x
  • Weather

    13° C Light rain
  • Time

    19:43 PM
  • Wine average?

    96 Tb
  • Country Ranking?

    63
  • Region Ranking?

    37
  • Popularity ranking?

    21

News

VINTAGE 2021

 

The Château Palmer grape harvest gives the impression of a gentle sprint, a controlled frenzy. Each person knows their role by their heart, making timely adjustments and reacting calmly in the face of unpredictable weather. And indeed, the expected — or rather dreaded — late-September rains lived up to the term "precipitation" in every sense of the word. These downpours kicked off the spectacle: the harvest of the 2021 vintage began three days early, on Friday, September 24, and ended in the second week of October after a marathon that proved to be more relaxed than expected. The solemn, heart-warming culmination of an intense year and a gloomy summer.

      "It's a happy time for us," says Driss, a winemaker and groundskeeper on the estate. The rest of the year, we work in separate teams. The harvest is when we all come together to take part in the grand finale." Some 15 winemakers are working around him: the "cutters," red secateurs in hand, remove plump bunches of Merlot from the vines, alternating with the "porters" who, with crates harnessed to their backs, march back and forth between the vine stock and the truck. Château Palmer's permanent staff get to know the seasonal workers, including Carmen, who has travelled from the town of Gradignan with her son, or joke around with the apprentices, such as Isabella, accompanied by her dogs. Here, separating the grapes from each plot is as important as uniting those who harvest them. Fruit is divided; people are mixed together.

      A few feet away, a group task is being completed by 16 refugees, including Abdil Basir, a former taxi driver from Afghanistan who arrived in France in 2019, and Abdul, originally from Sudan. "Some of them are eager to keep working on the vines after the harvest," says Stéphanie, wearing a blue Château Palmer "Vintage 2021" T-shirt. She and Émilie are also supervising a group from the local youth career centre, comprised of young adults from 16 to 25. For many of them, this is their first professional experience. "They get off the coach on the first day as if they were arriving at a holiday camp," say the two winemakers. "Then they discover the connection with nature and the rigor of our work. Guiding them takes a lot of energy and you have to really make yourself heard, but it's a fulfilling experience. We are team leaders, canteen staff and social workers all at once!"

      A little further on, in the midst of the vines, three other figures are choreographing this autumnal dance: Thomas Duroux, director of Château Palmer, Sabrina Pernet, technical director, and Oriane Heuillet, head of research and development. Every day, these pillars of the estate scour the vineyard, smelling and tasting the grapes, comparing and deciding which plots to harvest first. Number 38, for example, can wait until Saturday, while number 70's clusters of Petit Verdot must be picked as soon as possible - and "gently," insists Sabrina, relaying instructions over the phone.

      After a challenging year marred by a lack of sunshine, spring frosts, and persistent mildew, the trio seems to be reassured by their mobile tasting-session. "The tannins in this plot are fantastic," says Thomas Duroux, who is predicting "wines that might just surprise us."

 

 

Vintage 2019 - The School of Nature

In 2019, the Merlots enjoyed dry and sunny weather conditions up to the very end, giving rise to wines full of power, exuberance and flesh. The Cabernets, harvested after the scattered rains of late September, would develop a certain coolness and reserve, to produce wines of rare distinction. It is this uncommon marriage that has placed our two wines, Château Palmer and Alter Ego, in the rarefied circle of exceptional vintages.

 

Vintage 2018 - Unprecedented.

From December to July, incessant rains provoked the development of mildew. Then, during a hot, dry summer, the vines focused all their energy into the remaining grapes. Their power and concentration finally reached an exceptional level. In the winery, all of this led to an unprecedented decision: every lot would be selected for the blending of Château Palmer… Extraordinary.

 

 

VINTAGE 2017 - The wines exhibit the elegant balance of our most classic vintages.

 In the Medoc, it’s often said that “the great terroirs overlook the water”. Last vintage, it saved them, thanks to the shielding powers of the Gironde estuary, meeting place of the Garonne and the Dordogne. With a significant lack of rainfall and a particularly mild February and March, we’d expected the vines to awaken early from their winter dormancy. Sure enough, starting late March and into the first half of April, the buds began opening amidst optimal growing conditions. Then, during the nights of 27th and 28th April, the Bordeaux region was unfortunately struck by a particularly brutal wave of frost. Thankfully, the river, acting as a veritable thermal buffer, would protect the majority of Château Palmer’s vineyards, being situated on the first gravel rises along the shore.

Only a few plots inland to the west would suffer from freezing temperatures. Finally, late May brought the fine weather which would provide ideal conditions for flowering, and the promise of an excellent harvest. The spring remained quite dry until the month of June. As summer began, it brought several rainy periods which helped us traverse the season in confidence, but would slightly prolong the vegetative growth of the vines. The berries’ colour change would take place on schedule in mid-August. The rains of September then speeded the maturation of the skins. And so, harvest arrived early, with the vendange launching officially on 20th

 

 September. First picked were the most beautiful plots of Merlot, soon followed by the Cabernet Sauvignon and the Petit Verdot. By 29th September, the harvest was over. From the moment vinification began, it became apparent that the conditions of the vintage, coupled by the respectful vineyard management methods we’d used to safeguard the terroir, would allow us to enjoy a great clarity of expression from our plots. For the very first time, the final blends of both wines were almost finished before the beginning of the malolactic fermentation. Today, the 2017 vintage at Château Palmer is precise, without excess. The wines exhibit the elegant balance of our most classic vintages. Their velvety tannins and aromatic depth are promises of splendid ageing potential.

 

 

 

A promising summer for the 2015 vintage by Château Palmer

September 2015 - The summer is coming to a close, the temperatures are slowly dropping, the autumn light is filling the once summer sky. We are left with memories of a lovely summer in the Margaux appellation, especially the month of July.

July 2015 was a particularly hot and dry month. The average temperature was 21°C, 2°C above the average of the last thirty years, with highs reaching 37°C. This beautiful period of sunshine allowed the vines to focus on their richness, aromas, tannins, anthocyanins, sugars... However the rain was not plentiful and the 17mm that fell was far from sufficient. The vines, having used up the reserves in the ground, were starting to show signs of weakness. The small grape size bared witness to the situation and rain was eagerly awaited.

 

The month of August was a saving grace for the vines. The rain brought the vineyard back to life, the vine grew, the leaves regained their shine and the grapes continued to grow, making our winegrowers extremely happy. The veraison (the onset of ripening) was quick and homogeneous. The month of August gave us high expectations for the forth coming vintage.


The cool nights at the beginning of September, coupled with beautiful sunny days only reinforce this feeling. The 2015 vintage is already very promising and the date for the harvest is approaching quickly. 

 

The benefits of herb teas on the vineyard

 Over the past week, the risk of mildew contamination has been high. Partly due to the varying temperatures, oscillating from 6°C in to the morning to 23°C in the afternoon, and to significant rainfall (around 2mm every 3 days), perfect conditions to set off cryptogamic contamination. 

It is therefore paramount to protect the vines and make every effort to prepare each plot thoroughly. As the vine is a living organism, it needs to be made stronger so as it can fight the elements and diseases naturally. 

We use an ecosystem approach, as we believe that every element of the vineyard has its place and can play a role in the healthy growth of our vines. We develop natural and healthy preparations for the vines; one prepared using nettles growing on the propriety, the other using horsetail. The nettles, poured on the vines as herbal tea, act as a fertiliser and used before the flowering season ensures the vines come into bloom in the best possible conditions. The horsetail protects against cryptogamic disease, as it acts as a repellent against fungi. The fungi cannot contaminate the first leaves thanks to this preparation. 

The nettles harvested around our plots are dried on site, as is the horsetail that is brought in. After infusing the nettles for around 20 minutes and the horsetail for 45 minutes, the herbal teas are applied one after the other to all of the vines. 

We also produce our own compost. By giving the plots carefully monitored, natural fertilizer, we maintain the self-sustaining independent ecosystem... thus creating a virtuous, self-reinforcing circle.

Our aim, with this organic approach, is to cultivate a richer, stronger terroir and ensure its sustainability for future generations.

 

2014 Vintage Report - EN PRIMEUR - 200 years of Palmer

In 1814, General Charles Palmer purchased the wine estate of Madame de Gascq, and subsequently gave it his name. Two hundred years later, Château Palmer continues to write its own history from one vintage to the next.
Early in the summer, the sun had played and endless game of hide-and-seek. But when the 2014 harvest ended on Tuesday, October 14, it was under the same glorious sun that we had enjoyed all throughout September.
Everything had started quite well: a rainy winter had allowed the estate to renew its water reserves. In the spring, flowering went well, despite a few cases of poor fruit set among the older Merlots. At this point, we had high hopes for the quality of this new vintage.
But beginning in July, the weather became unstable and the vines focused on their fine foliage, to the detriment of their grapes. The month of August wasn't much better, veraison was slow and the berries began to swell . . .
Luckily the sun finally returned at the end of August. Little by little, September’s extraordinary weather conditions modified the profile of the 2014 vintage. The difference in veraison between the vines diminished and the size of the berries decreased, concentrating all the elements that make up this new vintage: sugar, anthocyanin and tannin levels all increased.
On September 22, we harvested the first plot, beginning with some young Merlots. The particularly good weather allowed us to harvest perfectly ripe grapes, with no risk of botrytis.
In the cellar, the spotlight was on innovation. After two years of experiments in reducing the level of sulfur in our wines, we decided to not add any sulfur to the harvested grapes to let them immediately express their complexity.
At this stage the wines of the 2014 vintage are an excellent reflection of the diversity of the estate’s plots. Each personality is expressed in these two blends as if a veil had been lifted. It is without a doubt one of the first results of our biodynamic approach.

Harvest dates: from 09/22/2014 to 10/14/2014

 

 

 

Château Palmer celebrates its 200th anniversary in music!

 

Big Band Dal Sasso.jpg

On the occasion of the 6th edition of Hear Palmer, Château Palmer will welcome the Big Band of the artist Dal Sasso on 27th March 2015. 

Fourteen artists will give a unique jazz concert at the property, in the main cellar, to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Château and to look back at a key period in its history: the acquisition of the estate by General Charles Palmer. The Big Band will interpret each important stage in the construction of the Château Palmer estate. It will be an event in which Jazz music transports us from 1814 to the present day, while also unveiling the new 2014 vintage. 

The event will continue the next day, Saturday 28th March 2015 at Rocher de Palmer in Cenon, with the performance of John Coltrane's masterpiece A Love Suprem by the Dal Sasso Big Band. 

You can already buy tickets for this unique event through the Rocher de Palmer website. 30 tickets are available. 

 

 

 

 

 

1814-2014, 200 years later, Palmer's history is still being written...

Château Palmer, 16/06/2014 

200 ans.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

France, 1814... The Napoleonic period was coming to a close. Charles Palmer, at the time aide-de-camp in the British army to the Prince of Wales, was 37 when he boarded a coach that would take him from Lyon to Paris.  It was journey that would forever change his destiny and alter the history of Palmer.  A beginning for Palmer but a continuation for an estate whose archives show a vineyard planted in the 18th century.

During this three-day journey, Charles Palmer met a young widow on her way to Paris to sell her estate.  With an astute sense of negotiation, Madame de Gascq presented her vineyard as the rival or the heir apparent to Château Lafite, the most illustrious estate of that period, a jewel of the Medoc. Ambitious and proud of his accomplishments, the young man had recently been promoted colonel a few days prior to his departure.

Legend holds that the gallant colonel was captivated, certainly by the lady... but also by the estate.  He quickly fell under its spell. He dreamt of it.  He could already imagine it... By the time the coach arrived in Paris, Charles Palmer was the new owner.  On June 16, 1814, the act of sale was signed, and Charles Palmer gave his name to the Château.

200 years later, Palmer's history is still being written...

 

 

Vintage 2014, first impression

 

On Tuesday, October 14, the last day of harvest for the 2014 vintage took place under a radiant sun.  This last day was the symbol of a miraculous month of September and first two weeks of October.

 

Taking a look back...

Everything had started off on the right foot:  winter, with decent rainfall, allowed the soil to renew its water reserves.  Then came spring where the vine flowered well despite a bit of coulure  on the older Merlots.  At this stage, hopes were high regarding the quality of this new vintage.

The situation changed as soon as July arrived: unstable weather made vacationers wince and the vines concentrate on growing their leaves instead of their grapes.  The month of August was not much better, the berries changed color slowly, swelling with the rain water as our morale slumped.

The situation again changed as vacation ended: if our vineyard workers hadn't enjoyed the sunshine at the beach, they certainly did in the vineyard!! The extraordinary weather conditions for the month of September modified little by little the profile of 2014.  Veraison levels evened out, berry size shrank and concentrated the key elements to this new vintage: sugar, anthocyanes and tannic levels all increased.

 

On September 22, we harvested our first parcel of young Merlot. The particularly clement weather accompanied us throughout the first three weeks of harvest, allowing us to pick perfectly ripe grapes, with no risk of botrytis, an important risk factor in organic agriculture.

All tanks have finished alcoholic fermentation, our first impressions were very encouraging: the Merlots full and seductive, the Cabernet Sauvignons clean and linear while the Petits Verdots quite exuberant.  The malolactic fermentation finishes in mid-december, we will have all the elements to understand the definitive balance of our three varietals... and to begin imagining the blends.

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History

The stagecoach lurched and rattled over the rocky road between Bordeaux and Paris that day in June 1814, but for a dashing young British officer named Charles Palmer, it must have felt like he was riding a cloud. Recently bequeathed a small fortune, and just days earlier promoted to Colonel—having valiantly led his squadron of the Prince’s Royal Hussars against Napoleon in Spain—Palmer was now making his triumphant return to London. There, his position as aide-de-camp to the Prince Regent promised to open doors to the highest echelons of society. For the bourgeois son of an honourable brewer and politician from Bath, his loftiest aspirations were becoming reality. On this blissful morning, Palmer found himself seated next to the most intriguing Traveling companion— a young, recently-widowed noblewoman named Marie Brunet de Ferrière, with an enchanting pair of eyes and a captivating tale.

Since the early 18th century, Bordeaux’s noble de Gascq family had owned the Médoc estate known as Château de Gascq, whose clarets fetched some of the highest prices of the day. A rival to Château Lafite! The widow assured Palmer, a tear in her eye. Alas, after years of revolution, war and the untimely death of her husband, Blaise Jean Charles Alexandre de Gascq, she was now forced to sell her beloved estate for a fraction of its worth, and would seek a buyer in Paris. The gallant officer offered Madame de Ferrière his handkerchief. Were it only in his power to relieve her pecuniary woes! The widow smiled sweetly. And by journey’s end, Charles Palmer owned an ancient wine estate he’d never visited in his life.

Such was the flair and foresight of the future major general. Through Madame de Ferrière’s fine eyes, Palmer had seen something greater than the relatively small, timeworn domain he acquired—a place which could reflect his own passions and ambitions. He named it Château Palmer, and dedicated his wealth and élan to fulfilling its promise. From 1814 to 1831, Palmer bought up surrounding land and vineyards until Château Palmer stretched 163 hectares from Cantenac, to Issan to Margaux. He built lodgings for a large workforce, a winery boasting fifteen oak vats and three crushers, introduced modern equipment and farming techniques. It was a château for a new era—and a new style of wine.

In establishing his estate across the Margaux plateau, Palmer offered himself soils suited to producing wines of exceptional refinement. And yet the average 19th century London clubman—whose taste dictated the British wine market—generally favoured strength over subtlety. Thus wine merchants routinely enriched Bordeaux clarets with potent Rhône or even Spanish wine. But Palmer’s was to be a style of wine beyond fashion and trends—an expression of an extraordinary place. The general’s passion for his vineyards was rather avant-garde in this respect, reflecting an idea of wine as something more than just another market-driven product.

So freely Palmer lavished his fortune on the estate, one has to believe his true aspiration wasn’t amassing wealth, but leaving his mark on the world. Ultimately the investments were too costly for the major general, who was obliged to sell the property to his creditors, the Caisse hypothécaire, in 1843. Charles Palmer died before he could see his estate ranked among Bordeaux’s greatest wines in 1855, but today his legacy is irrefutable. He gave Palmer its name, its style, and revealed to the world its finesse and force of character, while tracing the path of passion, devotion and sacrifice that leads to great wine.—Palmer’s Claret

Was the general ahead of his time? Palmer cultivated finesse in his wines as in his life. Yet for many 19th century London tastemakers, a wine’s strength counted more than its purity or provenance. Apiquant story from the memoirs of one Captain Gronow recounts how the Prince Regent once hosted a tasting of ‘Palmer’s Claret’. All began well. Upon tasting the wine, the Shakespeare-quoting Prince declared its bouquet akin “to the holy Palmer’s kiss”. The assembly of society gastronomes cheered. But then Lord Yarmouth, a Palmer rival, demanded the claret usually served at the Prince’s table—a potent ‘claret Hermitagé’ (Bordeaux blended with rich Rhône wine, as was the Britishfashion)—be brought out for a comparison, along with a round of anchovy sandwiches! Thepairing was catastrophic for Palmer’s fragrant, delicately-flavoured wine. Unsurprisingly, the assembly judged the robust, adulterated claret superior. Palmer was mortified. “That cursed Yarmouth!” The evening, Captain Gronow recalled, very nearly ended with a duel.

 

 

 

 

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Vineyards

When first visiting Château Palmer, many are struck by an ineffable douceur, a sweetness in the air that reigns over the estate. To later sit on a bench in the village of Château Palmer, contemplating the wines one has just tasted, while a breeze washes over the peaceful sea of vines nearby, one can’t help but ponder the unfathomable constellation of circumstances which has created this singular terroir overlooking the Gironde. How this estuary moderates temperatures, blanketing the surrounding vineyards in a nurturing atmosphere, protecting them from spring frosts; how this poetry of stones underfoot—lydite, quartzite, chalcedony—was swept down from the Pyrénées ages ago to be deposited here as these mythic gravel rises, the first of which now constitutes the heart of the Margaux appellation. The old winemakers of the Médoc have a saying, ‘The best vineyards are those with a view mof the river.’ When Château Palmer’s director Thomas Duroux arrived in 2004, he brought an agronomist’s hunger for a deeper understanding of this terroir. In 2007, he launched a vast campaign to map the characteristics of every parcel of Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon and Petit Verdot at the estate. Using aerial and infrared surveys, electrodes to measure electrical resistivity, and myriad samples and analyses, they created maps yielding unprecedented insight into the agronomic potential of the entire 66-hectare estate. Perhaps more unexpectedly, the project gave rise to a serious reassessment 0f the team’s work methods, and the sustainability of conventional, petrochemical-reliant viticulture.


Cabernet Sauvignon
Cabernet Sauvignon is the variety par excellence of Bordeaux in general and of the Médoc in particular. Its reputation is such that it composes many of the iconic wines in countries around the world. Cabernet Sauvignon is what gives the great wines of Bordeaux their power and structure. All you have to do is prune the Cabernet Sauvignon plant to see how hard its wood is and how few shoots it has. Château Palmer owes its restrained power and richness to this variety. 


Merlot 
At Palmer, we take Merlot seriously. The vineyards are divided equally between Merlot and Cabernet Sauvignon (47% each), with the Merlot planted on some of our best gravely plots, where it fully expresses its round, generous, supple character, while offering up its inimitable bouquet of black fruits. Merlot is a precocious child, the first to blossom and the first to mature. When the Merlot has reached full maturity, it is time to start the harvest.


Petit Verdot 
It took some time for Petit Verdot to impose its character on successive vintners at Château Palmer. Notwithstanding its reputation, it is not really more difficult than other varieties. It's up to the vine-grower to provide it with the conditions it needs to grow. Consequently, we give particular care to green harvests on our Petit Verdot plots. We strictly restrict yields to a maximum of 35 hectolitres per hectare so that the grapes have every chance of reaching full ripeness and playing their role of adding an element of “spice” to the final blend.

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Winemaking

In wine, if character comes from the terroir, and personality from climatic conditions, then excellence is the work of human beings. That begins with the vignerons, who throughout the growing season must tirelessly adapt to nature’s whims, relying on age-old viticultural  practices and gestures handed down through generations, to coax and coddle their precious vines into producing a fruit deeply imbued with the nuances of its place of origin. When the joyous days of harvest arrive, all these efforts reach their culmination in the vat room. There, the cellar master must step in and, with the tenderness, respect, patience and humility of a midwife, preside over the birth of a wine. Under soft lights and towering wooden beams, the grapes will be placed inside a temperature-controlled, cone-shaped vat to begin their gentle fermentation. With 54 of these stainless steel beauties, Château Palmer is able to separately ferment individual plots—and even parts of plots—to create a final blend which reflects every subtlety of the terroir. At a time when biodynamics in the vineyard has patently accentuated the identity of every plot, these facilities have permitted Château Palmer to create wines of ever greater precision.

 

If the vat room is where a wine is born, the barrel room is where it is brought to maturity. Barrel ageing is not unlike raising children. It calls for a similar sense of proportion, attention to the specific needs of each child, and constant supervision. Château Palmer’s barrel cellar makes it possible to age wine from beginning to end in the same place, spending a total of two years in the same cellar at a constant temperature of 13°C before bottling. New oak barrels are used in moderation, with the percentage never exceeding 45- 60% for Palmer, or 25-40% for Alter Ego. In the chiaroscuro of the cellar, the wine goes through the various stages of ageing—topping up, racking, and fining with egg white—like so many rites of passage, before it’s finally ready to meet the world.

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Inside information

As any oenophile who has driven Bordeaux’s picturesque D2 knows, Médoc’s Route des Châteaux is studded with sprawling estates designed to daunt and dazzle, each built around an edifice more resplendent than the last. When the slender grey turrets of Château Palmer first come into view around a bend in the road just outside the commune of Margaux, naturally one braces for yet another tour de force of flamboyant landscaping and grandiose architecture. But upon entering the estate, where one expects a dramatic approach leading to the castle, the road slips past it instead, leaving the proud monument standing at the entrance like a noble Swiss guard charged to protect something even more precious within…

 

The château which the Pereires saw completed in 1854 came as a much-needed emblem for a wine which had already begun to achieve international renown. Eschewing norms or classifications, blending classical elegance, Renaissance radiance and Baroque spontaneity, they created an inspired, timeless symbol for Château Palmer. A place with warm, nluxurious rooms for receiving guests, a private wine library for intimate tête-à-têtes, and a remarkable wine cellar, tucked away in a secret passageway, where vintages have been laid down for generations, the oldest bottles dating back to 1875. Yet the Pereires also knew a wine was never made by a lord luxuriating in a castle—great wines are the work of a community of men and women, living for and from it. So before the first stones had been laid on the château, the Pereires had already begun rehabilitating the historic the village of Château Palmer.

 

…When the road finally ends, it suddenly becomes clear that the true heart of Château Palmer is not a castle—it’s a hamlet of blond stone houses with olive green shutters and rose bushes, separated by little gravel paved alleys, shaded by chestnut trees, and overlooking a peaceful, rolling sea of grape vines.

– The Village: where the heart beats In consolidating the village of Château Palmer, the Pereires were perpetuating a centuriesold model in Bordeaux winemaking. In the 1800s, all the great estates were centred around such a hamlet, designed to enable a small rural society made of nuclear families to live in autarky, with cellar master, estate manager, cellar workers, and vignerons all residing onsite. There were animals too—horses, cows—and other crops and fruits grown. By the mid 20th century, most Médoc châteaux had abandoned such traditions. But today, if one could visit Château Palmer on a Sunday morning when the vineyards are deserted, the offices are closed, the telephones silent, you might hear something else—children playing in the village garden. Vincent, vineyard foreman and father of two young boys, now lives in one of the village’s stone houses. So do winery worker Pierre-Baptiste, vigneron Pablo, and the estate’s indefatigable chief gardener, also named Vincent. Today, an evolution is underway at Château Palmer. You see it in the historic village houses being reinvested by those so committed to the estate. You see it too in the new flock of sheep grazing between the vine rows during winter, where wild plants and grasses are now encouraged to grow, and in the château’s growing herd of cattle. It’s a return to the good sense of our ancestors, who knew that cultivating an extraordinary terroir begins by cultivating the life all around it.

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4 different wines with 108 vintages

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