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Tesseron Lot No. 29 French Cognac 70 cl 40%

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    Cognac house: Tesseron
    Name: Tesseron Lot No. 29
    Grape: Ugni Blanc, Folle Blanche and Colombard
    Type: XO Exception - Grande Champagne
    Alc. strength: 40%
    70 cl.

    Are you looking for cognac in the classifications Cognac VS, Cognac VSOP and Cognac XO?
    Whisky.dk has everything in cognac that can be enjoyed on the chesterfield sofa with the right cognac glasses from Riedel.
    Tesseron Cognac Grande Champagne X.O Exception Lot No. 29

    This is regarded as the jewel of the Tesseron collection of Cognacs, and the oldest in their standard range. A unique blend of legendary eighty
    two ninety year-old Grande Champagne eaux de vie, all from the 1920's, lovingly aged for three generations. Balancing power and finesse, Lot
    29 has a floral bouquet, allied to chocolate and mocha notes. This is complemented by that elusive, ethereal nose which is so typical of only
    the very best old cognac. This subtle elixir has an extraordinarily long aftertaste, and its lovely amber highlights reflect its very slow aging – the
    quintessence of elegance.

    COMPOSITION: Ugni Blanc, Folle Blanche and Colombard
    BLEND : Grande Champagne only
    AGED: More than three generations in Limousin oak casks

    COLOR : Lustrous topaz
    NOSE : Heady, decadent aged nose, followed by layers of honey, figs, plums and exotic fruit laced with oak.
    PALATE: Supremely elegant, this combines macerated dried fruit with hints of mocha and cocoa, refreshed by floral aromatics. Unctuous duck
    silky, it retains a wonderful freshness and vitality throughout. Extremely well balanced and wonderfully complex with marmalade notes
    emerging on a persistent, stylish finish.

    100 points, Robert Parker" "... anything this smooth, silky, potent, and aromatic, is truly great stuff. It is about as ethereal Cognac as anyone
    could ever hope to drink."

    Andrew Jefford [Financial Times, 2004]: "...If money is still less an object, Tesseron Lot 29 (40%) will prove just how conclusively great brandy,
    like great wine, can absorb, modulate and reflect a kind of mineral beauty in the midst of all its other, more freshly sensual attractions: layered
    amid the fig, the beech leaf and the cream there's a kind of stony fire that glows for 30 seconds after you've swallowed ..."

    Nicholas Faith [Decanter]: "...a marvelous balance of richness and dryness, a hint of orange peel, while retaining a wonderful florality on the
    palate. So pure, it is almost refreshing"

    Cognac Tesseron is without question the ultimate Cognac house. Although the American "wine guru", Robert Parker, does not usually deal with spirits that much, he has fallen for the house's products to such an extent, and not least Lot No. 29, to which he has given the rare but highly sought-after 100 points!

    Cognac Tesseron specializes, as this slogan suggests, in high-end cognacs. As their marketing slogan suggests, they only produce "XO and Beyond", so cognacs from the XO age onwards. From their ancestral home Domaine Tesseron in Châteauneuf-sur-Charente, which lies between Cognac and Angoulême, the Tesseron family traditionally used to sell its eaux-de-vie to the large cognac houses. But in 2003 they decided to release a range under their own family name. The Tesserons are also active in wine production, owning Château Pontet-Canet – a Pauillac classified property producing Grand Cru Classé Bordeaux wine.

    The self-assurance that once characterized the Cognac district has turned to despair in the last decade. The otherwise well-established image of the cigar-smoking wholesaler sitting in his soft armchair and swinging the bowl of cognac has turned towards the district as the consumer has gained greater social awareness, and the otherwise promising market in Asia has become hit by economic depression. Nothing is so bad that it is not good for something. It is often in times of economic pressure that the biggest changes and initiatives take place: Over the past few years, the cognac style has been improved and refined, so that the area today produces better cognac than ever before.

    The Cognac district is divided into 6 areas: Bois Ordinaires and Bons Bois are in the absolute outer zone. Closer to the main town are Fine Bois and Borderies, and around the town of Ségonzac we find the last two areas, Petite Champagne and Grande Champagne.

    In total, the district covers 1,132,500 ha, of which 80,000 are mainly planted with Ugni Blanc. Each of the mentioned areas gives its characteristics, but it is in Petite Champagne and Grande Champagne that you must look if you want to know why cognac is the world's best brandy. It does not matter which base wine you use when distilling cognac. The wine is reduced during the process, and only the right base wines can produce and enhance the best basic properties. A bit like a chef reducing his sauce to produce a greater intensity and concentration. The liquid is distilled twice. The first burn, "brouillis", has an alcohol percentage between 27 and 30%, but it is distilled an extra time to increase the alcohol percentage. The first distillate, also called "la tête" (the head), and the last "la queue" (the tail), are collected separately. The middle part is called "le coeur" (the heart), and it is this part, with an alcohol percentage between 69 and 72%, that is subsequently stored.

    2 1/2-3 years is usually the standard cognac of the Cognac houses, often with 3 stars on the label, while VSOP is a softer and friendlier cognac with a minimum of 4 1/2 years of aging behind it. The designations XO, Napoléon, Très Vieux etc. guarantee that the cognac is at least 6 1/2 years old. Fine Champagne is a blend of cognac from the Grande and Petite areas, of which Petite must make up no more than 50%.

    It is the aging in the oak cask itself that gives the cognac soul and quality - and the prices are often based on how long the cognac has been in the cask.
    Varenr: 22227865491-35