Wine Guide
Producers
Alter Ego de Palmer Carillon d’Angelus Carruades de Lafite Château Angélus Château Ausone Château Belgrave Château Calon-Ségur Château Cantemerle Château Cantenac Brown Château Climens Château Clinet Château Cos Labory Château Cos d’Estournel Château Coutet Château de Camensac Château de Ferrand Château de Fieuzal Château d’Yquem Château Ducru Beaucaillou Château-Figeac Château Fleur Cardinale Château Fombrauge Château Giscours Château Grand-Puy-Lacoste Château Gruaud-Larose Château Haut Bages Libéral Château Haut Batailley Château Haut-Brion Château Haut-Marbuzet Château Kirwan Château La Fleur Petrus Château Lagrange Château La Gurgue Château La Mission Haut Brion Château Lafite Rothschild Château Lanessan Château Langoa Barton Château Larrivet Haut Brion Château Latour Château La Tour Carnet Château Latour Martillac Château Léoville Las Cases Château Léoville Barton Château Léoville-Poyferré Château L'Evangile Château Les Grands Chênes Château Lynch-Bages Château Malescasse Château Margaux Château Marquis d’Alesme Château Maucaillou Château Monbousquet Château Montrose Château Mouton Rothschild Château Palmer Château Pape Clément Château Pavie Château Pédesclaux Château Pétrus Château Phélan Ségur Château Pichon-Longueville Baron Château Pichon-Longueville Comtesse de Lalande Château Pontet-Canet Château Pouget Château Poujeaux Château Rauzan-Ségla Château Rieussec Château Sigalas-Rabaud Château Taillefer Château Talbot Cheval Blanc Echo Lynch Bages Le Petit Mouton Marquis de Calon Pagodes de Cos Petit Haut Lafitte Vieux Château Certan
Producers
Carruades de Lafite
Some things in life are so eternally cool that they need only one name. Converse. Coke. Elvis. Madonna - no one ever mentions the All Stars, the a-Cola,the Presley or the Ciccone that should rightly follow. And Lafite is the Elvis of the wine world. The Rosthchild, that would normally come after Lafite is just that - an afterthought. Because Lafite, my friends, is one of le best.
Merlot magic in a bottle
But we are not here to talk about Chateau Lafite. Move over and make way for the estate’s younger and sexier brother: Carruades de Lafite. This second wine scores consistently high, rivalling some first growths, and embodies the excellence of the Lafitte spirit admirably. Full bodied? Yes. Elegant? Yes. Significant ageing potential? Oh, yes. However, while Carruades de Lafite might present certain similar characteristics to the Grand Vin, it very much has its own personality. This is due to the higher proportion of Merlot and to specific plots that are used to produce Carruades.
Name change = game change
Lafite is the Gascon term "la hite" meaning "small hill". The name Carruades comes from the plateau where the grapes are grown, a group of plots acquired in 1845 just next to the vines on the Château hilltop. Carraudes was marketed separately in the 20th century from the Lafite stable, under the name of Moulin des Carruades. It became Carruades de Lafite in the 1980s, a fact worth knowing if you are looking for 30+ year old vintages. The terroir, so important when investing in wine of this calibre is good, very close to the character of the great premier crus classe for which the chateau is known. However, Carrudes enjoys a 50 to 70% Cabernet Sauvignon, 30 to 50% Merlot varietal and includes anything from 0 to 5% Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot.
First growth quality for second best prices
One of the main differences between Carruades and Lafite proper is that Carruades is aged for 16-20 months, 80% of which is in oak barrels (but only 10% of these are new). This is versus a longer aging process for the first wine, (80-20 months) in 100% new oak barrels. Yields are also higher: Carruades' yield is around 20,000 cases, the Premier Cru averages 16,000. Carruades makes up for around a third of Lafite’s production.
Notable facts and vintages
  • 2016s vintage scored 92/100 by the Wine Advocate, with James Suckling adding it was: “Full-bodied, big and powerful. Very, very long”. And wondering if the chateau were going in a “new style?”.
  • Wine Critic Antonio Galloni of Vinous gave 2010s vintage 89/100, while Wine Advocate was slightly more generous with 92/100 points. The wine won two stars by Le Guide Hachette des Vins that year too. Suggested drinking time is between 2020 and 2030, meaning this is a short to medium term investment vintage.
  • 2009s vintage scored a whopping 93/100 from Robert Parker, but scored slightly less (a very respectable 92/100) on aggregate scoring. Currently trading at €288/bottle on the Vindome.net trading platform, the vintage has shown slow but steady growth over the past 18-months.