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Francis Darroze Blanche d'Armagnac 100% Ugni Blanc

The Darroze house brings a unique approach to Armagnac to the world of mixology . This unique aromatic profile will allow the most inventive bartenders and home mixologists alike to express themselves.

Ugni Blanc is a grape variety from Gascony. This grape is both used in distillation (over 50% of the distillation) and in the making of Côtes de Gascogne wines. It often brings balance and finesse.

May be enjoyed on its own or as a long drink with combinations like cucumber, elderflower or orgeat syrup.

This range of white Armagnac, virgin and unaged, favours purity and elegance. Appreciated as having more flavour than a Vodka, but without the heavy intensity of aromatics in Gin, this Blanche d'Armagnac is perfect in cocktails or straight.

Product of France

Product Information:

Colour: Clear
Nose: Straightforward, moderately intense, smooth and very delicate, with typical aromas (grape, plum, quince) and more surprising ones (fresh cane, cane sugar).
Palate: Dry, without sweetness, silky and still very delicate. Beautiful aromas of bitter almond, vine flower and raisin reinforce this finesse. Very long on the palate.
Alcohol Content: 49%
Volume: 700ml

About Darroze

Francis and Marc Darroze roamed the estates on the best terroirs, that of the Grand Bas Armagnac and its tawny sands, to select, raise and bottle the most beautiful discoveries. Around 30 estates contribute to this extraordinary collection that complete and perfect their ageing in the Roquefort and Labastide Armagnac cellars. Rare and ancient barrels, where the eaux-de-vies leave the alembic from a small property, distilled by a reputed mobile distiller and that demand several decades of subtle and careful ageing in oak barrels for 15 to 50 years in order to express the qualities of the place and the vintage. No other Armagnac house can offer such diversity, and just from the fairly small area of Grand Bas Armagnac.

The typical Armagnac farmer raises all the possible farm animals fed by many different crops plus a small vineyard the part production of which is distilled every year and aged in one or more barrels, which constitute the savings of the farm. A sick bull or a dying horse or tractor are repaired or replaced by the sale of a barrel. Multiply by the number of farms and years and you have the variety of the Darroze collection, so differentiated, because each farm is unique. Add to this no reduction , by water, only through ageing, no caramel colouring, the date of distillation and the date of bottling, because all that matters is the time spent in the barrel. Once in glass, nothing changes, nothing improves. A 1890 Armagnac bottled in 1900, is no better than a 2007 bottled in 2017, but collectors do not want you to know!