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2025 Jasnières “Cuvée du Silex”
Pascal Janvier
About a one-hour drive north of the famed château-studded Touraine region, Jasnières is one of Chenin’s coolest sites. Over the last three decades, Pascal Janvier has set a high bar for the appellation, thanks to his consistently beautiful Chenins, like this Silex, which achieves an incredible balance of honeyed lushness and chiseled minerality. Serve it at apéro hour alongside your favorite goat cheese.
—Tom Wolf
| Wine Type: | white |
| Vintage: | 2025 |
| Bottle Size: | 750mL |
| Blend: | Chenin Blanc |
| Appellation: | Coteaux du Loir |
| Country: | France |
| Region: | Loire |
| Producer: | Pascal Janvier |
| Winemaker: | Pascal Janvier |
| Vineyard: | 35 - 40 years, 6 ha |
| Soil: | Clay, Flint, Limestone |
| Aging: | Another racking takes place after fermentation, then the wines age for a few more months before bottling |
| Farming: | Lutte Raisonnée |
| Alcohol: | 13% |
More from this Producer or Region
2017 Jasnières “Chant de Vigne”
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A single-vineyard bottling whose age lends a soft, drawn butter richness to its bright, tart citrus palate.
2022 Chinon “Cuvée Terroir”
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2024 Coteaux du Loir Rouge “Cuvée du Rosier”
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2023 Sancerre Rouge
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2025 Jasnières
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Racy, exotically perfumed, and loaded with minerality, this wine is an excellent representation of how Chenin reacts to the local conditions.
2021 Vin de France Blanc “Chenin Centenaire”
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Fermented and aged in barrel and bottled unfiltered, it features a delightful kiss of oak on the long, bracing, mouth-watering finish.
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2022 Jasnières “Cuvée Sainte Narcisse”
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2025 Coteaux du Loir Blanc
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2020 Chinon “Clos du Chêne Vert”
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Chinons from Joguet are known for their firm minerality, but this one is quite charming as well, with plummy black fruit and notes of licorice.
About The Producer
Pascal Janvier
About The Region
Loire
The defining feature of the Loire Valley, not surprisingly, is the Loire River. As the longest river in France, spanning more than 600 miles, this river connects seemingly disparate wine regions. Why else would Sancerre, with its Kimmeridgian limestone terroir be connected to Muscadet, an appellation that is 250 miles away?
Secondary in relevance to the historical, climatic, environmental, and cultural importance of the river are the wines and châteaux of the Jardin de la France. The kings and nobility of France built many hundreds of châteaux in the Loire but wine preceded the arrival of the noblesse and has since out-lived them as well.
Diversity abounds in the Loire. The aforementioned Kimmeridgian limestone of Sancerre is also found in Chablis. Chinon, Bourgueil, and Saumur boast the presence of tuffeau, a type of limestone unique to the Loire that has a yellowish tinge and a chalky texture. Savennières has schist, while Muscadet has volcanic, granite, and serpentinite based soils. In addition to geologic diversity, many, grape varieties are grown there too: Cabernet Franc, Chenin Blanc, Sauvignon Blanc, and Melon de Bourgogne are most prevalent, but (to name a few) Pinot Gris, Grolleau, Pinot Noir, Pineau d’Aunis, and Folle Blanche are also planted. These myriad of viticultural influences leads to the high quality production of every type of wine: red, white, rosé, sparkling, and dessert.
Like the Rhône and Provence, some of Kermit’s first imports came from the Loire, most notably the wines of Charles Joguet and Château d’Epiré—two producers who are featured in Kermit’s book Adventures on the Wine Route and with whom we still work today.
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2025 Sancerre
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2024 Chinon “Beaux Monts”
Catherine & Pierre Breton France | Loire
Vouvray Brut
Champalou France | Loire
2025 Sancerre Rosé
Hippolyte Reverdy France | Loire
2025 Sancerre Rosé
Domaine Roger Neveu France | Loire
2023 Saumur Blanc “L’Échelier”
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2023 Quincy “Vieilles Vignes”
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Kermit once said...
Kermit once said...
For the wines that I buy I insist that the winemaker leave them whole, intact. I go into the cellars now and select specific barrels or cuvées, and I request that they be bottled without stripping them with filters or other devices. This means that many of our wines will arrive with a smudge of sediment and will throw a more important deposit as time goes by, It also means the wine will taste better.