Pedigrees may be less important in winemaking than they are in thoroughbred racing, but they still matter. Alexis Lichine, Sacha Lichine’s father, was instrumental in introducing wine into the mainstream of American culture. He began his career in the wine business working for legendary importer Frank Schoonmaker, and eventually branched out on his own. He promoted varietal labelling (without him, we might still be drinking jug wine labelled Chablis or Burgundy), and was one of the major ambassadors for French wine in the U.S. He was also the owner of Chateau Prieure'-Lichine, a classified growth in the Bordeaux commune of Margaux, and a part owner of Chateau Lascombes in the Médoc.
Alexis grew up in Bordeaux, spent his summers working on the estate, and took over management of the property after his father’s death in 1987. For most individuals in the wine world, being a proprietor of a Bordeaux classified growth would be the ultimate accomplishment. Sacha surprised the establishment by selling the Chateau in 1999.
“I realized there wasn’t much more I could do at Prieuré-Lichine,” he says. “In terms of quality, I couldn’t make a large difference from what was being done at the time.”
In 2006 he purchased Chateau D’Esclans in Côtes de Provence and decided to focus on making rosé. “People in Bordeaux all thought I was out of my mind,” he says cheerfully, but he had a vision of how far he could take the property with an investment of time, energy and care. He hired Patrick Léon, the recently-retired winemaker at Chateau Mouton-Rothschild. They cleaned up the vineyards, replanted most of the vines, and focused on producing rosé that could compete with the greatest wines on the planet.
The entry-level wine from Chateau D'Esclans, Whispering Angel ($20), is made from purchased Grenache, Vermentino and Cinsaut. The nose exudes sexy whiffs of wild strawberry. In the mouth, the wine displays good acidity, crisp flavors of red cherry and raspberry, and just the faintest suggestion of tannin. Clean and bracing though it is, it embodies elegance and finesse, and pairs well with a wide range of fish and shellfish.
The estate-grown 2014 Rock Angel ($30) demonstrates just how complex rosé from the Côtes de Provence can be. Aromas of red berries mix with scents of vanilla and baking spices on the nose. The wine enters the mouth forcefully, with far more amplitude and palate weight than its pale, salmon-colored appearance would suggest. This is a wine you can drink with anything from seafood through white meats and even red meats.
“It’s very easy to make average rosé,” says Sacha, “but hard to make something special. When I started, rosé was not much of a category. My goal was to turn it into a movement.”
This article first appeared, in a different form, on palmbeachillustrated.com
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strawberry angel Not rated yet
omg when I was younger like around 14 I was allowed one samall sip of a wine called strawberry angel it was so good and now iot is no longer inexistance …