2000 Ch. Sociando Mallet

Sociando Mallet is a wonderful success story.

Jean Gautreau, a wine broker turned négociant, bought a tiny, little-known, and much-neglected vineyard in the northern Médoc in 1969. These 5 hectares of vines in Saint-Seurin-de-Cadourne, just north of Saint Estèphe, have since grown to 83 hectares and the estate has gone on to a earn a stellar reputation.

Sociando Mallet (54% Merlot, 42% Cabernet Sauvignon, and 4% Cabernet Franc) is located quite close to the Gironde Estuary, making for a very temperate microclimate. The terroir consists of gravel soil overlaying a deep clay-limestone subsoil. The vines are an average of 35 years old.

I have only visited the château once, at which time I was impressed at how well-maintained everything (buildings, landscaping, vines, cellars…) was. I did a horizontal tasting that proved the wine’s excellent regularity, even in so-called off years. I would describe Sociando Mallet as a Médoc lovers Médoc, not one for label drinkers. Prices are definitely in the affordable range, and the wine represents very good value for money. Sociando Mallet is so well-known at this point that they decided not to submit their candidacy for inclusion in the cru bourgeois classification.

A week ago, I opened a bottle of 2000 Sociando Mallet, decanting it two hours before the meal. The color was beautifully deep and lustrous. The nose was ultra-classic, showing the hallmarks of fine Médoc: pencil shavings, humus, essence of blackcurrant, and incense. The wine was almost as good on the palate, with smooth, resolved tannin and a cool long aftertaste. At age 24, this Sociando Mallet from a great vintage was at its peak and as good as many a bottle of classified growths I’ve had, even if the depth and length did not quite qualify it for the uppermost echelon.

Jean Gautreau died in 2019, but his name lives on in a special cuvée of Sociando Mallet amounting to 3 special barrels per vintage. I do not know this wine, but have one bottle each from the 2005, 2009, and 2016 vintages and am looking forward to trying them.

Alex R.
 
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Thanks for the report Alex…the 2000 is one of the best Sociando experiences I have had…but I only tried it once or twice…I liked it as much as the somewhat under-rated and under-the-radar 1995. The vintage of Sociando I don’t get, and have never had any joy with, is the 1996.
 
Thank you Alex ,
I remember tasting this wine en primeur at the chateau and was very impressed.
In fact it was one of the wines that performed well over the course of the campaign.
The 2000 was a much needed vintage and SM was a bargain release.
The elevation of the vineyard stands in an almost amphitheater and perfectly situated
Sadly I drank my case too soon
Thank you for the memories
 
Currently enjoying a case of the 2003 which is a good wine in the context of the vintage. I remember first encountering this chateau in the form of the superb 1978 in the mid 90s and have enjoyed numerous vintages since.
The 2003 Sociando is the only 2003 claret I have not given up on. The only 2003 red Bordeaux that I still own.

I think I should try one soon - and would there be any interest in a Sociando Mallet vertical in late May?
 
Thanks Alex, good to see something about this producer.

I bought three bottles of the Jean Gautreau from Raeburns (the wine merchant we visited when you were in Edinburgh), with a 95, 96 and 97 - just to try the range. I really like the wines, not showy or trying to be something more than they are. Just classic Medoc.

I’ve subsequently bought some of their “normal” wine but am yet to try any so have no frame of reference for how differs the JG wine is.
 
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