South Africa

PAULUS WINE CO.

Bosberaad Chenin Blanc 2021

129,00 €
An extraordinary white wine, made using the most natural extraction of the fruit.
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Paulus Wine Co. is a collaboration between Paul Jordaan, South African, and Pauline Roux, French. Paul Jordaan, after years of travel and wine experiences, had been working alongside Eben Sadie for 10 years. Pauline Roux was supposed to return to Tuscany but decided to make one last harvest in South Africa and decided to stay. She has worked with Adi Badenhorst and Andrea Mullineux.

Bosberaad is in fact a place where all the elements and parameters necessary for the creation of a wine can come together: the vine, the terroir, the human, the energies. The vineyard on which the Chenin from the Bosberaad vintage is planted is located in Paardeberg in the Siebritskloof valley. The vines are trained in cups and cultivated organically . They were planted in 1980 on decomposed granite which brings a certain minerality and saline notes to the wine. The harvest is manual and pressed in whole bunches. Fermentation takes place in old oak barrels. The wine is aged on lees for approximately 10 months. This reveals notes of ripe pear , granny apple , white peach , acacia flowers , ginger , lime , aromatic herbs , flint and oyster shells . The palate is pure and precise. The fruit extraction is superb, the acidity is fine and the finish is persistent and saline.

Grape varieties : 100% Chenin Blanc

Alcohol : 13%

Guard : 5-10 years

For this complex, fruity and mineral wine, we suggest vegetable tempuras, fish blanquette, pan-fried shellfish, salmon en papillote or even chicken with almonds. It will be ideal with a beautiful cheese platter.

The first vines were planted in South Africa by Dutch settlers in the 1650s, although wine production did not really begin to take off until the arrival of French Protestants, in the 1680s, with their skills and their knowledge of viticulture. Stellenbosch is also a historic wine region, with the first vineyards being planted there in the 1690s.



Today South Africa is one of the most important wine producing countries in the southern hemisphere. With over 300 years of winemaking history, it is often described as a bridge between the Old and New Worlds. The majority of wines are produced using New World winemaking techniques, but they often have more in common stylistically with their Old World counterparts. Since the end of apartheid, South African wine has received international attention and acclaim for its wide variety of styles.



South Africa's wine industry is spread across the lush and rugged landscape of the Western Cape. Here, the abundance of mountains, valleys and plateaus allows winemakers to produce a wide variety of styles. Vineyards can also be found in the Orange River region of the Northern Cape, where the flat, arid landscape is dominated by the Kalahari Desert. Most of South Africa's wine regions have a Mediterranean climate, strongly influenced by the meeting of the Atlantic and Indian Oceans.



The country's signature grape variety is Pinotage, an indigenous cross of Pinot Noir and Cinsaut that is rarely found in quantity in other wine-producing countries. Shiraz (Syrah) is also widely planted, as are Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot (often combined in a Bordeaux blend). South African Chardonnay, Chenin and Sauvignon Blanc have become popular internationally in recent years.

Cape South Coast


The Cape South Coast is a recently designated South African wine region which is part of the Western Cape. It is located to the east of the Coastal region where most of South African wine production takes place. Due to its proximity to the ocean, cool climate grape varieties such as Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, and Sauvignon Blanc are much more successful here than in most other parts of the country. Sparkling wine production is also experiencing some growth. Six wine-growing areas are located within its territory: Cape Agulhas, Elgin (considered the coolest part of South Africa), Overberg, Plettenberg Bay, Swellendam and Walker Bay.


The sub-region: The Swartland

Traditionally a grain-producing region, Swartland, whose name means "Black Land" in Dutch, has become in around fifteen years one of the most emblematic wine-growing regions in South Africa. The topography of the region is very varied and vineyards can be found on mountainsides or on the rolling hills that dot the region. The climate is warm Mediterranean with oceanic influences as we get closer to the Atlantic coast. The warm climate greatly reduces the incidence of disease. The rainfall is 400 mm per year but the region includes many plots of old vines with very low yields. The floors are mainly composed of slates. There are also pockets of granite particularly around the Paardeberg mountain. The main grape varieties of the region are Grenache, Syrah, Mourvèdre and Chenin Blanc.

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