Six wines from France's Calvet - and the Calvet Kitchen experience
If you know Calvet's wines, it is probably for their range of easy-drinking and inexpensive Bordeaux. And if you don't, you probably should, as they are the largest French wine brand in the UK and the UK is Calvet's largest market.
But Calvet turns out to be a lot more than just Bordeaux; established over 200 years ago, the company makes wine in almost all of France's major regions.
Calvet Kitchen is a food-and-wine matching initiative to pair regional French dishes with Calvet wines; which is, after all, when French wine is all about.
With 64 winemakers in 7 regions, Calvet is a diverse business and yet all the wines here had a family resemblance that reflects Calvet's aims - an elegance and easy-drinking freshness with plenty of food-friendly mid-palate.
These wines all drink well on first pouring, but also open with aeration and have the body and complexity to stand up to food.
Loire-based winemaker Pierre-Jean Sauvion explained his approach:
- quality of fruit
- balance of fruit and freshness
- food-friendly salinity
The wines were all of broadly similar quality and, the Chablis aside, price, so preferences come down largely to personal taste.
Of the whites, I enjoyed the Chablis most, but given the price difference, the Muscadet makes a good value alternative.
Of the other colours, the CdRV was the most substantial and interesting.
The Calvet Kitchen playlist archive is here:
Calvet Kitchen | Meet Guillaume Lassevils, chef in the Bordeaux region - YouTube
Calvet Muscadet 2020, abv 12%, (£5.95-7 Sainsbury’s, Tesco, Co-op)
Grown on warmer sandy soils, resulting in more ripeness in the wine.
minty and floral with tropical fruit; fresh, rounded and saline with pear and white stone fruits
Thoroughly enjoyable.
Match with seafood and freshwater fish.
Calvet Haut Poitou 2021, abv 11.5%, (£10.99 Waitrose)
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