Raudonasis sausas
Thinking on organic agriculture began in the early 1990s. Owners stopped using chemical weedkillers in 1992 and ten years later they abandoned synthetic plant protection products altogether. In 2012, winery was certified as organic. Soil is limestone scree and mindel high terraces. Age of vines is over 50 years. Aged 28 months in barrel. Almost black, this Cahors smells of red and black berries, lilac, mint, white pepper, cedar and cocoa beans. In the mouth, heavy wine is also rich in freshness and its inherent minerality. A complex, lush but mild tannin wine.
Serve at 16-18 °C with various meat steaks and stews.
This wine is powerful in its depth and concentration. Bold tannins, vibrant acidity and strong minerality combine with black plum and berry flavors. This major wine obviously needs to age.
Léon Verhaeghe is born in the small town of Moorslede in the Flemish region of Belgium. When WW1 is declared in 1914 and the country is annexed, Léon is among the millions of Belgians who flee to the France. Later, his son, Charles Verhaeghe, meets Marie-Thérèse Rives, whose family owns a traditional multi-crop farm in Vire-sur-Lot. While cultivating the land and his love for it, he develops a growing desire to expand the scope of his practice. He watches with fascination as some of his neighbours transform their grapes: his project is clear. He too wants to produce his own wine.The couple continue their multi-crop farming activities and plant their first hectare of vines alongside the lavender in 1958. This piece of land, characterised by limestone scree cones, forms part of the great terroir we know today. 1973 sees the result of all the hard work. Self-taught, Charles and Marie Thérèse Verhaeghe carry out their first wine bottling, alongside their usual distillation of lavender. When Charles is diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 1987, the work becomes too difficult. His sons, Pascal and Jean-Marc, decide to return to the estate to help him. Pascal, trained in viticulture and winemaking at Jean-Marie Guffens and then in Napa Valley, and Jean-Marc, a graduate of La Tour Blanche in Sauternes, have the necessary knowledge and desire to manage the vineyard. Working in synergy, they inject their enthusiasm into the business and constantly experiment. Quality becomes the absolute priority.With this common goal, they share the work: Jean-Marc makes cultivating the vines his speciality and Pascal devotes himself to making, maturing, and marketing the wine. In fifteen years, they take Château du Cèdre to the top of the Cahors appellation.