Chateau de Mayragues
Brut de Mayragues
12% alc.
Gaillac, France
“Sometimes a proper bubble can make even the air sparkle.” I forget who said that about sparkling wines—perhaps no one. But isn’t it true? And when there are many bubbles, and these bubbles are light on both the palate and the wallet, happiness abounds. Chateau de Mayragues, an estate whose wine tradition is as historic as the fortification for which the chateau is named, sits on a picturesque slope on the right bank of the Tarn river in Gaillac in South West France. The estate produces a delightful full-bodied sparkling wine made from the Mauzac grape, grown principally and traditionally in Gaillac and Limoux. Mauzac is aromatic and naturally high in acidity, with a flavor reminiscent of pear and dried apple skins. The vines from this estate are grown biodynamically on soil rich in chalk and lime. Also traditional is the way in which the sparkling wine is developed, known as Methode Gaillacoise: Here the young wine is bottled before all the residual sugar has been fermented to alcohol, thus permitting fermentation to continue in the bottle, but without dosage (topping with an addition of a bit of syrupy wine for a second fermentation). This leads to a slightly sweeter wine with less mousse, but leaving some sediment in the bottle. My taste of this sparkler discovered a refreshingly crisp wine, still quite dry, pale gold and balanced with pinpoint bubbles, medium alcohol and concentrated flavors of ginger, pear and apple. Delicious, and well worth the very reasonable price. Importer: Fruit of the Vines. $15.00. 6/5/09

Feast of St. Amand (d. 679). Monk. Hermit. Abbot. His association with vintners originates from his preaching and teaching in the beer and wine regions of France, Flanders and Germany.
Birth of James Busby. Born in Scotland, Busby was a viticulturist, writer and public servant, known as the “Father of the Australian Wine Industry.” Took first collection of vine stock from Spain and France in the 1830s to Australia. Australian Chardonnay and Shiraz trace their origins to his vine imports.



