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2023 Île de Beauté Rouge
Yves Leccia



Feeling inspired the other evening, I stopped by the neighborhood fish market on my way home. I was in the mood for a fun meal to pair with a bottle of Corsican red I had chilled in the fridge, so I picked up a dozen oysters and a few salmon collars. Both would be easy to throw on the grill, just in time for sunset. Here’s where you may be thinking, oysters and fish with red wine? And my resounding answer is, yes!
Yves Leccia’s juicy, quaffable rouge is an unexpected, but apt accompaniment to grilled oysters with a nugget of herby butter and dash of spice melted into each half-shell. Mostly Grenache with a bit of the island’s native Niellucciu, the bottle is loaded with fresh red berry fruit, finishing with wild, herbaceous maquis—a beautiful complement to each briny, buttery bite, and a delightful palate reset. The unctuous, crispy-skinned salmon collars were a fabulous follow-up course, but a number of grill-friendly items like sausage or spring produce will also find an inviting match in this bottle. It’s surprisingly light, reminiscent of Beaujolais (also featured in this collection), and it has a particular home-court advantage that I like to keep in mind: reds from seaside terroirs like Leccia’s, whose vines are just minutes from the Mediterranean, match exceptionally well with seafood. As we enter outdoor cooking season, now is the perfect time to get inspired to branch out from your usual oyster pairings… go rogue, and go rouge!
—Allyson Noman
Wine Type: | red |
Vintage: | 2023 |
Bottle Size: | 750mL |
Blend: | 80% Grenache 20% Niellucciu |
Appellation: | Vin de Pays de l’Île de Beauté |
Country: | France |
Region: | Corsica |
Producer: | Yves Leccia |
Winemaker: | Yves Leccia |
Vineyard: | Planted in 1994, 7.1 ha |
Soil: | Clay, Limestone, Schist |
Aging: | All red grapes are de-stemmed, then placed in stainless steel cuves for 12 to 15 days with daily pump-overs, then aged for 12 months |
Farming: | Organic (certified) |
Alcohol: | 14% |
More from this Producer or Region

2024 Vin de France Rouge “Sempre Cuntentu”
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As if a fistful of ripe summer fruit had been smooshed against a hot stone. The name is Corsican for “always happy,” and you’ll understand exactly why immediately upon pulling the cork.

2024 Vin de France Blanc “Faustine”
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2024 Vin de Corse “Le Rosé de Pauline”
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Delicate, ethereal aroma—gently floral. Rose water, citrus zest, blood orange. Round and airy on the palate. Bright, clean, pure. Crisp finish.

2024 Île de Beauté “Biancu Marinu”
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This Corsican delight is fully dry, aromatic, and playful with notes of lychee, citrus blossom, pomelo fruit, and a touch of sea breeze.

2024 Île de Beauté Blanc “E Croce”
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You’ll taste the salty sea breeze in this wine.

2022 Patrimonio Rouge “E Croce”
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Leccia's earthy, delicious island-mountain wine is fun, accessible and pairs with anything from fish stew to pasta to lounging in the park.

2019 Vin de France Blanc “Général de la Révolution”
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A nod to the island’s rich history of viticulture, the Général is simply a stunning bottle of white wine.

2021 Île de Beauté Biancu Gentile “L’Altru Biancu”
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It is the up-and-coming white Corsican grape, rapidly winning back the reputation it had earned so long ago.

2021 Corse Figari Blanc “Amphora”
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It has a purity and seamlessness—no angles or edges—and a feeling of weightlessness despite its broad, full-bodied, golden flesh.

2024 Île de Beauté Blanc
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Sun-ripened fruit, sea-mist salinity, and an alluring note of fresh herbs.

About The Producer
Yves Leccia
About The Region
Corsica
I first set foot on the island in 1980. I remember looking down from the airplane window seeing alpine forest and lakes and thinking, uh oh, I got on the wrong plane. Then suddenly I was looking down into the beautiful waters of the Mediterranean. Corsica is a small, impossibly tall island, the tail of the Alp chain rising out of the blue sea.—Kermit Lynch
Kermit’s first trip to the island proved fruitful, with his discovery of Clos Nicrosi’s Vermentino. More than thirty years later, the love affair with Corsica has only grown as we now import wines from ten domaines that cover the north, south, east, and west of what the French affectionately refer to as l’Île de Beauté.
Corsica is currently experiencing somewhat of a renaissance—interest has never been higher in the wines and much of this is due to growers focusing on indigenous and historical grapes found on the island. Niellucciu, Sciarcarellu, and Vermentinu are widely planted but it is now common to find bottlings of Biancu Gentile and Carcaghjolu Neru as well as blends with native varieties like Rossola Bianca, Minustellu, or Montaneccia.
As Kermit described above, Corsica has a strikingly mountainous landscape. The granite peaks top out above 9,000 feet. The terroir is predominantly granite with the exception of the Patrimonio appellation in the north, which has limestone, clay, and schist soils.The wines, much like their southern French counterparts make for great pairings with the local charcuterie, often made from Nustrale, the native wild boar, as well as Brocciu, the Corsican goats milk cheese that is best served within 48 hours of it being made.
More from Corsica or France
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Kermit once said...

Kermit once said...
If you're looking for value, look where no one else is looking.
Inspiring Thirst, page 211
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