
Winery Julien PeyrasRosé Boheme
This wine generally goes well with beef and mature and hard cheese.

Food and wine pairings with Rosé Boheme
Pairings that work perfectly with Rosé Boheme
Original food and wine pairings with Rosé Boheme
The Rosé Boheme of Winery Julien Peyras matches generally quite well with dishes of beef or mature and hard cheese such as recipes of stewed beef heart or gratin with chard leaves.
Details and technical informations about Winery Julien Peyras's Rosé Boheme.
Discover the grape variety: Mourvèdre
Powerful, deep reds with firm tannins and dense texture, showing aromas of blackberry, leather, garrigue, black pepper, liquorice and animal notes (game, forest floor) with age. Star of Bandol AOC as a single variety and pillar of Châteauneuf-du-Pape, Gigondas and Costières blends. Also in GSM in Languedoc and Australia. A late-ripening variety of Spanish origin (Mataró/Monastrell).
Last vintages of this wine
The best vintages of Rosé Boheme from Winery Julien Peyras are 2018, 2017, 2016
Informations about the Winery Julien Peyras
The Winery Julien Peyras is one of of the world's greatest estates. It offers 12 wines for sale in the of Vin de France to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Vin de France
The freest category of French wine, the playground of winemakers working outside the AOC. All styles combined: fruity reds, lively or ambitious whites, everyday rosés, unusual blends, natural wines, atypical grapes (Petit Manseng in Languedoc, Riesling in Provence), experimental winemaking (skin-contact whites, no sulphur). Grape and vintage labelling allowed, no geographic constraint. From the pop, convivial cuvée to the artisan gem: freedom in a bottle.
The word of the wine: Wooded
A set of aromas brought about by ageing in barrels (usually oak). This can be pleasant when, in small doses, it brings a touch of spice, roast or vanilla to an already constructed ensemble. When the violent woodiness dominates the wine, it is quickly tiring. Easily identifiable aromatically, it is sought after (to the point of abuse) by the makers of coarse wines. New World manufacturers and, alas, some French winemakers use oak chips to impart the woody taste, which is tantamount to artificial flavoring.














