Whispering Angel Rose Garden returns to popular Dublin location this summer

The fun addition is taking over the venue once again for the summer season.

By Rachel Butler

Cafe En Seine Dawson Street

Whispering Angel Rose Garden is returning to Cafe En Seine this summer with delicious food to be enjoyed along side Whispering Angel Rose or with its stylish big sister Rock Angel.
The takeover at one of Dublin’s most chic venues will be running from July 6 to end of August. Customers can also indulge in a delicious food pairing menu, created by Cafe en Seine’s Executive Chef Stephen Gibson.
Whispering Angel is the perfect summer drink with delicate aromas of fresh citrus, rose petal, and red fruits making it the perfect choice for rose lovers. There is also the Whispering Angel Blush cocktail, fashioned with vodka, rhubarb, Whispering Angel Rosé and soda on offer to kick start a perfect summers evening.
The Whispering Angel Rose Garden will transport you to a Parisian terrace offering the perfect picture opportunity and give you that holiday feeling in the heart of Dublin city. The light flooded space will have open windows to let the sun and summer air in.

The Whispering Angel Blush cocktail is priced at €14.50, with Whispering Angel by the glass costing €12 and a bottle costing €57. There is also a Whispering Angel 750 ml bottle available for €85 and a Whispering Angel 1.5l bottle for €125.

Summer has arrived at The Ivy in Manchester with June specials and a special spritz menu

As the days get longer and the weather gets warmer, the essence of summer comes alive at this popular Spinningfields venue.

By Deanna Thomas

The Ivy Summer Terrace 2023

The Ivy’s expert mixologists have created a delightful summer spritz menu in collaboration with Aperol and Campari. The drinks list showcases timeless favourites such as Aperol Spritz as well as limited-edition specials like the Passionfruit Spritz. If you prefer a chilled glass of wine with added table-side theatre, treat yourselves to a glass of Whispering Angel Rose poured tableside from a Jeroboam.

Chardonnay, Rosé, local or Sparkling: summer is coming!

(Agen Food) – Rome, 21 June. – Since ancient times, the summer solstice – the day with the most light throughout the year – symbolizes change, vitality and greater contact with nature. And how could it be otherwise? The warmer evenings invite us to be outdoors and in the air there is that special feeling that anything is possible.
Whether it’s during an aperitif by the sea, in front of a table set on the terrace, on a linen tablecloth with a wicker basket next to it, every occasion becomes a good one to celebrate the new beginnings that await us with a toast.
Fresh, delicate and playful, wines for the summer are perfect partners to accompany the moments of conviviality that the summer has just begun. And if white still remains the first choice when it comes to summer labels, Rosé and Bubbles stand out for their gastronomic versatility.

WHISPERING ANGEL
Château d’Esclans, a domaine whose property covers 427 hectares (of which 140 are planted with vines) in the commune of La-Motte-En-Provence, in the heart of the Varo department (where most of the wines that refer to the denomination Rosé de Provence AOC), is known for its ancient vineyards of Grenache, the main variety of the area and the most present among the rows of Château d’Esclans, together with Rolle (our Vermentino), Cinsault, Syrah. Whispering Angel, the symbolic wine of Château d’Esclans and a reference point for Provençal wines, comes from the best first-drop juices and the best musts of Grenache, Cinsault and Vermentino from the best terroirs around La-Motte-En-Provence . It is a Rosé of great aromatic intensity, characterized by notes of fresh red fruits and a floral bouquet. On the palate it is dry and fleshy, with a soft and round finish. Perfect to sip on its own, to better discover its characteristics, it also accompanies a leafy green salad with goat cheese and grilled pears.

To help celebrate the most glamourous event of the racing calendar, we are delighted to offer you the chance to win a Jeroboam (3L) of Whispering Angel Rosé.

All you have to do is submit the form below to be added into the prize draw.

By clicking on “ENTER”, I confirm that I have read and accepted the Terms and Conditions.

The Trafalgar St. James launches Whispering Angel rooftop terrace

PUT A PROVENÇAL SPIN ON SUMMER IN LONDON WITH THE LUXURY HOTEL’S LATEST COLLABORATION

How are you spending your summer? While we can all dream of months lazily spent strolling pretty coastal paths and lingering over long, sun-dappled lunches next to the Mediterranean, the reality is many of us will be staying right here in the capital – which is why The Rooftop at The Trafalgar St. James is bringing a slice of Southern France to our doorstep this summer.

The luxury hotel has teamed up with Provence winery Château d’Esclans, maker of the famed Whispering Angel rosé, to create the Whispering Angel @ The Rooftop terrace. Taking over the seventh-floor restaurant and bar, which boasts incredible views over the central London skyline, the al fresco terrace will offer a unique menu of Provençal cocktails, drinks and dishes against a backdrop of seasonal floral decor.

The star of the show is the special Provence rosé wine menu, which features some of Château d’Esclans best-loved bottles, including the delicate Whispering Angel and high-energy Rock Angel. Accompanying this will be a series of limited edition rosé-based cocktails, such as Taste of Provence: an elegant blend of Whispering Angel, homemade lavender syrup and a touch of soda.

And should mid-shopping drinks or sunset cocktails turn into a long lunch or decadent dinner? Whispering Angel @ The Rooftop is happy to provide. The Trafalgar’s team of world-class chefs has devised a menu of light summery dishes and indulgent classics perfect for every occasion. Choose from a delectable offering including crispy prawns with lime and vegan nduja, halloumi fries with pomegranate and mint, and grilled seabass with salsa verde and burnt lemon.

From 10 June, Whispering Angel @ The Rooftop will also be serving a lively weekend brunch perfect for special celebrations and making the most of the (hopefully) glorious summer sunshine. Available from 11am to 2.45pm every Saturday and Sunday, the menu includes luxurious dishes such as crab and crayfish brioche sandwich, grilled minute steak and the signature Rooftop Muffin, packed with sausage, egg, hash brown, smoked cheddar and treacle-cured bacon.

And to wash everything down? Why, a glass of Whispering Angel, of course.

Whispering Angel @ The Rooftop opens on 9 June 2023, visit trafalgarstjames.com to book.

Maternal Love: the inspiration for the third edition of chiles en nogada at Carmela & Sal, Chef Gaby Ruiz’s restaurant

By Yohann Castaing

Rosé wines have such strong seasonal connotations, inextricably associated with summer meals and social gatherings around a pool, that wine enthusiasts tend to dismiss them as less interesting and less serious. It so happens that this is an attitude that seems to be shared by many a winemaker. After requesting samples of current releases for this appraisal, I was surprised to discover that a significant number of well-known producers have chosen to concentrate on making simple, fruit-driven reds instead of rosés. A typical explanation was, “Why bother trying to compete with the pale and often bland rosés of Provence that enjoy such commercial success and are produced in such large volumes with such low overheads?”

Such an attitude might seem surprising, given the tremendous commercial success that rosé wines enjoy in markets around the world. In the eyes of many, rosés—which exist in a wide range of hues and styles—are ideal for uncritical enjoyment, and the category is booming. The rosés of Provence have undeniably reaped the rewards. Alas, easy-drinking and easygoing selling points do not always coincide with the pursuit of excellence. Many contemporary rosés from Provence are so pale that they might almost be mistaken for white wines. Too many producers even seem to have settled for releasing wines to be casually enjoyed with simple summer culinary fare while giving up any ambition for producing characterful wines expressing terroir.

Fortunately, there remains a contingent of wine producers resisting the temptation to simply milk the cash cow. They work hard to produce rosé wines of a singular style, be it thanks to their choice of grape variety or winemaking technique, that express a sense of place and have layers of flavor and texture.

In the selection of wines presented here from the diverse regions that I cover for The Wine Advocate, including but not limited to Provence, I have focused on rosé wines that express a distinctive character and identity intimately linked to their place of origin, but ones that are also capable of enhancing both simple and more complex dishes or even of being enjoyed on their own for their compelling style. Some of them will even improve with age. I have chosen to ignore those interchangeable and somewhat insipid rosés that may certainly be eminently quaffable but which are just as quickly forgotten.

A blend of Grenache, Syrah, Cinsault and Rolle, the 2022 Cotes de Provence Rose Whispering Angel reveals aromas of peach, grapefruit, lemon, red berries and spices. Light to medium-bodied, elegant and fresh, tense and juicy, it’s pure and clean with a mouthwatering, elegant finish.

The 2021 Cotes de Provence Rose Les Clans, matured for 11 months in 600-liter barrels (new and old), derives from old vines (50-55 years of age) planted on gravel-calcareous soils. It reveals a complex, dense bouquet with aromas of vanilla, spices, peach, iodine, crushed stones, rose and raspberry, followed by a medium to full-bodied, seamless palate endowed with impressive texture, racy acids and a refreshing yet long finish. It’s the most complex, racy, gastronomic wine in the Château d’Esclans range. 93 Points

Château d’Esclans’s premium cuvée, the 2021 Cotes de Provence Rose Garrus, which was matured in French new oak, bursts from the glass with aromas of pear, grapefruit, vanilla, spices, lime, red berries and thyme flowers. Medium to full-bodied, layered and textured, ripe and round, it’s built around racy acids and a seamless palate. This vintage can be approached with pleasure even if it has 3-5 years of evolution ahead of it. 92 Points

How Whispering Angel became the world’s favourite posh rosé

Experts laughed at Sacha Lichine when he launched an expensive rosé — nobody in the wine world, they said, would take it seriously. Now his Whispering Angel, loved by A-listers like Adele and Victoria Beckham, shifts one million cases a year

By Hilary Rose

Sacha Lichine, at Château d’Esclans in Provence, France, which be bought in 2006. “They said I was totally out of my mind, that I was smoking too much pot”
ANDREI KOVALEV

If you drive along the coast road from Nice, turn inland at St Tropez and keep going for half an hour, you’ll see big white letters tacked onto the hill. It’s like the Hollywood sign but reads DOMAINE SACHA LICHINE. If you go into the discreet little shop opposite, through the grand gateposts with cockerels on top, you’ll find a lifesize pink camel painted with the advice, “Save water: drink rosé.” And if you walk a little further down the gravel track, where you’re not allowed to go, you’ll find a Provençal dream house glowing pinky apricot in the sunshine, looking down a valley of vineyards and pine trees towards the Med. This is Château d’Esclans, or more accurately Château Whispering Angel, and if you’ve ever hankered after a cold glass of rosé on a hot day, this place is why.

Inside, le patron, Monsieur Lichine, is reclining on a vast sofa in a vast room. He has a glass of rosé in one hand, a cigarette in the other and a chef in the kitchen preparing French classics for dinner, heady with butter and cream. Lichine gambled 20 years ago that rosé was overdue for an upgrade and set about doing it. Now 62, he’s an astute businessman and passionate salesman with the languid air of a bon viveur. Our conversation is punctuated by the gentle glug of glasses being topped up by silent, uniformed staff and by the ringtone of his phone — which is Shaggy, singing, “Girl, you’re my angel, you’re my darling angel.”

“Rosé was seen as cheap and cheerful and it gave you a headache on holiday in St Tropez,” he says, flicking his cigarette into an ashtray the shape of a bunch of grapes. “It was a day drink, a lot of it was quite sweet and it wasn’t seen as ‘real’ wine. It’s the hardest wine to make good and the easiest to make average, so I said let’s see if we can make rosé great. I wanted a challenge. And bit by bit, the category started to boom.”

Today, one million cases of Whispering Angel are sold annually in 106 countries around the world. According to the Council of Wines of Provence (CIVP), the price of rosé has risen by 29 per cent since 2015 and global consumption by nearly a quarter since 2002. In 2019, Forbes reported that since 2010, sales by volume of rosé in the US had increased by more than 1,400 per cent. Lichine says that since 2006, the price of a hectolitre of Provençal rosé has nearly quadrupled, “so it’s worked out quite well for everybody in the region. We’ve made it into serious wine.” So serious that three years ago he sold a controlling stake to the luxury goods conglomerate LVMH, where it joins Krug and Dom Pérignon. Bernard Arnault, the head of LVMH, likes to drink it when he’s visiting Lichine, and evidently doesn’t care, unlike some of his compatriots, that a French wine made by a Frenchman has an English name.

The name came about by chance, when Lichine was in the chapel at d’Esclans one night with a friend. They were admiring a sculpture carved above the altar of two cherubs, and the friend said it looked as if they were whispering to each other. A delicate line drawing of the whispering angels is now on the label, and two of those bottles stand in niches high up on the nave. Some visitors complain that it’s sacrilege.

Lichine bought d’Esclans in 2006 and people in the wine industry told him he was mad. Nobody took rosé seriously, they protested. It wasn’t a proper “category” of wine and never would be. No customer would pay good money for it, no critic would endorse it and no sommelier would touch it. But he had a hunch, based on the burgeoning success of pink champagne, that if people were willing to pay top whack for sparkly pink, then why not pink wine?

“They said I was totally out of my mind,” he says equably. “They wouldn’t even talk to me. They said he’s crazy, he’s smoking too much pot.”

In the beginning, money was tight. He spent it on establishing the vineyard and making the wine, not advertising, which he thinks is “a little cheap”. Better, he thought, to spend that money flying him round the world trying to sell it. Last on the list was doing up the run-down château bit by bit, as the “face” of the brand. Word of mouth, celebrity endorsement and social media did the rest. “It obviously has importance,” he sniffs about social media, “but I’ve never really been able to quantify it.”

Easier to quantify is the time Adele told Vogue that the two things she bought at the supermarket during Covid were Heinz tomato ketchup and Whispering Angel. Or Victoria Beckham going public with her penchant for Garrus, WA’s posh and expensive sibling, ever since d’Esclans sent her two cases when she was staying up the road with Elton John. Sarah Ferguson comes to d’Esclans to pay her respects when she’s staying at a friend’s château nearby. She and her daughters, Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie, like WA so much that they sent Lichine a pair of angel wings as a thank you. They sit on a desk in the salon, beneath a stuffed moose’s head and across from a downstairs loo handpainted with flamingos to look like the Beverly Hills Hotel. It did the branding no harm when in 2019 Malia Obama was photographed drinking WA by a pool in Miami even though, at 20, she was still under age, or that the New York Post declared an emergency rosé shortage in the Hamptons in 2013: two women were photographed fighting over the last case of Whispering Angel. That was the year that Lichine realised his gamble had paid off.

Adele said the two things she bought during lockdown were tomato ketchup and Whispering Angel
GETTY IMAGES

He was born in Bordeaux, the son of Alexis, a Russian émigré who is credited with introducing French wine to America. Père Lichine owned one château, Prieuré-Lichine, and had shares in others. The young Sacha was raised in New York and educated in New England, but spent summers back in France, working in the vineyards. He was five when he had his first glass of wine, a Château Lascombes, he recalls. There was never any question as to what he would do for a living.

“I loved it from the start. I learnt to drive a tractor before I learnt to drive a car. I was in the vineyards, in the cellar, putting nails into wooden cases… The fact that I grew up around wine gave me a passion for it.”

He dropped out of Boston University because he was making a fortune in the Caribbean as an agent for a champagne house, and spent his twenties working his way around the wine industry: distribution in New England, retail in New York, a stint as a sommelier in a restaurant in Boston. He fell in love with a soap actress and moved to Los Angeles.

“My father was livid. He said, ‘You’re an idiot,’ and he wasn’t wrong.” The actress dumped him two weeks later. Living in LA without being in the movie business was, he discovered, like living in Bordeaux and not being in the wine business. At that point, when he was 27, fate intervened in the form of his father’s lawyer, who summoned him back to Bordeaux to run the family business. Eighteen months later his father died and, ten years after that, he sold up to pay off his inherited debts and fund his Provençal dream. It wasn’t a difficult decision, because he was sick and tired of the rain.

“I wanted a little more excitement; to do something newer. I wasn’t into just managing an operation. It was merely a price game.”

Lichine’s home, Château d’Esclans. It was love at first sight
SARA MATTHEWS

D’Esclans, he thought, was the most beautiful chateau he had ever seen. The bank wouldn’t give him a €100,000 overdraft, but he reached a deal with the makers of Angostura Bitters, bought d’Esclans and told his friend and collaborator, the Bordeaux wine maker Patrick Léon, to get on a plane. OK, said Léon, what’s the plan?

“I told him, ‘We’ll make something we want to drink. If we don’t like to drink it we can’t sell it, and if we want to sell it, we’re going to have to drink a lot of it.’ ”

They imported Bordeaux technology and know-how to an area where attitudes were a little more laissez-faire. You couldn’t charge much for a bottle of rosé, so it wasn’t worth investing money in making it. Lichine thought that he could charge a hell of a lot, but it took him ten years and $10 million to prove it. Back in 2006, as soon as the first vintage was ready, he hit the road with it. In Chicago.

“It’s very cold there and nobody drinks rosé,” he says, as if it’s the most obvious sales pitch in the world. “I figured if we could succeed there, we could succeed anywhere.”

His plan was to get his wine into the trendiest hotels, restaurants and bars, from the Delano in Miami to the Peninsula in New York, from Soho House to Chiltern Firehouse. Fine dining didn’t put it on the map, he says today; it was fun places, hot bistros and brasseries: the Polo Lounge, the Hotel Costes, the André Balazs group. He didn’t bang on the door of Michelin-starred restaurants and, besides, the sommelier probably would have slammed it in his face. Sommeliers can still be snooty about his rosé but then, he reasons, they didn’t become sommeliers to drink rosé; they did it for the grand crus.

He spent nine years trying and failing to get Club 55 in St Tropez to stock WA but had more luck on Mustique, the private island in the Caribbean where the super-rich and celebrities have villas. To get his brand noticed, he came up with the idea of striking a deal with the local baker, who delivered to all 82 of the villas on the island (he still knows exactly how many villas there are now). The baker was persuaded to deliver cases of Whispering Angel with the croissants, which got it noticed and drunk and talked about. But getting it to the point where it’s all over Instagram with its own hashtag took years. One buyer in Chicago told him that he couldn’t sell rosé, and if Lichine thought anyone would pay $100 for a bottle he was out of his mind. Lichine poured him a glass. “I can’t sell it,” the buyer said, “but I’ll take two cases for myself.”

Whispering Angel Cotes de Provence Rosé, £20 from Sainsbury’s and Laithwaites

Next up after Chicago was Nantucket, after which the Hamptons were his for the taking. Because he grew up around there, he knew that people in Nantucket thought they were a cut above people in the Hamptons, and people in the Hamptons tended to agree. If a smart hostess in Nantucket was serving Whispering Angel, then that’s what a smart hostess in the Hamptons wanted too. And it was invariably the women, at least at first. Men, he says, took longer to take it seriously.

Over the next few years, Lichine, his second wife and their three children moved from Chicago to Hong Kong, Singapore, Boston, Miami and finally back to France, where there was an urgent problem: they couldn’t keep up with demand. Naysayers sniff that they solved it by buying in grapes from other vineyards; customers don’t care and Lichine is laughing all the way to LVMH. He makes seven wines now, ranging from the Pale for around £15 to Garrus at more than £100, produced from the 100-year-old vines on the estate. There’s more competition now, not least from Miraval. Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie bought the château when they were married and fought over it when they divorced, but Pitt was canny, says Lichine. He brought in “real” wine people to help him make the wine, when he could just have lain by the pool and counted the money. It would still have sold, he says. Or at least the first time.

Today, he spends five months a year at d’Esclans and much of the rest of it on the road. When someone else can sell it better than he can, he’ll retire. Until then the family base is Gstaad, and his wife doesn’t mind his prolonged absences. Does she like rosé? “She’d better!” He takes a sip of his pale pink drink, and we contemplate the giant nine-litre bottles of pale pink wine lining the pale pink bar of his pale pink chateau.

“There’s a lot of rosé being produced in the world,” he says, taking a canapé from a passing tray, “but Provence rosé is better than most. There are still quite a few snooty sommeliers and dealers, and it’s still a battle, but is it a fad? I don’t think so. Rosé is here to stay.”

‘Bonkers price’: the age of the £100 rosé

Wine critic Jane MacQuitty picks the top pinks. Start saving now…

 

2021 Les Clans, Château d’Esclans, Côtes de Provence (14 per cent)
thefinestbubble.com, £68
Those who can afford Sacha Lichine’s vanilla pod, candied and wood smoke-scented posh pink won’t be disappointed.

2020 Garrus, Château d’Esclans, Côtes de Provence (14 per cent)
Majestic, £139.99
Shocking price but a sensational rosé made from 80-year-old vines, aged and fermented in oak, with dreamy, tobacco-leaf fruit.

ANNIVERSARY 10th PINK DAY festival: you can enjoy pink wines on April 22 at Lauba: a house for people and art (and wine)

PINK DAY Zagreb – a festival dedicated to rosé – celebrates a significant jubilee this year, its tenth edition! At the media conference held in Lauba, the festival program was presented, and the founder and president of the Festival, journalist, editor and publicist Sanja Muzaferija , said on that occasion:

PINK DAY Zagreb, apart from being a rosé festival, is also a kind of dedication to female energy, spring and the beauty of life; the ceremony of a rosy view of a perhaps slightly better world that we all hope for. And rosé is exactly that: bright, fluffy – and the right choice for hot summer days. During the last ten years, the Festival has promoted moderate, feminine consumption of wine, and according to the winemakers themselves, PINK DAY Zagreb significantly helped to change the attitude towards rosé, and thus the Croatian wine list. I am proud that we contributed to rosé as a light and spring wine gaining a completely new and much better reputation than it had before us. Of course, there is also our Green in Pink  which celebrates top domestic extra virgin olive oils, and since last year we also have pink gins, tonics, liqueurs, cocktails…

Celebrating the big, jubilee of the “small” boutique festival , which after Vinistra and VinoCom is also the oldest major wine festival in Croatia, PINK DAY prepared this year the richest program so far, and everything started celebratoryly at the press conference – with welcome sparkling wine: Griffin Rosé, Bedekovich Rosé EKO 2017 and Tomšić Evelin, 2021. After the official part, the presentation of the wines of Brdovita Hrvatska was led by the distinguished sommelier Mario Meštrović, who presented 5 pink wines colors of that region: Dvanajšćak Kozol rosé 2022; Winery Puhelek Rosé 2022; Griffin Ivančić Ambassador rosé 2022; Bedekovich Prigora rosé Eko 2021; Vinarija Miklažić Rosé 2021. The president of the association Bregovita Hrvatska, which includes the vineyards of Moslavina, Prigorje and Bilogora, Zagorje and Međimurja, Plešivice and Pokuplje, Josip Tržec, said on that occasion:

Behind the excellent wines of Bregovita Hrvatska are hardworking people, winemakers and their families. Many of them continue the long-standing family tradition, but at the same time explore new ways of modern winemaking. Bregovita Hrvatska offers a variety of wines for every taste and for every occasion. It is characterized by a colorful wealth of varieties, styles and shades of wine. At today’s workshop and at the Festival, it will be possible to taste selected rosé wines and sparkling wines from Bregovita Hrvatska.

The PINK DAY Zagreb celebration continues on Tuesday , April 18 , in the only restaurant in Zagreb with a Michelin star, Noel, where the Chateau d’Esclans rosé wine Masterclass ” Pinks That Made Historypowered by PBZ Card Premium Visa will be held and will be led by Ted Lelekas, Moet Hennessy brand ambassador. Tasting will be from top quality Riedel glasses. Then on April 20 , on the occasion of the jubilee, in the legendary Zagreb restaurant Skenderica 1912 by Catering Lisak – a festive “Dinner in Pink” will be heldwith selected wines from the Festival: Villa Sandi Prosecco DOC Rosé Millesimato, Rosé Bastiàn, Rizman Rusula and Aura liqueurs.

Whispering Angel Rosé Releases Its Seventeenth Vintage Just In Time For Summer Sipping With Friends

Château d’Esclans is proud to announce the seventeenth vintage release of its flagship wine, Whispering Angel, which has become today’s worldwide reference for Provence rosé. Whispering Angel continues the Rosé Renaissance with another exceptional vintage, marking the first 2022 Provence Rosé to hit shelves around the globe, and with the summer months now in sight, we are incredibly excited to share the 2022 vintage of Whispering Angel Rosé with the world!

Back in 2006, Sacha Lichine envisioned creating the greatest rosé in the world. Setting the tone for making rosé a world class wine with the top tier oak-aged Garrus, produced from 100-year-old Grenache vines, he gave the category newfound cachet and with Whispering Angel Rosé, offered an affordably luxurious wine which was instrumental in sparking the Rosé Revolution, while bringing notoriety to the Côtes de Provence appellation.

Now available in over 110 counties, Whispering Angel 2022 once again delivers the magic of Provence to discerning consumers throughout the world. From festive winter soirées to seaside Beach Clubs, the best international restaurants and resorts to the finest wine shops, Whispering Angel continues to build desirability and remains the world’s most popular rosé. 

Of Whispering Angel Rosé’s newest vintage, Technical Director of Chateau d’Esclans, Bertrand Léon says, “A pale and pure rosé with notes of fresh citrus, rose petal and red fruits on the nose and a palate that is round and well-balanced with great acidity and structure”. 

The 2022 growing season yielded small berries which is about a 25% drop in their average weight compared to previous years. While unprecedented, this was expected following the scorching hot summer. Spring frosts prevailed in certain areas of Provence but Château d’Esclans was once again spared. Their commitment to long-term and meticulous vineyard management, year after year, facilitated an untroubled vintage and the vast majority of their plots withstood this scorching summer very well.

A blend of free-run juices and pressed juices consists primarily of Grenache, Cinsault, and Rolle from old vines grown in La Motte, Provence. Fermentation and ageing take place in temperature controlled stainless-steel tanks with twice weekly lees-stirring. The result is a pale and pure rosé with notes of fresh citrus, rose petal, and red fruits on the nose and a palate that is round and well balanced with great acidity and structure. A versatile wine that can be ideal as an apéritif paired with a variety of foods, from herb-infused Mediterranean styled dishes to Pan Asian cuisine. 

Whispering Angel Côtes de Provence 2022, RSP €26.65, is available from Jus de Vine, Mitchell & Sons, Nolans, Higgins, 64 Wines, Morton & Sons, The Corkscrew, D SIX Wines, 

Redmonds, On The Grapevine, Celtic Whiskey Store, Baggot St Wines, Deveney’s, Martin’s Off Licence, The Wine Centre Kilkenny, Bradley’s Cork, Bubble Brothers Cork, O’Donovans Cork, McCambridges Galway, World Wide Wines Waterford, Ardkeen Stores Waterford along with O’Briens nationwide, Molloys, Avoca stores and Brown Thomas & select grocery department stores nationwide.

CITY GUIDE, LIFESTYLE, LONDON CITY GUIDE

Belgravia in Bloom Goes Wild For The 2023 Floral Festival

Belgravia in Bloom recently announced its partnership with the London Wildlife Trust for this year’s floral festival.

With the theme ‘Into the Wild,’ the festival promises to showcase some of the world’s most beautiful and diverse species, from pandas and peacocks to monkeys, tigers, and snakes, all recreated as colourful and vibrant floral installations.

From May 22-29, Belgravia will be transformed into a wilderness wonderland, encouraging visitors to celebrate and learn more about all creatures, great and small.

London Wildlife Trust is dedicated to boosting biodiversity and inspiring Londoners to connect with nature, and Belgravia in Bloom shares this mission. As part of the collaboration, visitors can enjoy a series of pop-ups, events, and experiences that support biodiversity and offer opportunities to learn and connect with nature.

Restaurant Motcombs will run a delightful Whispering Angel Rose wine Summer Al Fresco Summer Floral Terrace promotion…