| Classification | Cru Classe |
| Type | Red |
| Producer | Chateau de Beaucastel |
| Vintage | 2006 |
| Country | France |
| Region | Rhone |
| Appellation | Châteauneuf-du-Pape |
| Grape | Rhone Blend |
| Volume | 0,75 |
| Condition | From Original Wooden Case |
| Label | Slightly bin soiled |
| Drinkable | -2030 |
| Stock | 6 |
The 2006 growing season brought near-perfect conditions to Châteauneuf-du-Pape. A warm, dry summer and cool mistral winds allowed the grapes to ripen slowly while maintaining freshness - exactly the conditions necessary for the success of Château de Beaucastel's characteristic blends with a high Mourvèdre content. The harvest began in mid-September in ideal conditions and yielded concentrated fruit with balanced acidity. The 2006 Beaucastel wine was an immediate success, but with potential for aging. The Perrin family's biodynamic approach captured the natural harmony of power and elegance in this vintage, making it one of the best of the 2000s.
Medium to deep garnet colour. Pretty perfume of freshly crushed raspberries / blackberries with nuances of wet leaves, cinnamon and white pepper. The medium to full bodied palate provides a good concentration of juicy berry fruit countered by medium to high acidity and a medium level of velvety tannins. Wonderfully balanced. Long finish with notes of white pepper. 13.4% alcohol.
Powerful, with a round, almost creamy core of blackberry and raspberry fruit all layered with cocoa, sweet toast, mesquite and fig paste. Long and rich through the finish. Still quite primal, with lots in reserve.
Very attractive overripe fruit aroma with a touch of compost and farmyard – yet not overtly bretty or funky. Balanced, rounded, succulent and finely balanced – this is a great example of the style in the prime of its life, full of fruit but showing tertiary development too.
The 2006 Beaucastel shows the textbook character of a mature Châteauneuf-du-Pape. It has expansive raspberry and cherry scents with suggestions of succulent herbs, pungent flowers, cigar box and just a hint of earth. Given the high percentage of Mourvèdre (almost a third of the blend), I would have thought that the earthy aspect would have been more pronounced, but that is not the case here. The 2006 is silky in texture, and the suave blend of depth and energy highlights its red fruit along with floral pastille and baking spice flavors. It finishes extremely long and precise, with superb clarity and just a hint of finely polished tannins adding gentle grip. Beaucastel often shows some gamy character when the wines are young; however, the 2006 did not in barrel nor after it was bottled, and there’s no trace of it now. I noted almost twelve years ago that this was a wine that “beguiles rather than brutalizes”, and I’m happy with that assessment today.
Readers lucky enough to have bought the 2006 Beaucastel on release got great value compared to the where bottles that just arrived on the market are priced today, yet the 2006 is actually quite fairly priced for a 15-year-old, world-class wine that comes direct from the winery’s cellars.
A fantastic wine, the 2006 Château de Beaucastel Châteauneuf-du-Pape fleshes out with air and displays deep, earthy aromatics of dark fruit, roasted meat, graphite, mushroom and old wood. In the mouth, the wine displays a medium to full bodied, structured personality to go with a fantastic texture, concentrated fruit and a long finish. If drinking anytime soon this needs plenty of air.
All 13 varieties recognized in Châteauneuf-du-Pape are grown in Beaucastel. Grenache is used extensively in most wine domains, but the main variety here is Mourvèdre, usually about 30% of the blend, with Grenache accounting for 30%. The remaining 40% is Syrah, Cinsault and Cunoise, along with a small amount of other authorized varieties. Why this particular approach? Mourvèdre brings more structure and length. And in a warm year like 2023, its tannin support becomes very important.
Aromas of dark cherry and blackberry are the first to be revealed, but underneath are more complex notes of leather, dried herbs and the garrigue character typical of the Southern Rhône. Mourvèdre provides the backbone, while Grenache adds warmth and glycerin richness. On the palate, the tannins still feel integrated after nearly 30 years of aging, but still structured. A savory, almost meaty texture develops from the middle of the palate, followed by notes of black olive and dried lavender. The finish is long, with notes of spice and minerals from the famous galets roulés. At 28 years old, this wine is ready to drink.
The wines from this vintage are fully mature and will drink well into the 2030s. With Beaucastel's emphasis on Mourvèdre, this wine is well structured and will age well for a long time. If stored in bottle, it should be kept in a dark place at 55-60°F. The complex tertiary aromas of leather, earth and dried herbs that are the charm of the aged Châteauneuf-du-Pape are already showing.
The Perrin family has owned Beaucastel since 1909, but it was Jacques Perrin who shaped the modern look of the estate. His philosophy was simple and straightforward: organic farming (started in 1950, decades before it became fashionable), blending predominantly Mourvèdre and never compromising the character of the wine for the sake of convenience. When he died in 1978, his sons Jean-Pierre and François adopted this approach. Today, the four Perrin brothers manage 130 hectares of land. Best of Wines considers them one of the most consistent producers in Châteauneuf-du-Pape.
The 70-hectare Beaucastel vineyard in Châteauneuf-du-Pape is located in the northeast of the region, near Courzon. The distinctive feature of this site is the galets roulés (large rounded stones that cover most of the vineyard surface). During the day, these stones absorb the heat of the Provencal sun. At night, the accumulated heat is returned to the vines, prolonging the ripening period of the grapes at lower temperatures. Beneath the stones is a Miocene marine molasse covered by alpine alluvium. It is well drained, which is very important in rainy years.
The structure and level of spice in this wine demands persistent flavors. Braised shoulder of lamb with rosemary blends beautifully with the fat, which does a great job of softening the tannins. Paired with mature Roquefort and walnuts, the saltiness of the cheese harmonizes with the fruitiness of the wine. Wild boar ragout also pairs well, especially with its herbal complexity; serve at 18°C and decant 30 minutes if drinking young. Delicate dishes can be overpowered.
Beaucastel ferments each of the 13 authorized varieties separately in concrete tanks. Before fermentation, the grape skins are briefly heated to 80°C and quickly cooled. This allows the color and aroma to unfold without the harsh tannins often associated with prolonged maceration. Aging takes place in large oak fouders (rather than small barriques), which provide gentle oxygenation without masking the fruity flavors. The result is more terroir and less oak flavor.
With track & trace code