Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Michel Rolland

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Name
  
Michel Rolland

Movies
  
The Ways of Wine

Role
  
Consultant

Michel Rolland bulgarianwineradevtradecomwpcontentuploads20

Michel rolland on bordeaux 2008


Michel Rolland (born December 24, 1947 in Libourne, France) is an influential Bordeaux-based oenologist, with hundreds of clients across 13 countries and influencing wine style around the world. "It is his consultancies outside France that have set him apart from all but a handful of his countrymen." It is frequently addressed that his signature style, which he helps wineries achieve, is fruit-heavy and oak-influenced, a preference shared by influential critic Robert Parker.

Contents

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Rolland owns several properties in Bordeaux, including Chateau Le Bon Pasteur, Chateau Bertineau Saint-Vincent in Lalande de Pomerol, Chateau Rolland-Maillet in Saint-Emilion, Chateau Fontenil in Fronsac, and Chateau La Grande Clotte in Lussac-Saint-Emilion as well as joint venture partnerships with Bonne Nouvelle in South Africa, Val de Flores in Argentina, Rolland Galarreta in Spain and Yacochuya (Salta) and Clos de los Siete in Argentina.

Michel Rolland QampA Michel Rolland Wine Consultant Wine News amp Features

Michel Rolland : winemaker consultant (France)


Education and early career

Michel Rolland Satan or Savior Setting the Grape Standard New York Times

Born into a wine making family, Rolland grew up on the family's estate Chateau Le Bon Pasteur in Pomerol. After high school, Rolland enrolled at Tour Blanche Viticultural and Oenology school in Bordeaux with his father's encouragement. Excelling in his studies, he was one of five student chosen by director Jean-Pierre Navarre to evaluate the program's quality against that of the prestigious Bordeaux Oenology Institute. Rolland later enrolled in the Institute, where he met his wife and fellow oenologist, Dany Rolland, and graduated as part of the class of 1972.

Michel Rolland Rolland Riled Wine News amp Features winesearcher

At the Institute, Michel Rolland studied under the tutelage of renowned oenologists Pierre Sudraud, Pascal Ribereau-Gayon, Jean Ribereau-Gayon, and Emile Peynaud. Rolland has said these men were a great influence upon him and considers them the "Fathers of Modern Oenology."

Michel Rolland Chateau Fonplegade About Us People Michel Rolland

In 1973, Rolland and his wife bought into an oenology lab on the Right Bank of Bordeaux in the town of Libourne. They took over full control of the lab in 1976 and expanded it to include tasting rooms. By 2006 the Rolland's lab employed 8 full-time technicians, analyzing samples from nearly 800 wine estates in France each year. Rolland's two daughters, Stephanie & Marie, also work at the lab.

Michel Rolland Michel Rolland Discovers Malvasia Istriana from Croatia

Michel Rolland's first clients included the Bordeaux Chateaux Troplong Mondot, Angelus, and Beau-Sejour Becot. An early setback was the loss of two Saint-Emilion first growths, Chateau Canon and Chateau La Gaffeliere, due to conflict in style with the owners and Rolland. According to Rolland, the loss "calmed him down" and brought him out of an awkward stage in his early career. Twenty years later, the two chateaux returned to be part of the more than 100 wineries who employ Michel Rolland as their consultant.

Michel Rolland Connaissez vous Michel Rolland de Bordeaux

In his book Noble Rot: A Bordeaux Wine Revolution, William Echikson writes that before Michel Rolland became consultant to Chateau Lascombes, it "produced about 500,000 bottles of mediocre wine, about half of which was sold not as Lascombes itself, but as the inferior Chevalier de Lascombes." Today, Echikson contends, that even the Chevalier (the second wine of the estate) is better than the old full-fledged Lascombes.

Media exposure

Rolland features prominently in the critical 2004 documentary Mondovino by Jonathan Nossiter as an agent of wine globalization. In Mondovino, Rolland is seen on several occasions advising his clients to microoxygenate their wines, including a scene at Chateau Le Gay in Bordeaux. Since the film, Rolland has said that he is "not a fan of microoxygenation. The film suggests I am. Some of my clients inquire about it. It can help in special conditions — if the tannins are fierce or hard, micro-oxygenation can make them softer and rounder. In certain countries with certain terroir, like Chile or Argentina, I may use it." James Suckling, formerly of Wine Spectator, notes in an article about Rolland that "He is not a proponent of micro-oxidation in wine-making as some suggest, and never has been".

Michel Rolland is also a wine making consultant for the Amphorae Winery in Israel (marketed as Makura in the United States) and has started signing his name to their premium Makura series. He visits Amphorae and their vineyards once a year and has his assistants throughout the year help implement his practices adopted by Amphorae's wine making team at the winery and in their vineyards.

Rolland is among the wine personalities satirised next to Robert Parker in the 2010 bande dessinee comic book, Robert Parker: Les Sept Peches capiteux.

Influence

From his consulting work and media presence, Michel Rolland has influenced many aspects of both the French and global wine industry. Among the prominent wine personalities that have been influenced by Rolland is the Rhone wine producer Jean-Luc Colombo.

Bordeaux vineyards under Rolland influence

Rolland holds decisive roles (such as owner, cellar master, oenologist, consultant) in a number of vineyards in Bordeaux. These include : Angelus, St-Emilion GC; Armens, St-Emilion GC; Ausone, St-Emilion GC; Beauregard, Pomerol; Bellefont-Belcier, St-Emilion GC; Bellevue Mondotte, St-Emilion GC; Blason de l'Evangile, Pomerol; le Bon Pasteur, Pomerol; Bonalgue, Pomerol; Branas Grand Poujeaux, Moulis; Brillette, Moulis; de Camensac, Haut-Medoc; Cap de Faugeres, Cotes de Castillon; Certan de May de Certan, Pomerol; Chapelle d'Ausone, St-Emilion GC; Clarke, Listrac-Medoc; la Clemence, Pomerol; Clement-Pichon, Haut-Medoc; Clinet, Pomerol; Clos des Jacobins, St-Emilion GC; Clos du Clocher, Pomerol; Clos l'Eglise, Pomerol; Clos les Lunelles, Cotes de Castillon; Clos Saint-Martin, St-Emilion GC; la Commanderie de Mazeyres, Pomerol; Corbin, St-Emilion GC; Cote de Baleau, St-Emilion GC; la Couspaude, St-Emilion GC; le Crock, St-Estephe; Croix de Labrie, St-Emilion GC; Destieux, St-Emilion GC; Destieux, St-Emilion GC; la Dominique, St-Emilion GC; l'Evangile, Pomerol; Faugeres, St-Emilion GC; Faugeres Cuvee Peby, St-Emilion GC; la Fleur de Bouard, Lalande de Pomerol; la Fleur de Gay, Pomerol; Fombrauge, St-Emilion GC; Fontenil, Fronsac; Franc-Mayne, St-Emilion GC; la Garde, Pessac-Leognan; le Gay, Pomerol; Giscours, Margaux; Grand Mayne, St-Emilion GC; Grand Ormeau, Lalande de Pomerol; Grand-Pontet, St-Emilion GC; les Grandes Murailles, St-Emilion GC; les Grands Chenes, Medoc; la Graviere, Lalande de Pomerol; Jean de Gue, Lalande de Pomerol; Kirwan, Margaux; Larmande, St-Emilion GC; Larrivet-Haut-Brion, Pessac-Leognan; Lascombes, Margaux; Latour-Martillac, Pessac-Leognan; Leoville-Poyferre, St-Julien; Loudenne, Medoc; Magrez-Fombrauge, St-Emilion GC; Malartic-Lagraviere, Pessac-Leognan; Malescot-Saint-Exupery, Margaux; Monbousquet, St-Emilion GC; Pape Clement, Pessac-Leognan; Pavie, St-Emilion GC; Peby Faugeres, St-Emilion GC; Petit Village, Pomerol; Phelan-Segur, St-Estephe; le Plus de la Fleur de Bouard, Lalande de Pomerol; Pontet-Canet, Pauillac; Ripeau, St-Emilion GC; Rochebelle, St-Emilion GC; Rouget, Pomerol; la Serenite, Pessac-Leognan; Smith Haut Lafitte, Pessac-Leognan; la Tour-Carnet, Haut-Medoc; Troplong-Mondot, St-Emilion GC; de Valandraud, St-Emilion GC; la Violette, Pomerol; Virginie de Valandraud, St-Emilion GC;

References

Michel Rolland Wikipedia