The Winery Louis Sozet of Rhône septentrional of Rhone Valley

Winery Louis Sozet
Only one wine is currently referenced in this domain
4.1
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Its wines get an average rating of 4.1.
It is ranked in the top 1515 of the estates of Rhone Valley.
It is located in Rhône septentrional in the region of Rhone Valley

The Winery Louis Sozet is one of the best wineries to follow in Rhône septentrional.. It offers 1 wines for sale in of Rhône septentrional to come and discover on site or to buy online.

Top Winery Louis Sozet wines

Looking for the best Winery Louis Sozet wines in Rhône septentrional among all the wines in the region? Check out our tops of the best red, white or effervescent Winery Louis Sozet wines. Also find some food and wine pairings that may be suitable with the wines from this area. Learn more about the region and the Winery Louis Sozet wines with technical and enological descriptions.

Discover other wineries and winemakers neighboring the Winery Louis Sozet

Planning a wine route in the of Rhône septentrional? Here are the wineries to visit and the winemakers to meet during your trip in search of wines similar to Winery Louis Sozet.

Discover the grape variety: Lignan blanc

It originates from northern Italy (Piedmont) where it is very often grown on trellises in front of houses. In France, this variety was introduced in 1850.

News about Winery Louis Sozet and wines from the region

Walls: Tavel and its unexpected revolution

When asked which is the most exciting appellation in the Rhône, there’s one that currently springs to mind before all others: Tavel. I have to be honest with you: I don’t buy much rosé. So, given that Tavel is, according to The Oxford Companion to Wine, ‘one of France’s few all-rosé appellations,’ my response might be unexpected. The Oxford Companion is technically correct, of course – the wines made here are paler than a typical red wine. But compared to other rosés, that’s where the comparison ...

Andrew Jefford: ‘2021 has been the year of all the miseries’

How’s the weather been this year? Awful. ‘La nature m’écoeure’, one of my wine-growing friends posted on Facebook on 8 April, having been out to look at the frost-crippled shoots on his vines that morning: ‘Nature disgusts me’. It takes a lot to make a wine-grower feel that. He wasn’t alone. Jeremiads echo around the northern hemisphere as 2021 closes. It’s been the year of all the miseries. None suffered more horribly than the growers of Germany’s Ahr valley, where floodwaters caused by the fou ...

Andrew Jefford: ‘Drinking cheap wine need not be a cheap experience’

Annual domestic gas bills in the UK threaten to rival, in craziness, the price of a box of Bordeaux first growths. Those energy costs have sent the price of almost everything else ripping up after them. Is there, um, anything to be said for cheap wine? There is. First, though, we must sip the bitter harvest of alcohol taxes. These are high in the UK and higher still in Scandinavia, Australia, New Zealand and India; they tend to vary by state in the US and by province in Canada, and in general th ...

The word of the wine: Oxidative (breeding)

A method of ageing which aims to give the wine certain aromas of evolution (dried fruit, bitter orange, coffee, rancio, etc.) by exposing it to the air; it is then matured either in barrels, demi-muids or unoaked casks, sometimes stored in the open air, or in barrels exposed to the sun and to temperature variations. This type of maturation characterizes certain natural sweet wines, ports and other liqueur wines.