Thanks to Firefly Farms and everyone who made it into the shop over the weekend to taste the sublime combination of their creamy, elegant goat’s milk cheeses with our Loire Valley Sauvignon Blancs. This coming week is a bit light on the activities front, but as always, we’ll pour at least six different bottles at our bar. The Lineup:

L’Abbaye du Petit Quincy Bourgogne Tonnerre 2006, $19.99/btl – Burgundy, France – 100% Chardonnay – 12.5% abv

Domaine La Bastide Blanche Bandol Blanc 2008, $26.99/btl – Provence, France – 45% Clairette, 35% Ugni Blanc, 15% Bourboulenc, 5% Sauvignon Blanc – 13% abv – A fruity style, with focused flavors of peach, Golden Delicious apple and pear. Medium-bodied, with a zesty, spice-filled finish that features touches of cream. Drink now. 25 cases imported. – WS 88 points

Domaine de Fontenille Cotes du Luberon 2007, $14.99/btl – Rhone, France – 70% Grenache, 30% Syrah – 14% abv – Grippy for a Lubéron, with dark currant, roasted chestnut, maduro tobacco and roasted olive notes that pump through the muscular, slightly rugged finish. Drink now through 2010. 1,500 cases imported. – WS 89 points

This has been a consistent winner from importer Peter Weygandt since he first brought the Domaine du Fontenille to the attention of American wine consumers in the early nineties. A blend of 70% Grenache (50- to 60-year-old vines) and 30% Syrah, yields are kept modest, and the wine is aged in concrete tanks for over a year prior to being bottled without filtration. A super-aromatic example of the vintage, the 2007 exhibits loads of pepper, earth, black cherry, and dusty, loamy soil notes. The wine’s fruit, earthiness, and spiciness are all classic characteristics of Provence. Seriously endowed and medium to full-bodied with excellent purity and depth, this Cotes du Luberon should drink well for 2-3 years. – WA 88 points

Domaine de Poulvarel Costieres de Nimes Rouge 2007, $17.99/btl – Rhone, France – 50% Grenache, 50% Syrah – 14% abv – The two red wines include an equal part blend of Grenache and Syrah, the 2007 Costieres de Nimes, a richly textured effort that tastes more like a northern Rhone with the Syrah component dominating both the aromatics and flavors. Blackberry, licorice, and tar notes along with terrific fruit and medium to full body are found in this 2007. Its style is not terribly dissimilar from a St.-Joseph. Drink it over the next 4-5 years. – WA 89 points

Domaine de L’Ancienne Mercerie Faugeres les Petites Mains 2007, $27.99/btl - Languedoc, France – 30% Carignan, 30% Syrah, 25% Grenache, 15% Mourvedre – 15% abv – The 2007 Faugeres Les Petites Mains – a blend of Grenache, Carignan, Syrah, and slightly less Mourvedre – displays heady black fruit ripeness with overtones of smoke and fruit distillate. On the palate, plush, sweet, dense, yet exuberantly fresh black raspberry, boysenberry, and cassis are tinged with cardamom, clove, tonka bean, and rosemary. There is at most the slightest trace of heat and drying from its 15% alcohol, but this is delightful, rich red and an excellent value ready to enjoy today, yet probably worth following for at least 4-6 years. – WA 90 points

Yann Chave Crozes Hermitage 2007, $27.99/btl – Rhone, France – 100% Syrah – 13% abv – Bright and open, with tasty black cherry, currant and aged tobacco notes. Fresh finish. Drink now. 5,000 cases made. – WS 88 points

© 2012 Weygandt Wines Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha