Producer Notes
Chateau Latour produces the biggest and longest lived wines of any of the first growths of the Medoc.
The wines are 75-80% cabernet sauvignon and the best vintages will be absolutely fine after 100 years (particularly, we suspect, the rather odd 1964, which may well have suffered from an excess of chapitalisation as some vintages of the period do). Latour has never had an off-decade, and the wine is also probably the most reliable of all the first growths across all vintages, great and poor.
The estate also produces two ‘second’ wines: Les Forts de Latour, which is produced in similar quanitites to the grand vin, and ‘Pauillac de Latour’, which confusingly just says ‘Pauillac’ in large letters on the label, making it appear to be a generic wine from the appellation.
Some people clearly drink Chateau Latour only a few years old but such people clearly have higher concentration of currency than taste buds.
Vintage Notes
2005 was a very good vintage in Saint-Emilion
2005 was an excellent, long-lived vintage in Bordeaux
Other wines from Chateau Latour
1995 Chateau Latour: £650
2000 Chateau Latour: £815
2003 Chateau Latour: £655
2004 Chateau Latour: £575
2004 Les Forts de Latour: £150
2005 Chateau Latour: £745
2006 Les Forts de Latour: £175
2007 Chateau Latour: £450
2009 Chateau Latour: £910
2010 Chateau Latour: £1150
2010 Les Forts de Latour: £260


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