| | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Boisset - La Famile des Grands Vins & Spiritueux
With an annual turnover in excess of €200 million, and fingers in many piles, the Boisset company is about as big as you will find in Burgundy, though actually it's not just Burgundy; other regions of France and even the US come onto the balance sheet. The business that is today headquartered in the former convent of the Ursuline order in Nuits St.Georges was started by Jean-Claude Boisset in the early 1960's. From a business idea to becoming the biggest buyer of grapes in whole of Burgundy took only thirty years; along the way, Boisset became the last resting place of many, many old burgundy names - not just the names of-course, but also a few libraries of old wines. So, while many old names were going to the wall, how did a newcomer manage to make such impact? Dynamism helps; rather than concentrating on making the best Gevrey or Meursault, Jean-Claude was always looking for new ways to do things, generally positioning his products for mass audiences. Clearly the organisation never had a reputation for producing wines of the highest quality, but their key skill - and major success factor - was the production of vast quantities of palatable wine with varietal character, many millions of litres sold per year stand as testament to this. Although Jean-Claude remains on the board of the company, today it is his son and daughter who hold the reigns - Jean-Charles and Nathalie. In terms of PR and marketing communications, the company is very slick indeed - better than any of their peers, and certainly better than many multi-national corporations. They do rather have the common corporate problem though - fantastic looking brochures, beautifully photographed and with perfect prose - but often with little real content! So what are we to make of the 'corporation' today, is it possible to separate the bulk approach from quality wine? - certainly it is - it was started by the foundation of Domaine de la Vougeraie in 1999. No expense was spared and the quality was undeniable - the aspirational pricing was also self evident, but here was a real commitment to quality. Then came Domaine Launay in Pommard, purchased by Boisset in 2001 then transformed to biodynamic farming, reduced yields and also overseen by Pascal Marchand - highly rated by Allen Meadows in 2002 and 2003. It came as a surprise then when this 'project' was shelved - reportedly due to poor profits - the surprise was doubled when Pascal and Boisset parted company in recent months. Herein was a conundrum for the 'newly' quality conscious Boisset, one side of this 'dispute' pointed only to cost cutting - the management, however, were silent. It does seem that the parting of Marchand from Boisset had many more facets than simple cost-cutting, but Domaine Launay do seem to have been sacrificed to profit. So what are the quality aspirations of J-C Boisset? Today they have what they call "Domaines Artisans et Terroirs" a collection of four 'domaines' where quality should be the watch-word - Jean-Claude Boisset, Vougeraie, Jaffelin, and Ropiteau - this is where we should look for the direction of today's Jean-Claude Boisset. The 'houses' below represent 15-20% of Boisset's total production from the Côte d'Or. From a quality perspective the wines range from exceptional to quite good - no bad trips here - quality can certainly be found within the 'Burgundy Corporation', let's just see how this develops... maison jean-claude boissetIt's interesting that one of the most innovative approaches comes from the name that everyone will associate with the über-négociant - perhaps that is indeed the intention. The young Grégory Patriat (ex Leroy) was hired in 2002 to run the show, and essentially given a free hand.Grégory has full control in the vineyards, the grapes only coming from growers where they have long-term contracts and organic cultivation. Very low yields, indigenous yeast, no pumping, little new oak, limited production - typically 2-10 barrels - many of the 2004's are limited to 1,000 bottles (3.5 barrels). It's not just synthetic yeasts that Grégory avoids, also completely verboten is the use of enzymes or powdered tannin - some chaptalisation may be used, but only on order to prolong fermentations. And while we're talking, why not break the mould some more - with his 2003's, Grégory was the first to bottle and sell top-growth burgundy with a screw-cap. In March I was lucky enough to taste with Grégory the wines that follow, and quite an impression they made too, no fat or oak flavours, just essence of wine. If this is what he can do with a vintage like 2004, be scared, be very scared, of what he might achieve with 2005!
domaine de la vougeraieThe last few months have doubtless been somewhat stressful for la Vougeraie - the sudden departure of their 'star wine-maker' has left a domaine in flux - I guess it was a bit of a shock for Amandine Terrier as she had only joined to work with Pascal Marchand in September. There is some continuity though in the form of Nicolas Jacob.Maybe it is the curse of Marchand, or perhaps the projection of that stress to the wines, but I was surprised to find that the least impressive performance from these 4 domaines, came from the wines of Vougeraie. For a vintage that is presenting itself in a similar way to 2001, and taking into account the great success for Vougeraie in 2001, then these wines presented themselves - in this context - in an average manner. Certainly some good wines, but occasionally with an unhelpful ashy character to them. The wines were tasted together with Amandine in March 2006.
Maison Ropiteau FrèresSince its founding in 1848, Ropiteau has always been in Meursault. The 24 year-old Jean Ropiteau from Monthélie was the founder, and close to 90 years later they bought the old Hospices de Meursault property that then belonged to the Hospices de Beaune - this has remained home to the business.A true 'maison', sales of wine both red and white emanate from this house, here we will look at a small selection of whites. I tasted the following wines with their maker - Nicolas Burnez - a tall, and obviously passionate man who searches for lightness of touch and typicité above all. Nicolas has been with Ropiteau for about 3 years, before that he had stints in Pommard and also with Joseph Drouhin. He holds up the wines of Jean-Marc Roulot as his perfect examples of Meursault. Always working with natural yeasts, he practised a small amount of battonage (3 times) on his 2004's, but currently plans none with his 2005's which will come from 8 different lieu-dits.
JaffelinBasically re-launched for the 2004 vintage, Jaffelin are based in the magnificent 12th century 'Caves du Chapitre' in Beaune which were acquired by Charles and Henri Jaffelin in 1920. The Jaffelins were 17th Century spirits merchants who broadened out into the world of wine production. The 'Caves' have only just come into the Boisset organisation from the remnants of the Jaffelin family.The wine-maker, Pierre Vincent works predominantly with regional wines, village and 1er cru wines - sometimes blended. Tasted with Pierre are, below, a selection of their 'Villages de Jaffelin' range that showcase less-illustrious appellations - though I'm not sure how that Beaune slipped in there - perhaps because they are based in Beaune!
|
Spring 2006
Layout & Text .[]. [..] m l xl Navigation: <<<... ...>>> home spring index ![]()
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| © burgundy-report.com, 2006. ISSN 1744-1307 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||