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  1. Tasting Notes
  2. Clos Saint Jean Châteauneuf-du-Pape Cuvée des Générations Gaston Philippe

Clos Saint Jean Châteauneuf-du-Pape Cuvée des Générations Gaston Philippe

The 2017 Clos Saint Jean Châteauneuf-du-Pape Cuvée des Générations Gaston Philippe has earned its place in The World of Fine Wine’s handpicked collection of tasting notes, featuring insights from the world’s foremost wine authorities. Explore in-depth commentary from wine experts Andrew Jefford, Simon Field and John Livingstone-Learmonth on Clos Saint Jean Châteauneuf-du-Pape Cuvée des Générations Gaston Philippe - an internationally acclaimed dry white from Rhône.
Clos Saint Jean Châteauneuf-du-Pape Cuvée des Générations Gaston Philippe
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Wine Name
Clos Saint Jean Châteauneuf-du-Pape Cuvée des Générations Gaston Philippe

Wine Producer
Château de la Gardine

Score
88

Wine Style
White - Dry

Grape Type
Roussanne

Country
France

Vintage
2015

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Simon Field | Lower in alcohol than some, this example does not lack for ripe, accessible fruit character, tutti frutti, pear and peach. There is, however, an ultimate lack of charm and a rather aggressive, pinched finish, which flies in the face of the generosity of the attack. | 85

Andrew Jefford | Full, burnished old gold. Bottle 1: TCA. Bottle 2: This is, in fact, very elegant and chiseled in the Châteauneuf-du-Pape context: poised, fresh, lively, and elegant. I don’t know how (soils?), but this wine almost seems to have a kind of truffley richness, elegance, and understatement to it, a new-bread richness, and a lemon verbena freshness. A super nose here. On the palate, this is fine white Châteauneuf-du-Pape—structured, firm, fine-drawn, long, and elegant, with lovely triggered secondary complexities, and despite the fact that it is 95 percent Roussanne, without any great sense that the variety might be dominating the soil. I expect this to get a lot better with bottle age, and it is already very good indeed. Amazing concentration, too. Wow! | 94

John Livingstone-Learmonth | Full yellow robe. The bouquet expresses ripe fruit, elder, and Muscat grapeyness, has a little tangerine outer. It’s not entirely ensemble. The palate is concentrated, and also has a musky, grapey center, as if the crop was picked a tad late, perhaps by design. The result is a wine withatannic leaning and a sense of lack of refinement. Try from mid-2018 to 2025/27. | 84

Details

Wine expert Andrew Jefford
Simon Field
John Livingstone-Learmonth
Tastings year 2017
Region Rhône
AppellationAOC
% Alcohol By Volume13.5
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