Hmnnn.
How dry is this wine ? To my mind / palate / feel, this style should not be overly dry, if it is to be beautiful.
Shez, TBH, that oak would be too heavy for me with a very dominant sauvignon blanc or a / 5% Sem in the mix.
Ch. Clos Floridène, had much more ancient vine Semilion (80 plus years) in the mix and much less oak. I don't remember Smith Haut Lafitte having so much oak in the cuvee' but that was a very long time ago, and at £60 + a bottle these days, I'm not able to check my fleeting memory of this notable Pessac. The SB fruit lift could fade as the wine evolves - Have you drunk any Te Koko recently ?
I dont remember Lurton's La Louviere' being oaky per se, and the last one we had, we drunk as an appero, as you would a very light fino appetiser.
It is as well to know, the level of oak in a wine, and we all have our preferences, and ways of qualifying our opinion.
For me Chardonnay, Semilion and Chenin make happier bedfellows with oak, But I hold ole fashioned experience, with an ole fashioned palate, so I'm way off beam with these wines today.
I can't afford good Pessac anymore, so I don't know recent developments in the style that Roquefort is trying to emulate
