2023 Chateauneuf-du-Pape, Domaine du Vieux Telegraphe - an outright classic

Vieux Telegraphe

2023 Châteauneuf-du-Pape, Domaine du Vieux Télégraphe
an outright classic

Another incredibly classic wine from this domaine.
Jeb Dunnuck

2023 Châteauneuf-du-Pape, La Crau, Domaine du Vieux Télégraphe
£290 per 6 bottle case in bond



Vieux Télégraphe is one of the wines with which many clients have a strong affinity. It has long been a go-to Châteauneuf-du-Pape for so many – reliable, affordable and rewarding.

In a past role, I used to visit the Bruniers every year to taste at their cellars in Bédarrides, to the south-east of the vast Châteauneuf appellation. It was always a fascinating visit and gave me a greater understanding of the vintage at hand.

I haven’t visited them in years but received a vintage report from the estate just recently that made me take note once more. The Bruniers were never a family prone to overstatement and hype; I always found them honest and to the point.

So, what caught my eye in their vintage report?

Well, they described 2023, a vintage about which I am sure we will hear much more, as ‘at once classic and distinctive, unburdened by any kind of pressure or severe weather’. Today, heat and drought can cause problems as much as inclement weather. They told the tale of a wet spring, but one in which the Mistral blew for many days, keeping disease pressure away. After a hot and dry summer, they commented that the complex range of grape varieties contributing to a traditional Châteauneuf blend ripened at different times, leading to a protracted harvest period, stretching from August to October, but crucially ‘crop health was perfect and the winemaking went smoothly’. The Bruniers have always considered that wine is made in the vineyard and the efforts of the winemaker are to harness what nature has provided. They summarised by stating that the quality of 2023 reveals how resilient their terroirs are – this is a comment we are finding echoed by producers across Europe; vines have adapted to modern vintage conditions and have surprised those that have cared for them for generations. For the Bruniers, 2023 is characterised by excellent balance between acidity and maturity, between freshness and richness. Grenache, the pre-dominant variety in Châteauneuf, is not renowned for notable acidity, but even without analytically marked acidity, it can definitely capture freshness. The challenge in a climate such as the southern Rhône is achieving balance; in some vintages bold ripeness dominates to the detriment of balance, but in years such as 2023, the balance is such that the winemaker has the chance to make some special wines, and it would appear 2023 is one such vintage.

Please see Jeb Dunnuck’s note from October this year below. Jeb is something of an authority on the Rhône, having once reviewed the region for Robert Parker’s The Wine Advocate before launching his own review site. I personally like his notes and his comments on drink dates underline that these wines can easily be broached early, such is their style. It is worth noting that the Bruniers now employ a proportion of stems in the vinification, which certainly aid the perception of freshness, but as Nicolas Brunier has pointed out, this is not a new approach as stems were employed routinely generations back, before the initial purchase of a destemmer machine!



2023 Châteauneuf-du-Pape, La Crau, Domaine du Vieux Télégraphe
£290 per 6 bottle case in bond

95 points, Jeb Dunnuck, jebdunnuck.com
The classic 2023 Châteauneuf Du Pape checks in as 70% Grenache, 15% Mourvèdre, and 15% Syrah raised all in foudre. It's another incredibly classic wine from this domaine that has beautiful red fruit (cherries, framboise) as well as a mineral-laced array of garrigue, sappy flowers, and crushed stone. With medium to full-bodied richness, a pure, elegant mouthfeel, and building tannins, it will benefit from 2-4 years of bottle age and have two decades of overall longevity. 2026-2043.

Today, Domaine du Vieux Télégraphe is in the hands of the sixth generation. I used to visit the fifth! It is great to see this estate is continuing to adapt and is still making wines very much in the classic style that first drew me to them all those years ago. Next year, I’ll aim to revisit an estate that taught me so much about a region that has long since held my fascination.

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