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Camin Larredya Jurançon Sec La Part Davant 2022

Camin Larredya Jurançon Sec La Part Davant 2022

Regular price HK$290.00
Regular price Sale price HK$290.00
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Cotton candy, cooked ginger, white pear and nutty palate. High acidity coming back to balance out the roundness of the palate.

COUNTRY South-West, France
APPELLATION Jurançon AOC
VARIETY  Petit Manseng, Gros Manseng, Petit Courbu
ABV 14%
STYLE  Bright & Bold
WINEMAKER  Domaine Camin Larredya

ABOUT THE REGION
Jurançon is an appellation for sweet and dry white wines (Jurançon, Jurançon Sec and slightly sweeter Jurançon Vendanges Tardives) grown in the rolling landscape of the Pyrenées foothills immediately southwest of the city of Pau in South West France. The wines here are predominantly based on the Gros Manseng and Petit Manseng grapes producing fine, long-lived wines combining aromatic intensity and freshness. The appellation covers a cluster of 25 communes. The regional climate is marked by a high rainfall typical of both sides of the lush and often verdant western Pyrenées. 

 

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Organic, Biodynamic and Natural wine. What’s the difference?

To understand this concept and its various ramifications, it is necessary to keep something clear in mind: before the 20th century and the spreading of affordable synthetic fertilisers, all farming was organic. When the shift to the use of synthetics and pesticides happened, it became necessary to diversify traditional organic farming from the new modern farming. 


ORGANIC WINE

Simply put, organic farming forbids the use of synthetic fertilisers, synthetic pesticides, herbicides, or genetically modified organisms. The basic requirements are generally specific and engage the farmers not to use any chemical fertilisers and other synthetic products in the vineyard. It does not prevent the vintner from using the conventional winemaking process after harvesting. 


BIODYNAMIC WINE

Let’s take organic farming one step further: Biodynamic. The creator of this agricultural system is the Austrian philosopher Rudolf Steiner, who developed the principles of biodynamics in a series of lectures given in 1924 in Germany. Here lies the foundation of true organic wines, with a strict limit in the use of additives, stringent requirements and at the end obtaining a biodynamic certification.


NATURAL WINE

The previous definitions are usually, and rightfully, associated with it, because most natural wine is also organic and/or biodynamic. But not vice versa!

Natural wine is wine in its purest form, simply described as nothing added, nothing taken away, just grapes fermented. No manipulation whatsoever, minimal intervention both in the vineyards and in the winery. Healthy grapes, natural yeast and natural fermentation, with no filtration nor fining. Sounds easy, right? However, making natural wine is unforgiving and it requires a bigger amount of work than conventional wine. To this day, natural wine has no certification yet.