Chateau Montrose 2010


4.7 étoiles - 4 avis professionnels

Chateau Montrose slightly damaged label 2010

hors TVA € 219,00
TVA incluse € 262,80
Volume 0,75l

Chateau Montrose 2010

hors TVA € 81,00
TVA incluse € 97,20
Volume Half bottle
buy with
Classification
Type Rouge
Marque Chateau Montrose
Millésime 2010
Pays France
Région Bordeaux, St. Estephe
Raisin Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Bordeaux Blend,
Volume
État Extrait de son coffret en bois d'origine
Étiquette Parfait
Consommable 2017-2050
Stock 0
État Parfait
Étiquette Légèrement Abîmée
État Extrait de son coffret en bois d'origine
Étiquette Parfait

Avis professionnels

Robert Parker (100)

The 2010 Montrose is a fabulous wine, and I was leaning toward giving it a three-digit score, which it may ultimately merit after it resolves some of its very sweet tannin. It is not as soft or flamboyant as the 2009, but it is a great classic, coming in at 13.9% natural alcohol. Representing 64% of the total production, the final blend is 53% Cabernet Sauvignon, 37% Merlot, 9% Cabernet Franc and 1% Petit Verdot (which is one percent different than the barrel sample blends that were presented). Inky bluish/purple in color, with classic blueberry, black currant, crushed rock and floral notes, hints of graphite, and lots of wild mountain berry fruit, this wine is extravagantly rich, has very sweet but noticeable tannin, laser-like precision, a massive, full-bodied mouthfeel and a finish of close to 50+ seconds. This remarkable wine will probably tighten up somewhat in the bottle, and need most of a decade to shed some tannin and its rather grapy, primary personality. The finish blew me away, and the overall power, richness and balance of this wine are virtually perfect. Look for it to drink well for half a century or more.

Although Jean Delmas remains a consultant at Montrose, he has yielded his primary responsibilities over to a younger staff, but he still believes the 2010 Montrose is one of the all-time great wines ever produced at this estate, equaling or exceeding the quality of the 1929, 1945, 1959, 1961, 1989, 1990 or 2009.

Winespectator (97)

Rock solid, displaying a dense core of plum, steeped currant and braised fig fruit, with racy charcoal and ganache notes. Intensely chalky, offering flesh and refinement to match the bracing minerality, this shows hints of grilled savory, iron, warm paving stone and bitter orange on the riveting finish. Should age very slowly.

Rene Gabriel (19)

Rene Gabriel rates this wine 19/20 points.

BOW (9)


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