Day 10
Sweet Wines of Layon, Super Salads in
Rose City and the Belt of the Virgin
On the Layon trail |
We enjoyed a super tasting at Chateau Soucherie this afternoon, the highlight of which, for me, was the Coteaux du Layon Chaume
2010. Sweet, not sticky, and with excellent acidity, this was unbelievable.
Looking down on the Layon valley from Soucherie |
Think I’ll just give you the notes of Olivier Poussier, who is
passionate about the world of wine, from the chateau’s website. After 20 years
of work and passion, he became Best Sommelier of the World in October 2000 in
Montreal .
“A beautiful golden yellow colour. The nose shows very ripe white
fruits with a touch of baked apple, juicy Comice pear. A touch of quince jam
highlighted by the spice. Botrytis vector is present with a beautiful nobility.
Wine is coated with a noble woody giving it a shade toffee. All concentrated
tonic but both with a hint of volatility. mouth is wide and smooth without
excess sugar, nice acid tension gives this wine focused a great drinkability.
"
Chateau Soucherie |
We started with two classy wines, the Anjou Blanc Vieilles
Vignes 2009 and the more expensive Savennières Clos des Perrières 2010. Could
have spent more time with these two but, on the initial tasting, put my money
on the Vielles Vignes and even more of it on the Chaume.
Promise of good things to come at Soucherie |
We had arrived at the same time as a small group of French
visitors and the receptionist very kindly added us to that group and kept us up
to date with a few words of English as we walked around the exterior,
overlooking the Layon valley, before entering the much cooler tasting room.
They make quite a few wines here, growing many varieties including Gamay and
Chardonnay, and we tasted quite a few.
The vineyards, we were told, are 90 per cent organic and all
the vineyard work (the stripping, the budding, and tying the harvest) is
manual. They still manage to produce somewhere between 80,000 and 100,000 bottles
per annum.
Salad of fried ham! |
Pork Belly Salad (is that a song title?) |
And we made a stop at the Town of the Roses for lunch. Not
that we saw too many roses in Doue La Fontaine though there was no shortage of flowers. We settled on the Brasserie-Saladerie L’Ardoise
for lunch and got two lovely salads for less than a tenner each. CL enjoyed her
grilled Ham salad (3 huge slices) while I tucked enthusiastically in to my Salad
of Rillauds Chauds (hot Pork belly). The coffee machine broke down just as we
ordered a couple of cups and we were offered a drink instead but, with the
tasting on the horizon, declined. Nice of them, though.
The belt of the Virgin, |