Gare du Nord 2023 | Wayward Wines

La Grange Du Nord
Gare du Nord 2023

£14.25

  • Region Gard, Southern Rhône, France
  • Grapes Grenache & Cinsault
  • Vineyard Organic
  • Cellar Fermented with native yeasts, unfiltered & unfined, minimal additional sulphites
  • ABV 12.6%
  • Size 750ml

About the Wine

A completely new expression for this cuvée, leaving behind its structured, gastronomic feel to become more closely aligned with the fluid, luminous style of the other reds of the domaine. 2023 sees Grenache as whole bunches in the directly-pressed juice of Cinsault.

Pretty red strawberry fruits, herby liquorice with a sort of dandelion and burdock quality and flashes of graphite minerality. At first invitingly slick and glossy, the tannins gain grip and detail in the long finish. A lot to admire at the entry point to Fred & Delphine's work.

About La Grange Du Nord

For years a Parisian literature scholar and, perhaps unsurprisingly, procuring a secondary education in wine via the formative natural wine bars of the early 2000s, Frédéric Agneray eventually made his way south to make wine, via a series of stints learning on the job, establishing La Grange du Nord as 3 hectares in the Gard, in 2014.

Finding an affinity with those growers opposing industrial agriculture and producing what he prefers to term ‘living wines’ whilst drinking in Paris, he left his then job as an a/v librarian for a TV sports channel in pursuit of his new passion, spending the best part of the next decade working and learning around the Loire, Northern Rhône and the Ardèche, with a stint of 5 years at Grange-aux-Belles in Anjou. Later, in 2017 Fred was able to grow the domaine to 10 hectares and was joined by his sister Delphine as their production more than doubled.

Sitting east, towards the Southern Rhône end of the Gard in Sabran, just west of Orange (and a short drive north from the iconic Tavel), the vines in many ways here enjoy an extension of the southern Ardèche terroir, with its limestone and clay soils and moderating mistral winds, whilst sitting at the intersection with the Languedoc and its balmy Mediterranean influence. 

Plantings of Grenache prevail, along with Cinsault, Carignan, Syrah, Clairette and Roussanne as well as the local obscurity, Counoise, typically used as a blending grape in Châteauneuf-du-Pape – of course that brash, blockbuster style is not Fred’s thing at all, preferring to exercise a deft touch with these varietals, yielding elegant, perfumed wines that display a detail and nuance that doesn’t always go hand in hand with expectations of the region.

Favouring a very delicate extraction, macerations are gentle and over just a few days, often employing the infusion method, where whole bunches sit in the direct-pressed juice of other grapes. Manual basket-pressing only, Clairette and Roussanne can find their way in amongst the reds, lifting the density of a blend, and everything happens in strictly tank only – fibreglass or steel, no barrels. Fermentations are spontaneous, the wine is never filtered or fined and is given the time it needs, both in élevage and in the bottle, to be ready before release. Eschewing the use of sulphur at bottling, there is on occasion a scant 10mg/l used at the point the wine is racked, in some cases none at all. The finished article is distinctively pure, with a fluid, gossamer texture that feels open and expressive. The wines of La Grange du Nord gave us a welcome fresh perspective on this southern region.

Find out more about La Grange Du Nord