x

EN PRIMEUR

This product is currently en primeur status. Effectively, it's a pre-order with payment required now and stock will be delivered up to 18 months later.
For more detailed arrival times please contact the store.

Mouton Rothschild 1970 1500ml - minor label damage

BOTTLE:
$3,000.00
In stock
SKU
95317
HALF-DOZEN: $17,100.00 or $2,850.00 each
DOZEN: $32,400.00 or $2,700.00 each

Item(s) will be sent packaged in a gift box. Please remember, once enclosed you will be unable to see the contents of the package.

Choose the Gift Wrap

    • Prince Wine Store Gift wrapping - FREE

      Prince Wine Store Gift wrapping - FREE

      Free

      Prince Wine Store gift wrapping using our David Band designed paper

    • Single Bottle wooden wine box - $20

      Single Bottle wooden wine box - $20

      $20.00

      Single bottle wooden wine box with wood wool - clear lid and can be wrapped

    • Double wooden wine box - $27

      Double wooden wine box - $27

      $27.00

      Two bottle wooden wine box with clear lid and wood wool

  • Please check and confirm the chosen wrapping

    Gift Wrap added

    The stock levels below show only what is in stock at our stores right now.
    Most times we can often order extra to fulfill any order so please, order the amount you want and we’ll let you know if we can get fill the order asap.

    Stock Availability:
    0 qty Warehouse
    0 qty South Melbourne
    1 qty Sydney
    Country: France
    Region: Bordeaux
    Size: BTL
    Vintage: 1981

    1 AVAILABLE

    I have had a remarkable number of opportunities to taste this wine. One of the most frustratingly irregular wines I have ever encountered, the 1970 Mouton can range from pure nectar, to a wine that is angular, austere, and frightfully hard and tannic. This bottle (one of the Reserve du Chateau bottlings that was mistakenly released by the estate and labeled with the letters R.C., rather than a number) was impossible to assess when decanted, given its hard, tough, impenetrable style. Nearly eight hours later, the wine had opened magnificently to reveal a classic bouquet of sweet cassis, tobacco, minerals, and exotic spice aromas. Opulent, full-bodied, thick, and juicy, the extraordinary evolution of this particular bottle would make a persuasive argument for long-term decanting. After being perplexed throughout much of this wine's evolution, I was reassured by this bottle. No doubt Mouton's high Cabernet Sauvignon content causes this wine to go through a tight, hard, ungenerous stage, and the 1970 requires 5-7 more years of cellaring. ROBERT PARKER