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Les Baux de Provence Olive Oil “Les Baux”
Moulin Jean-Marie Cornille
Some tasters consider this Provence’s finest olive oil. I haven’t tasted enough of the others to have an opinion. All I can say is that I fell in love with the stuff in my kitchen in France and started importing it so I would have some here, too. It is from Maussane, Van Gogh country, near Arles. Made with mature black olives, the most buttery and decadent oil we import.
—Kermit Lynch
| Wine Type: | grocery |
| Bottle Size: | 1L |
| Appellation: | Vallée des Baux de Provence AOP |
| Region: | Provence |
| Farming: | Lutte Raisonnée |
More from this Producer or Region
Les Baux de Provence Olive Oil “Les Baux”
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Made with mature black olives, the most buttery and decadent oil we import.
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Here is a full-bodied dose of Terrebrune terroir you can enjoy over the next thirty years.
2022 Alpilles Blanc “Clairette”
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Clairette—a name which translated means clear and bright. The wine certainly is, and at the same time, lush and nervy.
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About The Region
Provence
There is perhaps no region more closely aligned with the history of Kermit Lynch Wine Merchant than Provence. While Kermit began his career as a Burgundy specialist, he soon fell in love with Provence and its wines, notably the legendary Bandols of Domaine Tempier, which he began importing in 1977. He later began living in the area part-time, returning frequently between tasting trips, and today he spends most of his time at his home just outside of Bandol.
Provence is thought to be France’s most ancient wine region, established when Greek settlers landed in the modern-day port city of Marseille in the 6th century BC. The conditions here are ideal for cultivation of the grapevine, with a hot, dry climate and a prevalence of poor, rocky soils, primarily limestone-based, suitable for vines and not much else. The ever-present southern sunshine as well as the mistral, a cold, drying wind from the northwest that helps keep the vines free of disease, are crucial elements of Provençal terroir. Wild herbs from the pervasive scrubland, called garrigue, and cooling saline breezes from the Mediterranean also contribute to the quality and character of wines in all three colors.
Provence is well known for its rosés, but red wines have always held importance here. The very best, such as those from Bandol, possess great depth and a capacity for long-term aging. The white wines, notably those of Cassis, offer weight balanced by a maritime freshness, making them ideal pairings for the local seafood. Mourvèdre reigns king for red grapes, supported mainly by Grenache and Cinsault, while Clairette, Marsanne, Rolle, and Ugni Blanc are the region’s principal white grapes.
More from Provence or
2023 Alpilles Blanc “Jaspe”
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2023 Bandol Rosé HALF BOTTLE
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2021 Bandol Rouge
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2023 Bandol Rouge “Lulu et Lucien”
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2023 Bandol Rouge
“La Migoua”
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2021 Bandol Rouge
“La Tourtine”
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2021 Côtes de Provence Rouge
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2024 Alpilles Rouge “Cinsault”
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2022 Alpilles Rouge “Grenache”
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2021 Bandol Rouge “Lulu et Lucien” MAGNUM
Domaine Tempier France | Provence
2024 Bandol Rosé
Domaine de Terrebrune France | Provence
2021 Côtes de Provence Syrah “Les Planches de la Garedivole”
Clos Saint-Joseph France | Provence
2023 Alpilles Blanc “Jaspe”
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2023 Bandol Rosé HALF BOTTLE
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2021 Bandol Rouge
“La Migoua”
Domaine Tempier France | Provence
2023 Bandol Rouge “Lulu et Lucien”
Domaine Tempier France | Provence
2023 Bandol Rouge
“La Migoua”
Domaine Tempier France | Provence
2021 Bandol Rouge
“La Tourtine”
Domaine Tempier France | Provence
2021 Côtes de Provence Rouge
Clos Saint-Joseph France | Provence
2024 Alpilles Rouge “Cinsault”
Domaine Hauvette France | Provence
2022 Alpilles Rouge “Grenache”
Domaine Hauvette France | Provence
2021 Bandol Rouge “Lulu et Lucien” MAGNUM
Domaine Tempier France | Provence
2024 Bandol Rosé
Domaine de Terrebrune France | Provence
2021 Côtes de Provence Syrah “Les Planches de la Garedivole”
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Where the newsletter started
Where the newsletter started
Every three or four months I would send my clients a cheaply made list of my inventory, but it began to dawn on me that business did not pick up afterwards. It occurred to me that my clientele might not know what Château Grillet is, either. One month in 1974 I had an especially esoteric collection of wines arriving, so I decided to put a short explanation about each wine into my price list, to try and let my clients know what to expect when they uncorked a bottle. The day after I mailed that brochure, people showed up at the shop, and that is how these little propaganda pieces for fine wine were born.—Kermit Lynch