- Home/
- Wine Directory/
- France/
- Bordeaux/
- 2013 Chateau Latour Premier Cru Classe, Pauillac
$TOUR
2013 Chateau Latour Premier Cru Classe, Pauillac
Bottle size (ML)
Current price
Start Your Wine Collection with 2013 Chateau Latour Premier Cru Classe, Pauillac
- Begin your portfolio with a prestigious wine that has a history of growth.
- Enjoy fully managed, secure storage facilities with insurance coverage.
- Get expert advice on when to hold and when to sell.
Classifications schmassifications. This wine overachieves relative to its class.
6.5% of All Producers of Fine Wine Vinovest 100Part of our index that tracks the 100 most investment-worthy wines in the world
11.6% of All Producers of Fine Wine 1st GrowthThe highest ranking for Bordeaux wine
0.7% of Fine Wine Producers in RegionCritics Scores
James Suckling
Aromas of blackberry, dark chocolate and cedar yet bright and fragrant. Full body yet tight and polished. It starts off and then slowly grows on the palate with wonderful dimension of complexity and polished tannins. Better in 2022 but already so impressive.
Wine Spectator
This delivers a very tightly focused beam of red currant, pomegranate and bitter plum fruit flavors that streak along thanks to finely beaded acidity, showing a hint of graphite through the finish and a beguiling black tea accent. Reveals a lovely sense of precision, maintaining cut through the sneakily long finish. Best from 2017 through 2025. 5,625 cases made.
Robert Parker's Wine Advocate
Composed of 95.2 Cabernet Sauvignon, 4.4 Merlot and 0.4 Petit Verdot, the 2013 Latour offers an open-knit, fragrant nose of licorice, sandalwood, rose petals and cigar box over a core of Black Forest cake, stewed plums, mulberries and redcurrant jelly, plus a waft of cast-iron pan. The elegantly styled, medium-bodied palate (13 alcohol) fills the mouth with intense red and black berry preserves layers, framed by evolved, soft-textured tannins and well-knit freshness, finishing long and spicy. This vintage does not have the power and backbone of an outstanding vintage of Latour, but it is aging gracefully and, still possessing a lot of discernible fruit with plenty of tertiary pizazz, is absolutely delicious to drink right now. This sweet-spot stage is likely to continue for another 5-7 years, before the wine plateaus at a maturity peak and holds for a further 15+ years.