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Cathiard Vineyard Cabernet Sauvignon Cathiard Vineyard Grand Vin Estate Vineyard Napa Valley 2021  - First Bottle

Reviews

99 James Suckling -
Aromas of blackcurrants, pine needles, cedar, tree bark and fresh dark mushrooms. Some stone and black fruit, too. A very fine-grained wine, complex and refined with energy and focus. It’s elegant with a lasting finish. Hints of nutmeg and other spices at the end, with a touch of incense and sandalwood. Pure cabernet sauvignon from 45-year-old vines, the oldest hillside block at the property. 9,000 bottles made. Try after 2028.

Technical Details

  • WinemakerJustine Labbe, Fabien Teitgen with consulting winemaker Micehl Rolland
  • CountryUS
  • RegionCalifornia
  • Sub-RegionNorth Coast
  • AppellationNapa Valley
  • VineyardEstate Vineyards
  • Alcohol14.4%
  • Production666 cases

Cathiard Vineyard Cabernet Sauvignon Cathiard Vineyard Grand Vin Estate Vineyard Napa Valley 2021

Cabernet Sauvignon  |  US
JS99, TWI99, DC97, VN96

Hurry! Only 6 Left!
We have received just 24 bottles of the 2021 Cathiard Vineyard Cabernet Sauvignon Estate Napa Valley. This is the winery’s flagship offering, comprised of 100% Cabernet Sauvignon from the oldest vines on the property (45 years old), which are planted at 1200 feet of elevation in the Mayacamas foothills. The wine is full-bodied, structured, and intense, with ripe black fruits framed by savory tones of licorice, tar, and herbs. Those who have the patience to cellar it a few years will be richly rewarded.

About the Producer

In 1885, brothers James and William Rennie, immigrants from Scotland, purchased a property in Napa Valley, planting sixty acres of grapes spanning the Rutherford and St. Helena AVAs. They built an innovative stone gravity-flow winery, inspired by their heritage as descendants of British engineers, including their uncle Sir John Rennie, famed for completing the London Bridge. The Rennie Brothers were pioneers in the industry, being the first in California to use a gasoline-powered engine for grape crushing, and they developed some of the most well-extracted vintages of their time. However, their winemaking journey was cut short by a devastating fire and the spread of phylloxera, which led to the closure of the winery in 1920 with the onset of Prohibition. The once-thriving estate fell into disuse and became one of Napa Valley's "ghost wineries," intact but untouched for many years. In 1933, Louis Martini purchased the property, building a large wood house where he lived with his family in the early '40s. The property changed hands again in the late '70s, being sold to the Komes-Garvey family, and most recently to Florence and Daniel Cathiard in January 2020. The Cathiards, former high-level ski champions and attendees of the 1969 Woodstock festival, fell in love with the estate's biodiversity. Their respect for nature, already a cornerstone of their Bordeaux properties like Château Smith Haut Lafitte, is now expressed at Cathiard Vineyard, where their passion for nature and the arts continues to flourish.