Domaine Saint Cyr, Beaujolais La Galoche Rouge, 2022

£19.00

Why We Like It

In our early days exploring wine, we would frequent the wine bars of London, usually asking a similar question; ‘do you have a nice light red?’. Nine time out of ten, a bottle of Beaujolais would land on the table in front of us and so started a bit of a penchant for this particular region.

One of those bottles displayed a curious hand written label and opened up into a strawberry sceneted, lightly chilled red, that was perfect with our pre-theatre dinner of guinea fowl and lentils. That bottle was Domaine Saint-Cyr’s La Galoche Rouge.

Four generations in, Rapaël Saint-Cyr took charge of the domaine in 2008 with a mission to focus on the Cru vineyards the family owns in the north. The focus is on terroir, with each vineyard divided into distinct plots and vinified separately. Winemaking focuses on different styles of carbonic maceration and is hands off, with indigenous yeast, old oak and concrete used to display the quality of the fruit and the terroir as a whole.

One of the most interesting facts we have learned about the domaine since our first test of their wines, is that despite sill being a relatively little know domain, they are the biggest organic producer in the Beaujolais.

What To Expect

This is fruit driven, silky tannined, juicy, chillable bojo at its finest. We love it and if you ever come around our house for a spot of lunch in the garden, it is extremely likely you’ll find one of us pouring this into your glass.

Gamay / 13.5% / Beaujolais, France / 75cl

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Why We Like It

In our early days exploring wine, we would frequent the wine bars of London, usually asking a similar question; ‘do you have a nice light red?’. Nine time out of ten, a bottle of Beaujolais would land on the table in front of us and so started a bit of a penchant for this particular region.

One of those bottles displayed a curious hand written label and opened up into a strawberry sceneted, lightly chilled red, that was perfect with our pre-theatre dinner of guinea fowl and lentils. That bottle was Domaine Saint-Cyr’s La Galoche Rouge.

Four generations in, Rapaël Saint-Cyr took charge of the domaine in 2008 with a mission to focus on the Cru vineyards the family owns in the north. The focus is on terroir, with each vineyard divided into distinct plots and vinified separately. Winemaking focuses on different styles of carbonic maceration and is hands off, with indigenous yeast, old oak and concrete used to display the quality of the fruit and the terroir as a whole.

One of the most interesting facts we have learned about the domaine since our first test of their wines, is that despite sill being a relatively little know domain, they are the biggest organic producer in the Beaujolais.

What To Expect

This is fruit driven, silky tannined, juicy, chillable bojo at its finest. We love it and if you ever come around our house for a spot of lunch in the garden, it is extremely likely you’ll find one of us pouring this into your glass.

Gamay / 13.5% / Beaujolais, France / 75cl

Why We Like It

In our early days exploring wine, we would frequent the wine bars of London, usually asking a similar question; ‘do you have a nice light red?’. Nine time out of ten, a bottle of Beaujolais would land on the table in front of us and so started a bit of a penchant for this particular region.

One of those bottles displayed a curious hand written label and opened up into a strawberry sceneted, lightly chilled red, that was perfect with our pre-theatre dinner of guinea fowl and lentils. That bottle was Domaine Saint-Cyr’s La Galoche Rouge.

Four generations in, Rapaël Saint-Cyr took charge of the domaine in 2008 with a mission to focus on the Cru vineyards the family owns in the north. The focus is on terroir, with each vineyard divided into distinct plots and vinified separately. Winemaking focuses on different styles of carbonic maceration and is hands off, with indigenous yeast, old oak and concrete used to display the quality of the fruit and the terroir as a whole.

One of the most interesting facts we have learned about the domaine since our first test of their wines, is that despite sill being a relatively little know domain, they are the biggest organic producer in the Beaujolais.

What To Expect

This is fruit driven, silky tannined, juicy, chillable bojo at its finest. We love it and if you ever come around our house for a spot of lunch in the garden, it is extremely likely you’ll find one of us pouring this into your glass.

Gamay / 13.5% / Beaujolais, France / 75cl

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