Winery: Domaine du Vieux Télégraphe
Year: 2010
Region: Châteauneuf-du-Pape (located in southeastern France's Côte d'Azur)
Brand: "La Crau"
Grapes: 65% Grenache, 15% Mourvèdre (also called Mataró and Monastrell), 15% Syrah (also called Shiraz), and 5% others
Wine made in the wine region of Châteauneuf-du-Pape is traditionally released in bottles with embossing that indicates the region. Please remind me to never, ever again photograph an embossed bottle of red wine. That's because bringing out the detail of all the embossing on such a large area of a curved surface is really difficult; some parts are inevitably hard to see.
Though I'm not thrilled with my version, I like it at least as much as any other style I've seen made by the pros. There is one detail that I wish I had executed better but I have no plan to redo it. Even so, it's a special bottle of wine made by a highly respected winery with a renowned history, so I'm glad I went to the rather extreme trouble to make the photo.
There was a telegraph tower on a high plateau named "La Crau" near the winery, so the estate and its signature brand is named Domaine du Vieux Télégraphe. That brand is made from vines that are about 60 years old on average. The estate's second brand made from much younger vines is fittingly named Telegramme.
Based on three famous wine critics' thinking, this wine should be spectacular; it's rated 94 to 97 points out of a possible 100 points. They say it should last at least until 2030 but I guarantee this wine will be drunk no later than 2020. That's because I don't have the discipline to keep wine so long. Having gone to so much trouble to get the embossing to look as good as I could, I feel as if I've earned the right to drink the darned stuff now.