
Château Tour Saint HonoreLa Ferme des Janets Côtes de Provence
This wine generally goes well with beef, lamb or mature and hard cheese.

Food and wine pairings with La Ferme des Janets Côtes de Provence
Pairings that work perfectly with La Ferme des Janets Côtes de Provence
Original food and wine pairings with La Ferme des Janets Côtes de Provence
The La Ferme des Janets Côtes de Provence of Château Tour Saint Honore matches generally quite well with dishes of beef, lamb or spicy food such as recipes of beef luc lake, couscous merguez or coconut chicken curry in thermomix.
Details and technical informations about Château Tour Saint Honore's La Ferme des Janets Côtes de Provence.
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).
Informations about the Château Tour Saint Honore
The Château Tour Saint Honore is one of of the world's great estates. It offers 22 wines for sale in the of Côtes de Provence to come and discover on site or to buy online.
The wine region of Côtes de Provence
World reference for pale, elegant rosé: salmon to onion-skin hue, notes of strawberry, pink grapefruit, white peach and flowers, fresh, dry, mineral palate, taut finish. 90% of output, the Provençal signature. Grenache, Cinsault, Syrah and native Tibouren in the blend. A few fleshy Mediterranean reds (Mourvèdre, Syrah) and saline Vermentino whites.
The wine region of Provence
World capital of dry, refined rosé (~90% of production). Pale rose-petal colour, delicate nose of fresh red fruits (strawberry, raspberry, redcurrant), citrus (pink grapefruit), white flowers and a mineral touch, taut and thirst-quenching palate — the Mediterranean aperitif par excellence. Blends of Grenache, Cinsault, Syrah, Tibouren and Mourvèdre. Fleshy Bandol reds from Mourvèdre (leather, garrigue, age-worthy), straight Cassis whites.
The word of the wine: Yeast
Micro-organisms at the base of all fermentative processes. A wide variety of yeasts live and thrive naturally in the vineyard, provided that treatments do not destroy them. Unfortunately, their replacement by laboratory-selected yeasts is often the order of the day and contributes to the standardization of the wine. Yeasts are indeed involved in the development of certain aromas.














