1967 Chateau Latour Bordeaux Blend

Bordeaux Blend - 750ML
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REVIEWS

VN 92 WA 88 WS 87
VN 92

Vinous, February 2024

The 1967 Latour is a vintage that I had never tasted until it was poured blind at the château. It is probably the best Left Bank from this season that I have tasted. It has a lovely mint-tinged nose with pencil box scents...
WA 88

Robert Parker's Wine Advocate, January 1998

Unquestionably the best wine produced in the Medoc in 1967 the Latour has dark ruby color with some browning at the edges a medium- to full-bodied feel plenty of black currant fruit and some light soft tannins still...
WS 87

Wine Spectator, December 1997

Mature now this silky wine offers raisin tobacco mineral and slightly gamy flavors and turns a bit dry on the finish. A good effort for the vintage but needs drinking now.--Latour vertical. (TM)

WINE DETAILS

Color & Type Red
Varietal Bordeaux Blend
Country France
Region Bordeaux
Sub-region Pauillac
Vintage 1967
Size 750ML

Chateau Latour, one of Bordeaux’s oldest and most famous wine producers, is a First Growth in the 1855 Bordeaux Classification. It’s located in Pauillac near the border with Saint-Julien.

Vines have existed on the property since the 14th century, but Chateau Latour first began producing wines of great quality in the early eighteenth century. The estate gradually came to specialize in wine production, with 38 hectares of vines in 1759 and 47 hectares in 1794.

The vineyard currently has 78 hectares in production. The grapes from the 47 hectares surrounding the chateau, known as “L’Enclos”, are used in the production of the Grand Vin. The 30 hectares outside of the Enclos are used for the Forts de Latour and the Pauillac wines. The estate is planted with about 80% Cabernet Sauvignon, 18% Merlot, and 2% Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot on gravelly hilltops and clay subsoil.

The wines of Chateau Latour need time to mature, generally at least ten or fifteen years, before they can be drunk. It is only then that the full complexity of the bouquet is expressed and the palate becomes sufficiently well integrated to be enjoyable and harmonious.