Hindsight Wines

Château Brane-Cantenac

Grand Cru Classé en 1855 Margaux Red Bordeaux Blend 2005

Somm David T
9.4

I have a six-pack of this 05. I thought after 10 years in bottle, it would be interesting to check in on its evolution. While tasty, I’ll wait another 8-10 to open another. Even after 2-3 hours in the decanter, it’s still a very young adolescent. On the nose, slightly sour blackberries & dark cherries, dark currants, baked black plum, haunting blue fruits, anise, whiff of spice, steeped tea, dry stones, dry crushed rocks with dry top soil, caramel, vanilla with fresh & dry red florals. The body is thick & full. Tannins are starting to round out. It’s velvety on the palate. The fruits are; bright, fresh & ripe and really show the greatness of the 05 vintage. Dark currants, blackberries, dark cherries, baked black plum, haunting blue fruits, baked strawberries, cherries, raspberries on the long set, dark spice, clay & loamy dry top soil with crushed rocks, dry stones, cigar with ash, graphite, dry stems, slight herbaceous character, mint, used leather, clove, caramel, vanilla, fresh & dry red florals with violets. The round acidity is about perfect. The structure and length are still strong. The balance is in harmony. As for the long finish, it’s lush, ruby, rich and well polished. Photos of; Chateau Brane Cantenac, large wood vats, Henri Lurton and Estate vines. Producer notes and history...Chateau Brane Cantenac began in the early 17th century. At the time, the estate was known as Domaine Guilhem Hosten. Even that far back, wine was produced from the property. In fact, the wine was so highly regarded it was one of the more expensive wines in Bordeaux. It sold for almost as much money as Brane Mouton. This is interesting because of who went on to buy the vineyard in the 1800’s. The Baron of Brane, also known as “Napoleon of the Vineyards”, purchased the Chateau in 1833. At the time of the sale, the estate was called Chateau Gorce-Guy. To get the funds needed to purchase the Margaux vineyard, the Baron sold what is now called Mouton Rothschild, which was at the time of the sale, known as Chateau Brane-Mouton. Not such a good move with hundreds of years in hindsight! In 1838, the Baron renamed property taking his name and the name of the sector where the vineyards were located and called it Chateau Brane Cantenac. The Chateau later passed to the Roy family, who were well-known in the Margaux appellation in those days, as they owned Chateau d’issan. Moving ahead to 1920, the Societe des Grands Crus de France, a group of merchants and growers that owned several chateaux located in the Medoc including; Chateau Margaux, Chateau Giscours, and Chateau Lagrange in St. Julien, purchased Chateau Brane Cantenac. Five years later, M. Recapet and his son-in-law, François Lurton, took over Brane Cantenac along with Chateau Margaux. Lucien Lurton (the son of François Lurton) inherited Brane Cantenac in 1956. Today, the estate is still in the hands of the Lurton family. Brane Cantenac is owned and run by Henri Lurton. After being given the responsibility of managing Brane Cantenac, it was under the direction of Henri Lurton that large portions of the vineyard were replanted. Vine densities were increased, the drainage systems were improved and the plantings were also, slowly changed. The vineyard of Brane Cantenac is planted to 55% Cabernet Sauvignon, 40% Merlot, 4.5% Cabernet Franc and .5% Carmenere. Carmenere was used for the first time in the 2011 vintage. The only other Chateau I know that still uses Carmenere is Clerc Milon. The 75 hectare Left Bank vineyard of Brane Cantenac is essentially unchanged since it earned Second Growth status in the 1855 Classification. At least that is the case with the 45 hectares used to produce the Grand Vin of Brane Cantenac. Those 45 hectares are planted surrounding the Chateau. Those vines are located just in front of the Cantenac plateau and are the best terroir that Brane Cantenac owns. They have other parcels, which are further inland and much of those grapes are placed into their second wine, Le Baron de Brane. Those additional hectares can be divided into 3 main sections. Behind the Chateau, they have 15 hectares of vines on gravel and sand, 10 hectares across the road with sand, gravel and iron and a 13 hectare parcel with gravel called Notton, which is used for their second wine. The vineyard is planted to a vine density that ranges from 6,666 vines per hectare on the plateau and up to 8,000 vines per hectare for the vines located behind chateau, in their sandier soils. The higher levels of vine density are always found in the newer plantings. The terroir of Brane Cantenac consists of deep gravel, sand and clay soil. Experiments in the vineyards are currently looking at becoming more organic in their vineyard management. Today, more than 25% of Brane Cantenac is farmed using organic farming techniques. It is expected that over time, the amount of hectares farmed with organic methods will be increased. Brane Cantenac has gone through 2 relatively recent modernization’s in 1999, when they added began adding the first of their smaller vats to allow for parcel by parcel vinification and then again in 2015 when they completed a much more complete renovation of their cellars and vat rooms. While Brane Cantenac is a traditional producer, they are no stranger to technology as they were one of the first estates to embrace optical grape sorting machines. In very wet vintages, they can also use reverse osmosis. To produce the wine of Chateau Brane Cantenac, the wine is vinified in a combination of temperature controlled, traditional, 22 oak vats, 18 concrete tanks and 20 stainless steel vats that vary in size from 40 hectoliters all the way up to 200 hectoliters, which allows for parcel by parcel vinification. 40% of the fermentation takes place in the oak vats. The oldest vines are vinified in vats that are selected to allow for separate parcel by parcel vinification. The younger vines are vinified more often together in the same vats. However, the Carmenere is entirely micro-vinified, meaning that those grapes were completely vinified in barrel, using micro-vinification techniques. This can also happen because the amount of grapes produced is so small. Some vats can be co-inoculated, meaning they go through alcoholic fermentation and malolactic fermentation simultaneously. At Chateau Brane Cantenac, malolactic fermentation takes place in a combination of French oak tanks and barrels. The wine of Brane Cantenac is aged in an average of 60% new, French oak barrels for 18 months before bottling. The initial 2 months of aging is done with the wine on its lees, which adds more depth to the wine. There second wine is Le Baron de Brane. Le Baron de Brane is not new. In fact, previously, the second wine went under the name of Chateau Notton, which took its name from one of the main parcels where the grapes were planted. During the late 1950’s and into the 1960’s, having a second wine was important as the estate declassified 3 vintages, due to extremely poor, weather conditions in 1956, 1960 and 1963. Production of Chateau Brane Cantenac is about 11,000 cases per year. — 8 years ago

Eric, Jason and 39 others liked this
Severn G

Severn G Influencer Badge Premium Badge

Great write up, when I first saw this you were only one paragraph in. Thanks.
Somm David T

Somm David T Influencer Badge

@Severn Goodwin Thank you. I thought it was particularly interesting he sold Mouton to buy Brane Cantenac. Too bad he did have a magic 8 ball to predict the future.
Chris England

Chris England

Had this over the weekend - must post soon - love this wine 👍😎🍷

Salinia Wine Company

Saint Marigold Sonoma Coast Chardonnay

Skye LaTorre
9.1

Was boldly (and kindly) served this alongside Tissot-both '07 fruit. Though initially nervous about the results of such a matchup, in hindsight it was pretty obvious that the fruits of two bad-asses are doubly better than one ;-) Even against an old world dame, this pretty young thing showed off just as beautifully in her own way. @semillabk — 10 years ago

Robert Mondavi Winery

Reserve Napa Valley Chardonnay 2005

Christian Broder
9.2

Called it 1er cru Puligny with some age. A little too ripe for that in hindsight, but really darn delicious. — 11 years ago

Château Mouton Rothschild

Pauillac Red Bordeaux Blend 1995

I was looking forward to this wine, it was very good. Coffee , spice and minerals with subtle fruit and a very long finish. Hindsight we should have done this bottle first to enjoy it more. Rookie move. — 8 years ago

Adam Quarello
with Adam
Adam, Shay and 10 others liked this
Adam Quarello

Adam Quarello

My favorite interim bottle of the night 😉

Chartogne-Taillet

Sainte Anne Brut Champagne Blend

Rated this lower last night. I thought it was a bit too simple for the price, but in hindsight, there's nothing much to fault. A bit of reduction at the start, which blew off to reveal a deliciously fruity cuvee with hints of oxidation. Excellent dosage at 5.5 g/l. Racy, dry, balanced, with ample complexity. On the lighter side of grower champagne.

Note: For half the cost, I could probably find local cuvees that show somewhat like this. But irrespective of price (f Australian pricing), this was a very good wine. Perfect aperitif. Perhaps it needs some time in bottle. Love the LIP on the back label. Disgorged 2016, 65/35 PN/CH, 60/20/20 2013/11/12.
— 9 years ago

Anthony, Daniel and 3 others liked this

Domaine Coche-Dury (J.F. Coche Dury)

Meursault Chardonnay 2005

In hindsight, this was remarkable. Nothing like it. — 9 years ago

David liked this

Hindsight

Napa Valley Pinot Noir

Delicious - basic and did I say delicious?! Full body blend and easy to drink, not dry. — 9 years ago

Domaine Mugneret-Gibourg

Vosne-Romanée Pinot Noir 2010

Was a little underwhelmed when drinking it, but in hindsight - how did they get so much perfume into the wine? Beautiful balance, fruit core, red, black, bunchy, ripe, discreet tannins, so smooth. Texture and perfume's the key here. Not overly complex. Very good village, but just a little overpriced here in Oz 😣 — 9 years ago

Ron, Anthony and 1 other liked this

Chateau Montelena

The Montelena Estate Calistoga Cabernet Sauvignon 2010

Josh Luhn
9.2

Needs a lot of time to integrate. Wait until at least 2020. Then you'll have some hindsight. 😎 — 10 years ago

Riddhi liked this

Murdoch James

Blue Rock Vineyard Cabernet Franc 1995

Depleted my entire NZ collection. This was a $2 auction bottle that in hindsight I would have happily paid $30-40 for. Great Cab Franc nose. Body was lighter than expected, almost Pinot like, but not too surprising given the 12% ABV. A nice surprise. — 10 years ago

Paul, scott and 8 others liked this

Mollydooker Wines

Carnival of Love McLaren Vale Shiraz 2012

Took a bit to open up, well more than expected at about 60 min but very good and really well balanced. No heat even at 16%abv.

In hindsight, I would have drank this sooner but still very good.
— 8 years ago

Tapanappa

Foggy Hill Vineyard Pinot Noir 2016

After de-classifying the Foggy Hill in '15 (a decision, with hindsight, Brian Croser may regret) the '16 is back. True Pinosity, I could have savoured the aroma alone. Firm, fine and elegant tannin. A buy recommendation. — 8 years ago

Bob, Trixie and 3 others liked this

Hindsight

20/20 Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2014

Howell Mtn Tasting - Tasting a lot of wines though and in the same glass so I find it unfair to take these ratings seriously. Unremarkable — 9 years ago

Jason, Shay and 5 others liked this

La Spinetta

Vürsù Vigneto Starderi Barbaresco Nebbiolo 2008

Supremely elegant. A bit young, in hindsight should have waited. But loved it all the same. — 9 years ago

Vincent Dauvissat

La Forest Chablis 1er Cru Chardonnay 2009

Was a little disappointed. Not as zippy as I expected, quite soft and fat in fact - guess it does speak of the vintage. Also not as mineral as expected. Opened up over the course of dinner, showing more mineral notes on top of the honey, citrus, and lemon curd aromas. Quite lovely creamy texture. Subtle finish.

First Dauvissat and am admittedly not loving it. Picked the wrong vintage I guess. Still a good, balanced wine in hindsight. Will look out for fresher not-so-ripe years next time.
— 9 years ago

Serge, Bob and 4 others liked this

Hindsight

Estate Grown Calistoga Cabernet Sauvignon 2012

Really nice. Dark fruited, a bit of heat, touch of leather, acid. Good value, too. — 9 years ago

Hindsight

Russian River Valley Chardonnay

Bright and lithe, svelt, balanced spice from the oak, acid is perfect, just creamy enough mouth feel. Great with the carpaccio and capers. This Chardonnay meets in the middle of steely and buttery. Just right. — 10 years ago

Kenzo Estate

Ai Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon 2009

Super smooth and mellow while still full bodied. Allergies are preventing me from tasting other flavors. In hindsight, should have waited to open until I could breathe. — 10 years ago

Domaine Pradelle

Saint-Joseph Syrah 2010

In hindsight I would have cellared for another year or two but still drank very nicely. — 12 years ago