Complantation


Complantation is the practice of planting multiple grape varieties in a single terroir. It is the oldest form of viticulture known before the appearance of clones and the depletion of biodiversity. It ensures regular harvests by creating a complex and naturalist ecosystem.

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Complantation is the practice of planting multiple grape varieties in a single terroir. It is the oldest form of viticulture known before the appearance of clones and the depletion of biodiversity. It ensures regular harvests by creating a complex and naturalist ecosystem.

Wines produced using complantation are commonly known as field blends. The grapes grown together in the same field or vineyard, then picked and fermented at the same time. These unique wines are different than the typical blends we know today, like those of Bordeaux, where grapes are grown and vinified separately.

Many complantation vineyards are well-established and have likely come into being through massal selection, the practice of replanting new vineyards with cuttings from exception old vines from the same or nearby vineyards. Today, this traditional method of vineyard propagation has been replaced with clonal selection, where a vineyard is propagated by vines from a vine clone nursery.

A new generation of winemakers, such as Alsatian Marcel Deiss, are making the shift towards complantation due to its long-term benefits of increasing genetic variation among vines, improving biodiversity in the surround ecosystem and producing more unique wines that better reflection of the locale terroir.

Synonyms:
Field Blend
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Medium Dry
"It has a terse, orange rind, California raisin and dried apricot-scented bouquet with attractive resinous aromas emerging with aeration. The palate is well-balanced with superb acidity, crisp, honeyed fruit and a delicious spicy finish that is focused and tense. This is one of the best in their range." Neal Martin, The Wine Advocate
$88
$85ea in any 3+
$82ea in any 6+
Half aged in new and used barriques, 25 percent in new and used demi-muids and the rest in concrete tanks. Opaque ruby. A complex, expansive bouquet evokes ripe dark berries, candied flowers, vanilla and woodsmoke, and a suave Indian spice nuance builds in the glass. Broad and seamless in the mouth, offering deeply concentrated blackberry, cherry cola and violet pastille flavors and a sweetening mocha flourish. Closes extremely long and sappy; smooth, sneaky tannins shape the lush dark fruit.
$290
$280ea in any 3+
$270ea in any 6+
Set in the very heart of the Grand Cru area, Vaudesir has a subtle diversity in exposure. Its steep terrain contains more clay than limestone and produces wines of great finesse and elegance.
$254
$244ea in any 3+
$234ea in any 6+

Pyramid Valley Central Otago Pinot Noir 2020

Pinot Noir | South Island, Central Otago

Fresh energetic zippy acid much more contained than the 2021. More vibrant without the darkness and dry red factor of the 2021. This will be a region that I look for the cool vintages. This is very good at the price point playing comfortably with Mercurey 1er Crus. They’ve nailed the mouthfeel: long, even and flowing. The core of fruit lingers on complexed with a little baking spice and again beautifully integrated stalk adding intrigue. Resolved. A little musk and rose playing at the edges.
$68
$65ea in any 3+
$62ea in any 6+