specifically says a lot about the absence of local winemaking traditions.
The wine has no great pretensions, in my opinion, and few will get. A flat product, which does not leave his mark neither in the mouth nor in the memory but that puts his name in the long list of wines "without infamy and without praise. "
Advise it? I would not say. Unless of being on the island of Jersey in front of a plate of fish or shellfish for a 100% local meal.
The wine has no great pretensions, in my opinion, and few will get. A flat product, which does not leave his mark neither in the mouth nor in the memory but that puts his name in the long list of wines "without infamy and without praise. "
Advise it? I would not say. Unless of being on the island of Jersey in front of a plate of fish or shellfish for a 100% local meal.
Official website: www.lamarewineestate.com