Château Faurie de Souchard

Presentation

 

 

 

 

 

In 2013 Château Faurie de Souchard, a Saint-Emilion Grand Cru Classé, further enhanced the Dassault Wine Estates collection.
The quality of the work performed at this property over several years, with respect for the soil and the spirit of the terroir, with the ultimate goal of producing a fine wine, fits in perfectly with the group's mission in the search for excellence.

Viticulture

A double requirement

All the vineyard work, carried out with care throughout the year, is thought out and well-reasoned according to the potential of the vintage and the different plots. These efforts contribute to obtaining optimum and healthy ripeness in the grapes; the essential guarantee in the creation of great wines that are respectful of their terroir.

COMPLETE RIPENESS

The maturity of the flesh of the grape is not enough; for our vineyards we look for complete phenolic ripeness all the way from the skin of the grape to the pip. Like this, the maximum can be drawn from the terroir, allowing it to express itself. It is an essential and permanent quest.

Tasting the berries, plot by plot, helps to fix the date of the harvest. A first careful, manual selection is performed by the pickers in the vineyard. Then the harvest is taken to the cellar in small crates.

A PERFECT SELECTION

In 2009, Château Dassault was one of the first properties to make use of an optical sorting table.
This innovative investment allows us to determine the quality of berries we accept in an extremely precise way.
It also allows us to work very quickly, which means that we can take all necessary risks in order to fix the harvest date and pick at optimum ripeness.

Winemaking

RESPECT FOR THE TERROIR

The vat rooms at the different properties of Dassault Wine Estates also reflect this wish to glorify the expression of a unique vineyard and terroir.

The delicate winemaking process takes place in small concrete temperature-controlled tanks, allowing each plot to be vinified apart, with respect for its personality.

These small-batch vinifications have just recently been coupled with complete barrel fermentation of the property’s most representative batches.

Ageing

ENHANCING THE FRUIT

Oak is an alluring component in wine that should help to bring out the fruit. The malolactic fermentation is partly carried out in new barrels. The wine is aged in these barrels for 14 to 18 months. Throughout this ageing period, oxygen passes through the grain of the oak and modifies the tannins, making them silkier and better integrated.

The orders for barrels are planned each year, always taking care to use a number of different suppliers. The sourcing of the oak from central France, as well as a minimum of two years’ seasoning, are an indispensable part of the technical specifications.

To accentuate this quality requirement, the team at Dassault fine tunes the search for elegance and complexity with a very precise check on the different forests chosen and also on the level and duration of toasting.

All the coopers take part in this precision quality research every year.

The barrel must contribute to the complexity of the wine’s fruit by adding spicy, varied and complementary aromas and thus enhancing the fruit.