Lapostolle Grand Selection Carmenère

Lapostolle Grand Selection Carmenere

Wine Description

The mission of the Grand Selection Tier is to capture the freshness of the fruit. Young, expressive, bright, and vivid are defining characteristics of Lapostolle Grand Selection wines.

Apalta in autumn
Lapostolle
Lapostolle Winery
Andrea Leon
Charles de Bournet
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Acclaim
“Racy red cherries, red berries, plums and a touch of olives and light spices. Fruity and fluid on the palate with a medium body and fruit-coated tannins. Not complex, but very balanced, fruit-oriented and fresh.” — James Suckling, Feb 2024
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Vineyard & Production Info
Vineyard name
Las Kuras Vineyard
Soil composition
Alluvial and Colluvial Origin
Training method
Espalier
Year vineyard planted:
From 1992
Harvest time:
March
First vintage of this wine:
2009
Bottles produced of this wine:
14,208
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Winemaking & Aging
Prefermentation Technique:
Cold maceration
Varietal composition:
85% Carménère, 15% Syrah
Fermentation container:
Stainless steel tanks
Maceration technique:
Gentle Extraction
Type of aging container:
Barrels
Size of aging container:
225L
Length of aging before bottling:
5 months
Total SO2
93
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Analytical Data
pH level:
3.66
Acidity:
3.38 g/L
Alcohol:
14 %
Dry extract:
32 g/L
Total SO2
93
Residual sugar:
3.24 g/L
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Wine Production

Grapes were harvested and carefully transported to the winery in Colchagua. We obtained clean and pure fruit with strict quality control,thanks to the state of the art technology, our Vistalys optical berries selection for 98% of the grapes and the remaining 2% was hand destemmed. 97% of the grapes were fermented in stainless steel tanks and the remaining 3% was fermented in wooden vats at 28-30°C with gentle extraction methods. 

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About the Vineyard

Rapel Valley is one of the few places where Carmenère grows in ideal conditions. It is located in the central part of Chile, including the sub Valleys of Cachapoal and Colchagua. It exhibits a semi–arid Mediterranean climate with a winter – only rainfall pattern. During the growing season, we have warm and dry days and pleasantly cool nights as a result of cold breezes coming from the Andes Mountains. Rapel also has a cool influence from the Pacific’s Humboldt Current, which lowers temperatures in the coastal areas of the Valley. This leads to warm days with ample sunlight and dry conditions, allowing a slow ripening period. Carmenère is able to fully ripen but maintain all its fresh notes that are so unique to the variety.