- Colour Red
- Producer Château La Mission Haut-Brion
- Region Pessac-Léognan
- Grape Cabernet Sauvignon / Merlot / Cabernet Franc
- Drinking 2000 - 2025
- Case size 12x75cl
- Available Now
1982 - Ch La Mission Haut Brion Cru Classé Pessac-Léognan - 12x75cl
- Colour Red
- Producer Château La Mission Haut-Brion
- Region Pessac-Léognan
- Grape Cabernet Sauvignon / Merlot / Cabernet Franc
- Drinking 2000 - 2025
- Case size 12x75cl
- Available Now
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This wine is currently only available Duty Paid
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Robert Parker, June 2000, Score: 99
An extraordinary effort that gets better with each tasting, this dark, murky, garnet/purple-colored 1982 exhibits a fabulously complex nose of hot bricks, asphalt, black fruits, tar, roast beef, and truffles, colossal concentration, super-ripeness, an unctuous texture, and low acidity. While still exceptionally youthful, this wine is powerful, dense, large-scaled, and intense. It is evolving at a snail's pace, but should continue to improve for another 10-15 years, and last for another three decades. A candidate for perfection! Drink 2010-2040
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Jancis Robinson, July 2002, Score: 18/20
An excellent bottle of this wine. Deeper, more intense colour than Haut Brion 1982. Blackish crimson. Thick, sweet and bloody. More opulent and arresting than Haut-Brion. Still some tannins on the finish but very, very ripe fruit. Real intensity. Drink 2004-2020
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Clive Coates, September 2002, Score: 18.5/20
Fullish, mature, vigorous colour. Rich,vigorous, virile yet mature nose. Full bodiedand rich on the palate. Still some structurehere. The tannins now absorbed but thewine is very vigorous. Lots of dimension.This is balanced, complex and classy. Veryfine. Now-2015+
Producer
Château La Mission Haut-Brion
Owned by the Dillon family since 1983, La Mission Haut Brion is without doubt one of the mostexceptional wines of Bordeaux. Across the road from Haut Brion, it regularly competes with its moreillustrious older sibling and has even outperformed Haut Brion in certain vintages, such as 2006 when Wine Spectator suggests that it "could be the wine of the vintage".
Region
Pessac-Léognan
Stretching from the rather unglamorous southern suburbs of Bordeaux, for 50 km along the left bank of the river Garonne, lies Graves. Named for its gravelly soil, a relic of Ice Age glaciers, this is the birthplace of claret, despatched from the Middle Ages onwards from the nearby quayside to England in vast quantities. It can feel as though Bordeaux is just about red wines, but some sensational white wines are produced in this area from a blend of sauvignon blanc, Semillon and, occasionally, muscadelle grapes, often fermented and aged in barrel. In particular, Domaine de Chevalier is renowned for its superbly complex whites, which continue to develop in bottle over decades. A premium appellation, Pessac-Leognan, was created in 1987 for the most prestigious terroirs within Graves. These are soils with exceptional drainage, made up of gravel terraces built up in layers over many millennia, and consequently thrive in mediocre vintages but are less likely to perform well in hotter years. These wines were appraised and graded in their own classification system in 1953 and updated in 1959, but, like the 1855 classification system, this should be regarded with caution and the wines must absolutely be assessed on their own current merits.