Wine Guide
Pierre Usseglio
An Italian in Provence? Making French wine? Quick, call the village elders, it must never happen! And yet it has. And not just any wine either: Pierre Usseglio make Chateauneuf du Pape of such singular quality that many a French wine maker should take notice. Blending Italian panache with French savoir-faire, if you don’t already know him, Pierre Usseglio is worth remembering.
Following in their father’s footsteps
Leaving his native Italy, in 1931 to work in the French vineyards, Francis Usseglio spent 15 years learning the trade (literally from the ground up) prior to buying his own parcel of land in 1948. Producing his first bottle in 1949, the wine was well received, but it was really six years later when Francis’ son Pierre joined the ranks that the business began making waves on the international circuit (Francis has another son, Raymond, who runs his own eponymous estate). Building on their father’s vision, Pierre’s sons Thierry and Jean-Pierre (who now runs the winery) have followed in their father’s footsteps and have propelled the wine to be one of the best in the region.
Quality over quantity
Known for the quality of their Chateauneuf du Papes blends, Pierre Usseglio owns 39-hectares, made up of 24 hectares of Châteauneuf-du-Pape red, 1 hectare de Châteauneuf-du-Pape white, 6 hectares de Lirac red, 6 hectares de Côtes-du-Rhône and 2 hectares de Vin de France, planted to approximately 80% Grenache, 10% Syrah, 5% Mourvedre, and 5% Cinsault. These blends have made both oenologues and critics alike take note: the high alcohol content (up to 18% in some cuvees) is indicative of the age of the vine (half of his vines are 65 years old, the other half are 40). Eight separate wines are produced, notably the Cuvee de Mon Aieul (Cuvee for my Ancestors) Reserve des Deux Freres and the Not for You! Annual production is 3,500 cases annually.
What wine to invest in?
This latter wine is the perfect benchmark for Chateauneuf du Pape - the wine has been climbing in popularity (and price) year on year. Among the highest-priced Southern Rhone Blends (Q2 2019 selling prices for the 2016 were approximately €350 a bottle, dropping from a peak of €460 in Q1 of the same year). Outside of Bordeaux, Pierre Usseglio, Chateauneuf Du Pape 2010 was the top wine traded by volume, while the Reserve des Deux Freres was given a 98/100 by Robert Parker for the 2006 vintage.
Notable facts and vintages
- 2017 Domaine Pierre Usseglio Tradition Blanc, Châteauneuf-du-Pape was one of Matt Wall’s top 18 picks for “Expert’s Choice: White Chateauneuf-du-Pape” in Decanter/January 2019.
- Aptly named “Not For You!” of the 400 bottles per (select few) vintages produced (2007, 2010 and 2017) not so much as one bottle is listed as available on wine-searcher in Q2 2019. This pricey and rare cuvee requires more than two years’ fermentation to dry the grapes’ high sugar content, produced from a tiny plot of 95-year-old Grenache vines in Les Grandes Serres. Robert Parker Wine Advocate gave the 2010 vintage a 98 point score, noting “this is more like an Amarone-styled wine”.
- 2010 Pierre Usseglio et Fils Chateauneuf-du-Pape Reserve des Deux Freres received 96 points from Robert Parker Wine Advocate, recommending at minimum 5-7 years cellaring and an ageing potential until 2047.