Ensérune… small but mighty!
Vineyards nestled at the foot of the hill…
As early as the 1980s, local winegrowers decided to clearly differentiate their wines by securing classification as what was then Vin de Pays, ensuring they would be clearly identified. That backstory continues to this day under the IGP Coteaux d’Ensérune banner..
The IGP Coteaux d’Ensérune wine region is located between Béziers, in Hérault, and the edge of the Aude department. It winds around the picturesque contours of the most southerly foothills of the Montagne Noire, in the North, and the limestone plateaux and molasse hills farther South, where time and erosion have shaped ridges and gentle slopes.
August 1
2009
15
villages
13 190 hL
21 independent wineries,
2 co-operatives and
14 wine merchants.
red
24%
rosé
61%
white
15%
Grenache
Lledoner pelut
Carignan
Syrah
Mourvedre
Grenache
Lledoner pelut
Carignan
Syrah
Mourvedre
Carignan Blanc
Sauvignon Blanc
Viognier
Bourboulenc
Macabeu
Virtually all of the IGP Coteaux d’Ensérune area is ‘clad’ with limestone. It comes either alone or mixed with clay, shows multiple nuances of texture and depth depending on the individual vineyard blocks and boasts that valuable quality of being suited to growing many different grape varieties, both red and white. Predictably, the climate is Mediterranean with its dry, hot summers, mild winters and relatively wet springs and autumns.
There is a variety of wine styles – on limestone soils, minerality lends the wines abundantly clean flavours and the much talked-about impression of ‘sucking a stone’. When mixed with clay, the wines have broader shoulders and more ample palates. Grape varieties obviously also play their part, instilling different characters that can range from the gracious rustic feel of Lledoner Pelut to the profound, precise Mourvèdre which imparts delicious peppery notes.
Chosen by the winegrowers themselves at the start of the 1980s to identify their wines, the IGP symbol is obviously the famous hill of Ensérune. At the top of the hill, which was once the site of a Roman oppidum, there are still archaeological remains. And at its foot is the famous waterway listed as Unesco World Heritage – the Canal du Midi.