Domaine de Terrebrune 2025 Bandol Rosé 750ml
Kermit Lynch has been importing French wine to California since 1972. He fell in love with Provence early — specifically with the Bandols of Domaine Tempier, which he began importing in 1977 — and has spent so much time there since that he now lives near Bandol most of the year. When a man whose entire professional life has been spent in the pursuit of great French wine chooses to live beside the appellation that produces the Terrebrune rosé, that is its own endorsement. Domaine de Terrebrune was established in 1963 by Georges Delille in Ollioules — a small town between Toulon and Bandol whose terraced slopes of brown clay and limestone overlooking the Mediterranean constitute some of the most specifically and the most historically distinctive vine-growing terrain in the entire appellation. Reynald Delille runs the domaine today, and he is revered by his Provençal peers, as Kermit Lynch's own team describes him, as "a rosé master" whose bottlings are celebrated for their complexity and age-worthiness. The advice from Lynch's merchant: "save a bottle for five, ten, or twenty years — a pleasant surprise awaits." For a rosé. The number of producers anywhere in the world about whom that statement is genuinely true you can count on one hand. The production of Terrebrune rosé is the most specifically unusual and the most clearly age-worthiness-focused in the Blackwell's Bandol section. Where most Bandol rosés are aged in stainless steel and released young and fresh, Terrebrune ages its rosé for 18 months in large oak foudres of 40 to 60 hectoliters — a method borrowed from white Burgundy and from the finest Bandol rouge production, which integrates and develops the Mourvèdre's most complex secondary aromatic compounds over a full year and a half before bottling. The vineyard yield is among the lowest in the appellation: one vine equals one bottle. The result is a rosé whose nose evokes, in Kermit Lynch's own words, "a Provençal summer with notes of thyme and white peach, and a mouthwateringly salty finish." And then, five years later, something significantly more complex than that. Three consecutive vintages at 91 points. Imported by Kermit Lynch. Aged in oak foudres. From one of the most specifically serious rosé producers on earth. Origins & Craftsmanship Domaine de Terrebrune was founded in 1963 by Georges Delille in Ollioules — a town in the Var département whose position between Toulon and Bandol gives its vineyards both the maritime influence of the Mediterranean coast and the more specifically continental heat accumulation of the hillside terraces that characterize the appellation's interior. The name Terrebrune derives from the "brown earth" — the specific brown clay, pebble, and limestone soil formed millions of years ago on the estate's land, whose precise composition is the direct source of the distinctly saline and specifically mineral secondary quality that Terrebrune's wines carry in every vintage. Reynald Delille runs the domaine today, maintaining and deepening the organic viticulture that his father established. No weed killers, insecticides, or synthetic chemicals are used in the Terrebrune vineyard. Ploughing is performed with a plow. Picking, sorting, and harvesting are done manually. In the winter, sheep and goats are grazed among the vines for natural weed control — the most specifically integrated and the most self-sustaining agricultural approach available for any Bandol estate. The yield is among the most strictly controlled in the appellation: one vine equals one bottle, the most specifically low-yield and the most directly flavor-concentration-communicating production metric available for any French rosé. The blend — 60% Mourvèdre, 20% Grenache, 20% Cinsault — is the most Mourvèdre-forward rosé blend in the Blackwell's section, exceeding the appellation's 50% minimum with a full 10% additional Mourvèdre whose structural weight, spice, and specific aromatic complexity add a dimension to the rosé that lighter blends cannot approach. Grapes undergo direct pressing — whole cluster pressed without skin maceration, unlike the Gros Noré's 24-hour approach — and fermentation occurs at low temperatures in stainless steel vats to preserve freshness and aromatic purity. The wine then spends 18 months in large oak foudres of 40 to 60 hectoliters — the cooperage decision that most specifically and the most dramatically distinguishes Terrebrune from virtually every other Bandol rosé producer. The foudre size matters: at 40 to 60 hectoliters, these are barrels many times larger than a standard barrique, whose very low wine-to-wood ratio deposits oak character slowly, gently, and specifically in the integration of the Mourvèdre's secondary aromatic compounds rather than in the addition of new wood flavors. After bottling, the wine continues to evolve — the reason Kermit Lynch recommends cellaring for five to twenty years is not simply marketing but the specific and genuinely earned claim of a producer whose older vintages have proven it true. Critics Reviews Wine-Searcher aggregate scores: 2024: 91 Points · 2023: 91 Points · 2022: 91 Points · 2021: 89 Points · 2020: 88 Points · 2019: 89 Points · 2018: 91 Points James Suckling (2017 vintage): "Amber-orange tinge with aromas of roasted hazelnuts, brioche, orange curd, nutmeg and spiced apples. Full-bodied, spicy and flavorful, with creamy and oily layers and a tasty, weighty finish. 60% Mourvèdre with Grenache and Cinsault. From organically grown grapes." French reviewer (confirmed prior vintage): "A delicious, medium-bodied rosé with an ample and enveloping mouth, imposing its dense and pulpy flesh with accents of crushed strawberry and savory spices, on a mineral backbone of extreme freshness. The long finish is remarkably delicate and refined. A radiant Bandol." Kermit Lynch Wine Merchant (current and past vintages): "Terrebrune's Bandol epitomizes the idea of a terroir-driven rosé, from the nose of thyme and white peach, redolent of a Provençal summer, to its mouthwateringly salty finish, a reminder that the sea is just a stone's throw away. For conclusive evidence that this is no ordinary rosé, save a bottle for five, ten, or twenty years — a pleasant surprise awaits." "Reynald Delille is a rosé master, revered by his Provençal peers for the complexity and age-worthiness of his bottling each year. While a cool glass of Terrebrune's dry, peach-scented Bandol rosé is the bee's knees on a warm summer afternoon, it's also deliciously bracing with oysters on a blustery winter day, delightful with a salad made from spring's first produce, and the perfect complement to your Thanksgiving feast." Infinivin (2024 confirmed): "One of the great Bandol rosé wines to know — notes of licorice appear and mingle with the dominant of exotic fruits. Length, depth and beautiful complexity. Some bitters give relief to the tasting and reinforce the power of the vintage." Merchant of Wine (winemaker's notes confirmed): "An exotic nose dominated by pomelo, then honeysuckle and wet roses emerge, and then develops the complexity of a potpourri of flower petals. The palate is marked by the delicate structure of its bitters." Wine Spectator (Terrebrune selected for Top 10 Provence Rosés to drink in Summer 2025) Tasting Profile The following profile is built from the confirmed Terrebrune house style across recent vintages. 2025-specific critic notes are not yet published. Nose Pale salmon with copper reflections — the direct pressing and the low-temperature fermentation producing a color of delicacy and refinement that belies the 18 months of foudre aging behind it. The nose opens with the quality that Kermit Lynch's team has consistently identified as the most immediately and the most memorably Terrebrune-distinctive aromatic: thyme and white peach arriving together, the thyme adding the most specifically and the most unmistakably Provençal garrigue-herb quality and the white peach adding the most generous and the most delicate stone fruit dimension in a combination that is genuinely "redolent of a Provençal summer." An exotic nose dominated by pomelo — the large citrus fruit whose aromatic, slightly bitter character is more complex and more specifically unusual than standard citrus. Honeysuckle and wet roses emerge progressively with the most delicate and the most specifically perfumed floral quality. A potpourri of flower petals develops with air. Red fruit — crushed strawberry — adds warmth and vividity. White pepper and spice add the Mourvèdre's most characteristic secondary aromatic. Licorice adds the most specifically unusual and the most specifically appealing herbal depth. Notes of exotic fruits carry through from the warmer maritime influence of the Ollioules terroir. Palate Dense, pulpy, and ample with extreme mineral freshness — the most paradoxical and the most specifically Terrebrune-distinctive palate quality, the rich Mourvèdre fruit and the 18 months of foudre integration producing a palate of considerable substance while the mineral backbone of extreme freshness from the brown clay and limestone terroir provides precisely the counterweight that prevents the wine from feeling simply heavy. Crushed strawberry and savory spices carry the primary fruit and botanical character with genuine generosity. The bitters — the delicate structure of bitter herbs and the Mourvèdre's natural tannin contribution — give relief to the tasting and reinforce the power of the vintage, preventing the Mourvèdre richness from becoming unchecked sweetness. The saline quality that the sea proximity deposits — the mouthwateringly salty quality that Kermit Lynch identifies as the finish's most memorable characteristic — begins to emerge through the mid-palate and carries through to the close with the most specifically and the most persistently maritime-terroir-communicating quality available in any rosé in the section. Finish Long, saline, and refined. The mouthwateringly salty finish is the most enduringly memorable and the most specifically Terrebrune-distinctive single quality in the entire wine — the finish that immediately tells the buyer this wine is made from organically farmed Mourvèdre vines on brown clay and limestone hillsides above the Mediterranean, that the sea is close, and that the winemaker has extracted every drop of the terroir's mineral character into the glass. Crushed strawberry, savory spice, and the licorice note linger alongside the saline quality. The long finish is remarkably delicate and refined — the 18 months of large-vessel oak having integrated every component into something more complete and more specifically evolved than young, direct-press Bandol rosé typically achieves. And this is the wine at release — in five years, as Kermit Lynch promises, it will be something significantly more interesting still. Quick Overview Category Details Appellation Bandol AOC — Provence, France Style Rosé — Mourvèdre-Dominant · Oak-Aged · Cellar-Worthy Vintage 2025 Domaine Domaine de Terrebrune — Ollioules, Var Founded 1963 by Georges Delille Winemaker Reynald Delille Location Ollioules — between Toulon and Bandol, overlooking Mediterranean Name "Terrebrune" — the brown clay, pebble and limestone soils of the estate Importer Kermit Lynch Wine Merchant Kermit Lynch Quote "Save a bottle for five, ten, or twenty years — a pleasant surprise awaits" Blend 60% Mourvèdre · 20% Grenache · 20% Cinsault Organic Certified organic — no herbicides, insecticides, or synthetic chemicals Winter Viticulture Sheep and goats grazed in vineyards for natural weed control Yield One vine = one bottle — among lowest in the appellation Pressing Direct pressing — whole cluster Fermentation Low-temperature stainless steel Oak Aging 18 months in large oak foudres — 40-60 hectoliters Foudre Significance Very low wine-to-wood ratio — gentle, integrative oak without flavor addition Bottling After 18 months foudre aging Aging Potential 5–20 years — Kermit Lynch confirmed Critics Wine-Searcher 91 Pts (2024, 2023, 2022) · WS Top 10 Provence Rosés 2025 vs. Gros Noré Direct press (vs 24h skin contact) · 18mo foudre aging (vs tank) · slightly more mineral, saline, aromatic vs. Château Romassan More artisanal scale · higher Mourvèdre % · more specifically mineral finish Style / Identity The most age-worthy and the most mineral-saline Bandol rosé — thyme, white peach, pomelo, saline finish Aromas & Flavors Thyme, white peach, pomelo, honeysuckle, wet roses, flower petals, crushed strawberry, red fruit, white pepper, licorice, exotic fruits, savory spice, sea salt, mineral Drinking Window Now through 2035+ Serve 10-12°C — year-round Bottle Size 750ml Food Pairings The saline finish, Mourvèdre structure, and year-round versatility make Terrebrune the most seasonally flexible and the most specifically food-designed rosé in the Blackwell's section. Kermit Lynch himself frames it precisely: "a cool glass is the bee's knees on a warm summer afternoon, deliciously bracing with oysters on a blustery winter day, delightful with a salad made from spring's first produce, and the perfect complement to your Thanksgiving feast." Grilled fish and red mullet with citrus butter — Infinivin's specific pairing recommendation Oysters — the saline finish meeting the sea directly and naturally Duck breast — the Mourvèdre structure supporting rich poultry Spider crab and shellfish Bouchées à la reine — the official Terrebrune pairing recommendation Seafood of all kinds — year-round Thanksgiving — Kermit Lynch's most specifically unusual and the most broadly conversation-generating seasonal pairing recommendation
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