Growers / France / Loire Valley / Anjou-Saumur-Touraine / Château de l’Éperonnière

Château de l’Éperonnière

Mathieu Tijou, son of Pierre-Yves and Brigitte, established his domaine at Eperonniere and launched his career as independent vigneron with the 2007 vintage.


A few years ago, the Tijou family, proprietaires for several generations of the Chateau Soucherie in Beaufort-sur-Layon, decided to sell their property and effectively exchange the larger domaine of Soucherie for the smaller estate just down the road, Chateau de l’Eperonniere, which was also in the family for many generations. Mathieu Tijou, son of Pierre-Yves and Brigitte, established his domaine at Eperonniere and launched his career as independent vigneron with the 2007 vintage. This is a particularly pleasing development for us as we had worked vintage-to-vintage with his father at Soucherie for over twenty-five years, having commenced our relationship in 1982 by importing the 1980 vintage.

Mathieu and his wife, Charlotte, have renovated this spectacular property with impeccable taste, respecting the traditional architecture and, in fact, using the finest artisanal labor to repair one of the wooden ceilings in the chai that dates back to the thirteenth century.

The vineyards are sited on both sides of the Loire and overlook the Layon. Mathieu owns the “Croix Picot” vineyard in the Savennieres appellation and the remaining vineyards around the Chateau are in the Anjou and Coteaux du Layon appellations.

Man in field with grapes textured background of dirt

Mathieu owns the “Croix Picot” vineyard in the Savennieres appellation and the remaining vineyards around the Chateau are in the Anjou and Coteaux du Layon appellations.

Farming

In organic conversion

Treatments

No herbicide for c. 5 years and movement away from synthetic treatments to copper-sulfate

Ploughing

Annual ploughing to maintain vineyard health

Soils

Schist/shale, clay, sandstone, flint, and limestone

Vines

Trained in Gobelet and in Guyot and planted at c. 5,000 vines/ha, vines average 15-20 years old.

Yields

Controlled through pruning, debudding, and green harvesting, yields average 75-80 hl/ha.

Harvest

Savennières and Crémant are harvested manually, Rosé is harvested mechanically, usually from September to early October.

PURCHASING

Entirely estate fruit. (Crémant de Loire vinified off-site from estate fruit)

Fermentation

Savennières ferments with indigenous yeasts in neutral barriques. Other wines ferment with selected yeasts in stainless-steel tanks.

Extraction

White wines see bâtonnage only to counter reduction.

Chaptalization

Chaptalization when necessary

Pressing

Whole-cluster direct pneumatic pressing for all wines

Malolactic Fermentation

Blocked by wines’ naturally high acidities

Élevage

Savennières spends c. 12 months in neutral barriques. Other wines age 6 months in stainless-steel tanks.

LEeS

Wines are racked following alcoholic fermentation and remain on their fine lees until assemblage prior to bottling. Crémant remains sur lattes c. 36 months.

FINING & FILTRATION

Wines are fined with bentonite and see plate filtration.

SULFUR

Applied at rackings and at bottling

Farming

In organic conversion

Treatments

No herbicide for c. 5 years and movement away from synthetic treatments to copper-sulfate

Ploughing

Annual ploughing to maintain vineyard health

Soils

Schist/shale, clay, sandstone, flint, and limestone

Vines

Trained in Gobelet and in Guyot and planted at c. 5,000 vines/ha, vines average 15-20 years old.

Yields

Controlled through pruning, debudding, and green harvesting, yields average 75-80 hl/ha.

Harvest

Savennières and Crémant are harvested manually, Rosé is harvested mechanically, usually from September to early October.

PURCHASING

Entirely estate fruit. (Crémant de Loire vinified off-site from estate fruit)

Fermentation

Savennières ferments with indigenous yeasts in neutral barriques. Other wines ferment with selected yeasts in stainless-steel tanks.

Extraction

White wines see bâtonnage only to counter reduction.

Chaptalization

Chaptalization when necessary

Pressing

Whole-cluster direct pneumatic pressing for all wines

Malolactic Fermentation

Blocked by wines’ naturally high acidities

Élevage

Savennières spends c. 12 months in neutral barriques. Other wines age 6 months in stainless-steel tanks.

Lees

Wines are racked following alcoholic fermentation and remain on their fine lees until assemblage prior to bottling. Crémant remains sur lattes c. 36 months.

Fining & Filtration

Wines are fined with bentonite and see plate filtration.

Sulfur

Applied at rackings and at bottling

Growers