BARON DE BRANE
2023 Margaux Château Brane-Cantenac
Grapes | Cab Franc, Merlot, Cab Sauv |
Colour | Red |
Origin | France, Bordeaux |
Sub-district | Haut Médoc |
Village | Margaux |
ABV | 14% |
Baron de Brane once again sets the bar high once again in terms of 2nd wines, with fragrant floral aromatics, nuance and depth from the attack and continuing through the mid palate, firm atannins and concentrated black fruits. 20% new oak. Drinking range: 2028 - 2038 Rating: 92 Jane Anson, www.janeanson.com (May 2024)
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The 2023 Baron de Brane offers up dark-fleshed fruit, new leather, tobacco and incense. There's a touch more Cabernet Sauvignon than in most years, and the Merlot was saignéed. All of these elements yield an attractive wine that is still coming together. Today, the Baron is a bit of a bruiser. Drinking range: 2025 - 2030 Rating: 88-90 Antonio Galloni, www.vinous.com (May 2024)
The blend of the second wine is 48% Cabernet Sauvignon, 32% Merlot and 7% Cabernet Franc, with 1% each Carmenère and Cabernet Franc, and the percentage of the crop that went into this was about 40%. The fruit largely comes from terraces three and five. There are no young vines, all that goes into Margaux de Brane, and this will see only 20% new oak. Sweet, powdered chalk and cedar on the nose, with dried berries and currants, sage and dark chocolate. The entry is silky and textured, although this quickly yields to a fresh, energetic and peppery drive in the midpalate, with the silky and modest texture of the vintage, cut through by the vintage’s fresh and precise acidity. A charming if lighter version of Margaux, and with that fresh acidity and soft rounding of tannins I can see this drinking well very soon after release. Tasted twice. The alcohol is 13.8%. Rating: 90-92 Chris Kissack, www.thewinedoctor.com (Apr 2024)
The 2023 Baron de Brane is well-defined on the nose with black cherries, wild mint and pencil box scents that are nicely focused. The palate is medium-bodied with quite a grippy entry. There's backbone on this Deuxième Vin, quite feisty on the finish with decent length. Drinking range: 2027 - 2037 Rating: 89-91 Neal Martin, www.vinous.com (Apr 2024)
Château Brane-Cantenac
Margaux Deuxième cru 1855 The estate was originally called Château Gorce after the family that owned it in he 18th Century, but the story really begins with its purchase by Baron Hector de Brane in 1833. Baron Hector was a well-known figure in the area, earning himself the nickname "Napoléon of the the Vines" and so keen was he to own Château Gorce that he sold Château Brane-Mouton in Pauillac to finance the purchase. Quite how much wisdom there was in ridding himself of the what was to become Château Mouton-Rothschild in order to secure the ownership of a slightly under-performing Second Growth property is debatable, but at the time the wines of the estate were consistently highly(ish) ranked. From the late 19th Century onward Brane-Cantenac followed a familiar Bordelais downward spiral. In 1920, it was purchased by the Societé des Grand Crus de France, owners of (among others) Château Margaux. In 1925, ownership passed to Léonce Récapet and his son-in-law François Lurton, but the real rennaissance of Brane-Cantenac came in 1956 when François' son - the great Lucien Lurton - took over. Today, his son Henri Lurton continues to run Château Brane-Cantenac. The period of Lurton ownership has been good to Brane-Cantenac, and the wines are consistent good performers although not really ranking alongside the best Second Growths of the Haut-Médoc, but this probably says more about the relevance of the 1855 classification than it does about the terroir and wines of Château Brane-Cantenac. Brane-Cantenac sits south-west of the village of Cantenac, next to Cantenac-Brown. There are 75ha of vineyard given over to 55% Cabernet Sauvignon, 40% Merlot, 4.5% Cabernet Franc and a very unusual 0.5% Carmenere. The Grand Vin spends 18 months in wood, of which 50% is new every year. The second wine is called Baron de Brane in honour of Baron Hector who put the estate on the map in the early 19th Century.
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