Frantz Saumon Vin De Frantz Colombard
$36.00
Out of stock
Vintage: 2021
Region: Sûd Ouest, France
Viticulture: Organic
Grape varieties: 100% Colombard
Frantz Saumon Vin De Frantz Colombard is tangy and mineral-driven, with notes of Granny Smith apple and lemongrass. A great wine for fresh seafood.
Song: Flirted With You All My Life by Vic Chestnutt
Additional information
Out of stock

ABOUT THE PRODUCER
About Frantz Saumon Vin De Frantz Colombard
Frantz Saumon Vin De Frantz Colombard is tangy and mineral-driven, with notes of Granny Smith apple and lemongrass. A great wine for fresh seafood.
In 2021 Frantz lost 80% of his production in the Loire, but he was fortunate to be able to purchase organic fruit from an old friend in Sûd Ouest. This wine is 100% Colombard grown on Argilo calcaire soils. Direct slow press before fermentation, aged in stainless steel tanks.
About Frantz Saumon
Frantz Saumon established his domaine in Montlouis-sur-Loire in 2002, after a few stints as a forester here (in France) and there (in Canada), and a stage with Christian Chaussard of Domaine le Briseau, an influential voice in the “vin naturel” world who passed away not long ago.
He has always practiced organic/biodynamic agriculture and raises his wines in a variety of fiberglass and stainless steel tanks as well as wood vessels of different sizes. All wines are fermented naturally here, to the extent that there’s not even method Champenoise going on in this cellar — all of his sparkling wines are pétillant naturel. Frantz’s winemaking style seems to be about purity, always looking for clean wines and thriving for dryness. He also has a great talent for making pétillant naturels, some of the best ones in the region.
In Montlouis, Frantz works about 5 different Chenin vineyards with a variety of soils. Clos du Chene, which is bottled as a single-vineyard cuvée when the vintage permits, is all tuffeau, a very hard limestone found in the valley, with very little clay topsoil. All other Chenin parcels are either clay over limestone, clay with silex, or clay with broken down limestone (argile a eboulis calcaire.) The vineyards average between 20 and 50 years old, with Clos du Chene being the exception, consisting of vines that are between 70 to 100 years old.