Château Lafite Rothschild 2023
• Domaine: Château Lafite-Rothschild
• Appellation: Pauillac
• Classification: First Growth, 1er Grand Cru Classé
• Origin: Left Bank, Bordeaux, France
Producer Profile
Château Lafite Rothschild is a prestigious winery located in the Pauillac appellation of Bordeaux, France. The estate has a long and rich history, with its origins dating back to at least the 17th century when it was owned by the Ségur family. In 1868, the estate was purchased by Baron James de Rothschild, a member of the famous Rothschild banking family, and it has remained in the Rothschild family ever since.
Château Lafite Rothschild is known for producing some of the world's finest and most expensive wines. The estate's vineyards cover about 112 hectares (276 acres) and are planted with primarily Cabernet Sauvignon, as well as smaller amounts of Merlot, Cabernet Franc, and Petit Verdot. The vineyards are situated on well-draining gravel soils, which are ideal for producing high-quality grapes.
Baron Eric de Rothschild, chairman of Domaines Barons de Rothschild (DBR), described Château Lafite Rothschild as a viticultural tour de force with the power to, “turn bare earth into heaven.”
After managing the portfolio of family wine estates for 42 years and overseeing significant expansion across the globe (including new vineyards in Chile, Argentina, and China), Baron de Rothschild transitioned the leadership of the family business to his daughter, Saskia de Rothschild, in 2017. The château has been owned by the same branch of the Rothschild family since 1868. 2018 marks the family's 150th anniversary as owners. With over 150 years steeped in rich history, Lafite Rothschild is a place where man and nature work together in perfect harmony to produce wine that continues to captivate wine drinkers around the globe.
The late American president Thomas Jefferson was reported to have visited the estate and been a lifelong consumer of its great wines. As a President, he had a penchant for the finer things in life and spent $10,000 on his wines one year -- that's the equivalent of 1 million dollars today. A hefty amount of that purchase consisted of wines from Château Lafite Rothschild and the other great First Growth, Château Haut Brion. Naturally, his extravagent lifestyle led him into debt and towards the end of his life he was practicaly penniless. His biggest regret? That he couldn't drink the wines from Château Lafite Rothschild anymore.
Lafite Rothschild has an illustrious past, with references to its exalted wines that date back to as early as 1234. The chateau rose to prominence in the 17th century, largely due to contributions of Marquis Nicolas Alexandre de Ségur. Known as, “The Wine Prince,” the Marquis de Ségur improved the viticultural techniques at Lafite and introduced the wines to royalty at the court of Versailles. The excellence of the wine was undeniable, and soon Lafite Rothschild’s Grand Vin became known as the wine of kings.
Lafite Rothschild cemented its reputation when it was recognized as one of the First Growths of the 1855 Classification, earning it much-deserved prestige on a global scale. As the years progressed, new innovations improved the viticultural process on the estate. Dairy cows were introduced to organically fertilize the property, and the estate built its own cooperage for making barrels to age the wines to perfection. At Lafite Rothschild, tradition marries artistic innovation and the result is great wine for generations.
The winemaking process at Château Lafite Rothschild is carefully controlled to ensure the highest possible quality. Grapes are harvested by hand and fermented in oak barrels, with the wine then aged in oak for 18-20 months before being bottled. The resulting wines are known for their elegance, complexity, and aging potential, with some vintages known to improve for decades.
Château Lafite Rothschild winespossess an excellence that transcends beyond their pedigree. The strength of these wines lies in their versatility. They are highly sought after by collectors and wine enthusiasts around the world, and they command some of the highest prices of any wines in the world. The estate produces several different wines, including the flagship Château Lafite Rothschild, as well as Carruades de Lafite, which is a second wine made from younger vines or grapes that do not meet the high standards of the main wine.
Tasting Notes
''This hits you right off the first nose, driven by slate and crushed rocks, setting the tone and the architecture, guiding the fruit through the palate. Cassis, bilberry, tobacco leaf, graphite, crushed mint, finessed and sculpted, this is a gorgeous Lafite, with fine tannins and the squid ink character that seems to be present in all of this stable of wines except Moulin de Duhart. Hidden power, where nothing is too much and yet everything is concentrated, once again proving that the terroir at this particular spot has its own personality that stands out every year. High Cabernet as ever, combined with around 15% press wine. Not the concentration of 2022, but in many ways showcasing the essence of Lafite more squarely, and this will delight anyone lucky enough to own it in future years. 45hl/h yield, highest since 2015, harvest September 7 to 29. 100% new oak. New cellar underway, due for completion in 2027. I am giving it 10 years to begin entering its opening window, a little less than usual but it will make no difference to how long you can cellar it.'' - Jane Anson, Best Pomerol 2020 Wines Tasted En Primeur, (04/15/2024), Ratings : 98-100, Drink: 2033-2055
"Today, Château Lafite Rothschild amounts to some 110 hectares planted to some 900,000 vines (including 4.5 hectares of Cabernet Sauvignon in Saint-Estèphe). If that figure strikes readers as smaller than it used to be, that's because Lafite has ripped up some less optimally situated plots that never tended to produce wine fit for inclusion in the grand vin. As of 2021, what's more, organic conversion is underway (15 hectares are already farmed biodynamically); and hedges and flowering borders, planted with native species, now begin to break up the monoculture of the vine. Cover crops, too, have been added to the viticultural team's agronomic arsenal and are delivering good results in parcels with more humid or clay-rich soils. In the winery, Lafite is meticulously traditional—the grapes are sorted twice, once optically, and see a classical maceration in wooden and cement tanks with pump-overs and some use of the "air pulse" system that disrupts the cap and oxygenates the ferment without the need for a full pump-over. Malolactic fermentation, as ever, is in tank, and the wine matures in barrels that are mostly produced in-house, with a light toast, favoring the forests of Allier and Nevers. Each vintage is racked three times, traditionally, with one egg white fining (which requires up to 8,000 eggs). As is the case almost everywhere in the Médoc, the tendency is for less and less Merlot in the assemblage.'' - William Kelley, The Wine Advocate, (04/26/2024), Ratings: 97-99
"The 2023 Lafite-Rothschild races out of the glass with notable textural intensity. Explosive and deep, with striking balance, Lafite dazzles in this vintage. The 2023 is a somber, virile Lafite endowed with remarkable depth and tons of sheer character. Plum, blackberry, gravel, pencil shavings, graphite, mocha and lavender build into the intense, palate-staining finish. The blend is 93% Cabernet Sauvignon, 6% Merlot and 1% Petit Verdot." - Antonio Galloni, Vinous, (04/30/2024), Ratings: 95-98
"The 2023 Château Lafite-Rothschild is based on 93% Cabernet Sauvignon, 6% Merlot, and 1% Petit Verdot, resting in 90% new French oak, with the balance in once-used barrels. It's another deeply hued barrel sample that has thrilling (and classic Lafite) aromatics of darker currants, freshly sharpened pencils, leather, flowers, and graphite. These all carry over to the palate, where the wine is medium to full-bodied and has a seamless, layered, elegant mouthfeel and ultra-fine tannins. I don’t see it hitting the heights of the 2018, 2019, or 2020, but it's an incredible wine in the vintage and is going to be an ultra-classic beauty from this château that will evolve for decades. The alcohol is a respectable 12.9% and the pH is 3.78. (Lafite always tends to have a higher pH.)" - Jeb Dunnuck, Bordeaux 2023 En Primeur, (05/08/2024), Ratings: 95-97
| LWIN | 1011872 |
|---|---|
| Stock Status | Futures |
| Appellation | Pauillac |
| Vintage | 2023 |
| Shipping Weight | 3.000000 |










