Chateau Musar Bekaa Valley Red 2016 750 ML
SKU: NL211070
Product Details
Brand: | Chateau Musar |
---|---|
Country: | Lebanon |
Region: | Bekaa Valley |
Appellation: | Bekaa Valley |
Grapes Varietal: | Cabernet Sauvignon |
Wine Type: | Still |
Wine Style: | Red |
Vintage: | 2016 |
Size: | 750 ML |
Collections:2016, 750 ML, All Collection, All collection exclude no deals, Bekaa Valley, Bekaa Valley, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Sauvignon, Cabernet Sauvignon, Malbec, Cabernet Sauvignon, Malbec, Chateau Musar, Chateau Musar, Lebanon, Red, Still, Wine, Wine
Tags: 0, 0.145, 2016, 750 ML, Bekaa Valley, Cabernet Sauvignon, Chateau Musar, Lebanon, Red, Still, Wine
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Our 2016 vintage is deep ruby in colour with high viscosity. Red cherries, plums, carob and figs dominate the nose with a hint of eastern spice. Kirsch and plums follow through to the palate with blackcurrant and chocolate. The tannins are velvety soft and this wine has a lot of depth and fruit concentration with a long finish. The 2016 harvest showed without a doubt, that global warming is causing higher annual temperatures and at the same time, successive years of low rainfall have resulted in drier soils. Clearly, these factors may affect maturation of the grapes as well as the wine-making process but for 2016, with the much needed rainfall and almost perfect climatic conditions, we have high expectations for this vintages’ future for decades to come\n \n Producer Information\n Chateau Musar is a renowned wine producer based in Ghazir, Lebanon, just north of the capital Beirut, producing a range of wines from vineyards in the Bekaa Valley, and best-known for its eponymous grand vin: Chateau Musar. Gaston Hochar set up the vinery after traveling through Bordeaux, and today the old vineyards are planted to Cabernet Sauvignon, Cinsaut, Carignan and indigenous Lebanese grapes Obaideh and Merwah. In 1959, Hochar's son Serge took control of the vineyards, having returned from Bordeaux where he was studying enology. The vineyard suffered during the Lebanese Civil War (two vintages were lost or damaged), and Hochar began to look beyond the domestic market. The wine began to gain recognition after Michael Broadbent MW wrote about it in Decanter magazine in 1979 and by the time the war ended in 1990 just a small fraction of Chateau Musar's production was sold locally. Musar's flagship red wine, made from a blend of Cabernet Sauvignon and Cinsaut, is the most important wine made in Lebanon. It is fermented in concrete, aged for one year in French oak and then rested in the Musar cellars for at least three years before release – sometimes many more. It is famous for its great (intentional) vintage variation, and is highly collectable. In its top tier, Chateau Musar also makes a small amount of white wine from Obaideh and Merwah (thought to be related respectively to Chardonnay and Semillon) from high-altitude vineyards in the Bekaa Valley. These are aged in oak barrel, and like the red wine, spend time in bottle before being released.