2023 Vina Carmen Chardonnay Gran Reserva
| Type of Wine | White |
|---|---|
| Country | Chile |
| Region | |
| Winery | |
| Vintage | 2023 |
| Grape | |
| Content (Alc) | 0.75 ltr (13%) |
| Drink window | 2024 - 2030 |
- Buy 6 for 12.95 10.70 each and save 7%
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Description
What a thick Chardonnay, this Carmen Gran Reserva, a fully wood-matured Chilean Chardonnay. And you can taste that because it is wonderfully creamy and full, with many complex impressions. Due to the aging of part of the wine in new oak, this Carmen Gran Reserva Chardonnay has the scent of vanilla and toast, hazelnuts and almonds, peaches and mango.
In the cool Casablanca Valley, the grapes for this special Chardonnay are planted on a subsoil rich in clay and loam. The ideal conditions for making top quality Chardonnay. The grapes are no more than thirty kilometers away from the cool Pacific. The grapes are carefully harvested by hand and then strictly controlled before being pressed in the cellar. To prevent the wine from becoming too bitter, a short, vigorous oxidation takes place. The wine is completely fermented in French oak barrels. After aging in barrel for eight months, the wine is ready for bottling. What a nice wine this is! We also lack nothing in terms of taste, good balance between acids and bitters and a nice length. Taste impressions of yellow fruit, vanilla, herbs and very ripe apricots complete the whole!
Awards:
Vintage 2022 - 91pt (James Suckling)
Vintage 2022 - 90pt (The Wine Advocate)
Specifications
| Block Bundle Options | No |
|---|---|
| Type of Wine | White |
| Country | Chile |
| Region | Casablanca Valley |
| Winery | Vina Carmen |
| Grape | Chardonnay |
| Biological certified | No |
| Natural wine | No |
| Vegan | No |
| Vintage | 2023 |
| Drinking as of | 2024 |
| Drinking till | 2030 |
| Alcohol % | 13 |
| Alcohol free/low | No |
| Content | 0.75 ltr |
| Oak aging | Yes |
| Sparkling | No |
| Dessert wine | No |
| Closure | Cork |
| Promotion | Tier Price |
| Parker rating | 90 |
| James Suckling rating | 91 |
| Vinous rating | 91 |
| Tasting Profiles | Dry, Aged on wood, Powerful, Rich, Round, Full, White fruit |
| Drink moments | Barbecue, Cadeau!, Lekker luxe, Met vrienden, Open haard, Romantisch |
Professional Reviews
Parker
RP 90
Reviewed by: Luis Gutierrez
Drink Date: 2023 -2025
Thirty percent of the 2022 Gran Reserva Chardonnay was barrel fermented and aged, and that gave it classical aromas of nuts, spices and smoke intermixed with varietal waxy apples and yellow plums. It has a light palate with the Limarí austerity, dry, balanced and easy to drink. 70,000 bottles produced. It was bottled in November 2022.
Carmen is one of the classical names in Chile, a winery created in 1850 and property of the Grupo Claro (Santa Rita and others), which is one of the top three winery groups in Chile, after Concha y Toro and Viña San Pedro Tarapacá. Here, they produce "only" 4.2 million bottles with the help of winemaker Emily Faulconer.
Published: Apr 06, 2023
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
James Suckling
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
Vinous
91
Drinking Window
2023 - 2027
From: Chile: Thinking Outside The Box (Jun 2023)
The 2022 Chardonnay Gran Reserva from Limarí was fermented in 80% oak barrels and spent up to 10 months on fine lees. Yellow in hue. The nose delivers notes of creamed corn, green apple and lemon zest, like many Limarí Chards. Sugary and creamy in the mouth, the chalky palate contrasts with the unctuous feel. A rich, flavorful white.
- By Joaquín Hidalgo on March 2023
Carmen is one of the classic producers of Chile. It has been located in Buin, Maipo, since 1850 and is now a member of the Grupo Claro. The first to make Carménère in Chile, the winery has updated its technology and style, most notably at Bodega Gold, one of the house’s facilities. Enology is overseen by Emily Faulconer, who combines classical approaches with a more countercultural feel, as seen in the bottlings made with grapes sourced from all over Chile, such as Carmen DO, Matorral Chileno, Loma Seca, Florillón and Delanz.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
97
Awards:
Oogstjaar 2017 - 97pt (Decanter)
Oogstjaar 2017 - 4.5* (Perswijn)
Oogstjaar 2017 - 9- en blinkt uit in zijn klasse (DGH)
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Wijnhuis
Carmen is the oldest of the bodegas still active in Chilean viticulture. The house was founded in 1850 by Chistian Lanz, who named the winery after his beloved wife Carmen. Until 1987 it led a fairly inconspicuous existence. However, it was then taken over by the Claro family, who were also involved as co-owners in companies such as Santa Rita and Los Vascos. Substantial investments were made, and the opportunity was seized to establish one of Chile's most modern wine companies. In 1994, the carménère grape variety was rediscovered in the vineyards of Carmen. It was long thought that this grape variety was extinct because of the phylloxera, but research showed that the grape was still planted in the Alta Maipo Valley vineyards of Carmen. Since its rediscovery, the carménère grape has become the signature variety for Chilean viticulture. Due to the construction at the foot of the Andes mountains, the new cellars from the winery could be constructed in such a way that all movements with the wine only take place under the influence of gravity. The use of pumps, which somehow 'damage' the wine, make it less of a quality, is completely avoided in this way.
However, the basis of Carmen's success does not even lie in the state-of-the-art installations, but in the vineyard. The professional team of oenologists, led by María del Pilar González, also plays an important role in the production of quality wines. With its arrival in the early 1990s, the emphasis was placed on the quality of the grapes by the young winemaker Alvaro Espinoza. Now that winemaker Emily Faulconer has taken over Carmen's premium range, the focus is on making wines with their own identity and salvaging the value of the terroir they come from. Winemaker Emily Faulconer studied agricultural engineering at the Universidad Católica de Chile. She worked in wineries in the United States (Cakebread Cellars), New Zealand (Trinity Hill Winery) and France (Chateau Canon). Faulconer has also previously worked as head winemaker in Viña Arboleda, where she managed the viticultural and viticultural areas, emphasizing the production of fine wines with a sense of origin.
What a thick Chardonnay, this Carmen Gran Reserva, a fully wood-matured Chilean Chardonnay. And you can taste that because it is wonderfully creamy and full, with many complex impressions. Due to the aging of part of the wine in new oak, this Carmen Gran Reserva Chardonnay has the scent of vanilla and toast, hazelnuts and almonds, peaches and mango.
In the cool Casablanca Valley, the grapes for this special Chardonnay are planted on a subsoil rich in clay and loam. The ideal conditions for making top quality Chardonnay. The grapes are no more than thirty kilometers away from the cool Pacific. The grapes are carefully harvested by hand and then strictly controlled before being pressed in the cellar. To prevent the wine from becoming too bitter, a short, vigorous oxidation takes place. The wine is completely fermented in French oak barrels. After aging in barrel for eight months, the wine is ready for bottling. What a nice wine this is! We also lack nothing in terms of taste, good balance between acids and bitters and a nice length. Taste impressions of yellow fruit, vanilla, herbs and very ripe apricots complete the whole!
Awards:
Vintage 2022 - 91pt (James Suckling)
Vintage 2022 - 90pt (The Wine Advocate)
| Block Bundle Options | No |
|---|---|
| Type of Wine | White |
| Country | Chile |
| Region | Casablanca Valley |
| Winery | Vina Carmen |
| Grape | Chardonnay |
| Biological certified | No |
| Natural wine | No |
| Vegan | No |
| Vintage | 2023 |
| Drinking as of | 2024 |
| Drinking till | 2030 |
| Alcohol % | 13 |
| Alcohol free/low | No |
| Content | 0.75 ltr |
| Oak aging | Yes |
| Sparkling | No |
| Dessert wine | No |
| Closure | Cork |
| Promotion | Tier Price |
| Parker rating | 90 |
| James Suckling rating | 91 |
| Vinous rating | 91 |
| Tasting Profiles | Dry, Aged on wood, Powerful, Rich, Round, Full, White fruit |
| Drink moments | Barbecue, Cadeau!, Lekker luxe, Met vrienden, Open haard, Romantisch |
Parker
RP 90
Reviewed by: Luis Gutierrez
Drink Date: 2023 -2025
Thirty percent of the 2022 Gran Reserva Chardonnay was barrel fermented and aged, and that gave it classical aromas of nuts, spices and smoke intermixed with varietal waxy apples and yellow plums. It has a light palate with the Limarí austerity, dry, balanced and easy to drink. 70,000 bottles produced. It was bottled in November 2022.
Carmen is one of the classical names in Chile, a winery created in 1850 and property of the Grupo Claro (Santa Rita and others), which is one of the top three winery groups in Chile, after Concha y Toro and Viña San Pedro Tarapacá. Here, they produce "only" 4.2 million bottles with the help of winemaker Emily Faulconer.
Published: Apr 06, 2023
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
James Suckling
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
Vinous
91
Drinking Window
2023 - 2027
From: Chile: Thinking Outside The Box (Jun 2023)
The 2022 Chardonnay Gran Reserva from Limarí was fermented in 80% oak barrels and spent up to 10 months on fine lees. Yellow in hue. The nose delivers notes of creamed corn, green apple and lemon zest, like many Limarí Chards. Sugary and creamy in the mouth, the chalky palate contrasts with the unctuous feel. A rich, flavorful white.
- By Joaquín Hidalgo on March 2023
Carmen is one of the classic producers of Chile. It has been located in Buin, Maipo, since 1850 and is now a member of the Grupo Claro. The first to make Carménère in Chile, the winery has updated its technology and style, most notably at Bodega Gold, one of the house’s facilities. Enology is overseen by Emily Faulconer, who combines classical approaches with a more countercultural feel, as seen in the bottlings made with grapes sourced from all over Chile, such as Carmen DO, Matorral Chileno, Loma Seca, Florillón and Delanz.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
97
Awards:
Oogstjaar 2017 - 97pt (Decanter)
Oogstjaar 2017 - 4.5* (Perswijn)
Oogstjaar 2017 - 9- en blinkt uit in zijn klasse (DGH)
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
Exclusive Content
Sign in to unlock professional wine reviews from world-renowned critics
Carmen is the oldest of the bodegas still active in Chilean viticulture. The house was founded in 1850 by Chistian Lanz, who named the winery after his beloved wife Carmen. Until 1987 it led a fairly inconspicuous existence. However, it was then taken over by the Claro family, who were also involved as co-owners in companies such as Santa Rita and Los Vascos. Substantial investments were made, and the opportunity was seized to establish one of Chile's most modern wine companies. In 1994, the carménère grape variety was rediscovered in the vineyards of Carmen. It was long thought that this grape variety was extinct because of the phylloxera, but research showed that the grape was still planted in the Alta Maipo Valley vineyards of Carmen. Since its rediscovery, the carménère grape has become the signature variety for Chilean viticulture. Due to the construction at the foot of the Andes mountains, the new cellars from the winery could be constructed in such a way that all movements with the wine only take place under the influence of gravity. The use of pumps, which somehow 'damage' the wine, make it less of a quality, is completely avoided in this way.
However, the basis of Carmen's success does not even lie in the state-of-the-art installations, but in the vineyard. The professional team of oenologists, led by María del Pilar González, also plays an important role in the production of quality wines. With its arrival in the early 1990s, the emphasis was placed on the quality of the grapes by the young winemaker Alvaro Espinoza. Now that winemaker Emily Faulconer has taken over Carmen's premium range, the focus is on making wines with their own identity and salvaging the value of the terroir they come from. Winemaker Emily Faulconer studied agricultural engineering at the Universidad Católica de Chile. She worked in wineries in the United States (Cakebread Cellars), New Zealand (Trinity Hill Winery) and France (Chateau Canon). Faulconer has also previously worked as head winemaker in Viña Arboleda, where she managed the viticultural and viticultural areas, emphasizing the production of fine wines with a sense of origin.