Tasting of Royal’s 2016 French wines in France

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All 16 of the 2016 and 2017 Royal Wines of Bordeuax - sideways view

As I stated recently in my original post about my most recent trip to Israel, the reds of Israel are really not impressive, but thankfully I ended my trip by going to France to meet with Menahem Israelievitch and taste through all of Royal’s new 2016 and 2017 wines from France in Paris.

2016 Royal Europe French wines

Two years ago, I was given the opportunity to taste many of these wines from the barrel at each of the wineries in Bordeaux. Now, the 2015 wines were a bit more akin to the barrel notes when I tasted through the 2015 wines last year in Paris, but the 2015 wines were already in barrel for a year. However, since the trip was in 2016, the 2016 wines were barely finished fermenting and most had yet to even go through malo, but man even then it was easy to tell that the 2016 vintage was going to be something very special.

The 2014 vintage to me, was crazy fun because it is less ripe than the 2015 or 2016 vintages. They are also FAR cheaper. Then you had the 2015 wines which are more expensive and far riper than the 2014 vintage. This 2016 vintage is the best of both worlds, but it comes at a crazy high price. I warned you during the epic post of my visit to Bordeaux with Mr. Israelievitch, that you better start saving your money, sadly nothing has changed about that. The REAL shocker of the 2016 vintage will be the Chateau Malartic wine, get ready to see that at 170 or more a bottle! That will be close to double the 2014 vintage.

In a previous post about the most recent French wines that were arriving on the market – I already spoke about pricing and supply, so there is no need to talk that over again in this post.

Also, the 2015 vintage may have been ripe to many, but the 2016 right bank wines are even riper. That appears in the right bank because of the Merlot that was super ripe in 2016, but other wines with lots of Merlot also show that way, even on the left bank.

The interesting change this year for these wines is that more of them will be coming to the USA in Mevushal format. Will that be an issue? In the past, I have found that the mevushal work of Mr. Israelievitch is top-notch, and really just ages the wine rather than ruining it.

The Mevushal wines from France for the 2016 vintage will be, the 2016 Barons Edmond et Benjamin de Rothschild, Haut-Medoc, 2017 Chateau Mayne Guyon, 2016 Chateau Greysac, 2016 Chateau 2016 Chateau de Parsac, 2016 Les Lauriers, Des Domaines Edmond de Rothschild, along with the two whites wines, the 2017 Bourgogne Les Truffieres, Chardonnay and the 2017 Les Marronniers, Chablis.

All 16 of the 2016 and 2017 Royal Wines of Bordeuax

Now does mevushal impede the long-term viability of aging in regards to the wine? Well, that too is not something that we have scientific proof on. I have tasted a mevushal 1999 Herzog Special Edition and it was aging beautifully! So, would I buy the mevushal versions of the wines I tasted below – absolutely! Would I age them? Yes, I would hold them for slightly fewer years. The only wine listed below that will be mevushal in the USA and that is NOT mevushal in France is the 2016 Chateau Le Crock. I will post my notes on the mevushal version when it is released here in the USA, they are currently selling the 2015 Chateau Le Crock, so that needs to sell out before the 2016 vintage is released.

Other than the mevushal aspect, there are no differences between the European version of the wines and the USA version of the wines. While that sounds obvious, I am just stating it here. The wines will be shipped now and the temperature issues that clearly affected Israel’s wines of old, have not been a factor here.

Tasting in Paris

I landed in Paris, got showered and the such, and then made my way to lunch with Menahem Israelievitch. After lunch, we went to a lovely home to do the tasting. The wines were all laid out in the order for the tasting, and one by one we went through the 29 wines. The only wine missing wines were the 2016 Les Lauriers, Des Domaines Edmond de Rothschild and the 2016 Chateau Greysac.

My many thanks to Menahem Israelievitch for going out of his way to help me to taste all the current French wines from Royal Wines before they were publicly released. The labels on the pictures may not all have a kosher symbol, but that was because they rushed some of the bottles to Mr. Israelievitch before they were properly labeled with supervision symbols attached. My many thanks to Mr. Israelievitch, Royal Europe, and Royal Wines for making this tasting possible in the first place, and secondly, for making the time to taste the wines with me.

The wine notes follow below – the explanation of my “scores” can be found here:

2017 Ramon Cardova Albarino, Rias Baixas – Score: 91 Lovely nose of rich mineral, with loads of straw, with which salinity, and lovely peach and dry apricot, with honeysuckle, lemongrass, with green notes galore. Lovely! The mouth on this lovely green and acid-driven wine, showing rich salinity, green olives, with lovely dry quince, green apples, but also with lovely lime and grapefruit, with a bit of sweet fruit of guava and rich acid that comes at you in layers. The finish is long and green, with gooseberry, passion fruit, and lovely round and tart with freshness and orange pith, and incredible acidity lingering long. Drink until 2021.

Interesting note on this wine, there is a thermosensitive logo on the label that shows ONLY when the wine is at the correct temperature, on the bottom right-hand corner of the front white label. This is a lovely wine and one that is worth the effort to enjoy at the correct temp. Cool!

2017 Chateau Lacaussade Saint Martin, Vignes Vignes – Score: 90 The wine is a blend of Semillon and Sauvignon Blanc. This wine is very slow to open, it may need a quick decanting, for an hour or so. The nose is slightly tropical in nature with lovely with melon, guava, and hints of passion fruit to start, over time it recedes to show lemongrass, straw, mineral, grapefruit, citrus, and honeysuckle notes. Just like the nose the mouth also starts off with crazy tropical notes that also recede with time, to show a very different wine. After some time, the mouth on this wine is not complex, but very nice, with rich acidity, showing a good balance of fruit, green apple, heather, tart pear, and mineral. The finish is long, super long, with southern tea, and rich acidity, and lovely pith. Drink until 2021.

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  1. Samuel Soffer Avatar

    You wrote a post about how much you hated Israeli reds and then followed it up with a bunch of posts about Israeli winery visits highliting some great wines. There is no such thing as an “Israeli Red” category. Most are not great, as most red wines from every part of the world , but some recent releases are excellent and compare favorable to the best Kosher wines out there. The winemaking overall has improved on the high end over the past few years. The beauty of wine is that just because you write it, doesn’t make it fact. Discerning wine drinkers can decide by themselves. As a final though, if you failed to visit Gvaot, you are simply not capable of discussing “Israeli Reds״ with any authority. Their current releases, including a $35 Merlot , every Gofna, and an interesting but young Masada are superb.

    1. winemusings Avatar

      Hello Sir,

      First of all, thank you for reading the post and for replying here. If you read my posts, you would see I gave those wine scores below a 90, which if you read my scoring rules, are wines I would not buy. The wines I did like were white wines, which as I said in the original post are OK. My hope is that one day Israel will create wines I would buy, until then, I will stick with other options.

      1. Samuel Soffer Avatar

        Thank you for replying. Castigating all “Israeli Reds” still seems extreme to me. We can agree to disagree and drink what we like. May favorite part of wine !

  2. Yerachmiel Avatar

    Thanks for the wealth of information!
    Will there be a 2016 Fourcas Dupre?
    How is it?

    1. winemusings Avatar

      sadly there was no 2016 Fourcas, but there will be a 2017 and a 2018 as well!!

      1. Yerachmiel Avatar

        Thanks!

  3. wine drinker Avatar

    Thanks for your posts! Do you know if these wines are sold in Israel and if so, where they can be purchased?

  4. dag0207 Avatar

    Thanks for your posts! Do you know if these wines are available for purchase in Israel, and if so, where?

    1. winemusings Avatar

      Well, Tzur has been doing a better job at bringing in some of the French wines. The majority of them will be far easier to buy in the USA or in France. I have seen the 2015 Rothschild Haut Medoc there in Jerusalem, but I do not remember much else. Many of the wines I tasted will not be for sale yet, while some are for sale already on kosherwine.com and onlinekosherwine.com

    2. winemusings Avatar

      Alexandre, a friend of mine who lives in Patel said that: we have Chateau Leoville, MR (Moulin riche), and Pavillon (14 so far), Lascombes and Chevalier, Malartic, Giscours, Yon Figeac, Fourcas, Royaumont (2014), Greysac (2013) , Riganes and Maronniers

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