Patrick Baudouin took a circuitous route from city life to his final destination in the Côteaux du Layon. It was only in 1990, after twelve years of factory work and a stint selling books in Paris, that he decided to take over the estate his great-grandparents founded in the 1920s. Today, Patrick is shaking things up, where he is fighting to outlaw chaptalization for sweet wines. In collaboration with some of France's greatest wineries – he is working to promote a return to the founding values of the AOC system. The goal is to establish a trustworthy seal of origin andquality, rather than a mere guarantee of geographical origin with a bar set low enough for production requirements as to let pretty much everyone in.
60 year old Chenin vines grown on pure schist make this one of Patrick Baudouin's very best dry white wines. Expressive, mineral and very age worthy.
“Les Gâts” refers to fallow land, or terres gâtées. From the Celtic “Carn”, becoming “Garnes” or “Gâts”, signifying, essentially, a pile of stones. They believe that either a Celtic monument once stood here, or simply a heap of stones.