Well, I suppose I deserve it for complaining about 10-12°C during the whole of November to February 😉
ouf!
By billn on March 09, 2016 #travels in burgundy 2016

Okay, perhaps not all the seasons – the amount of sun was a little more limited – but there was a little in Beaune today!
It seems bizarre that we have had 10-12°C for most of the winter, and then in the last days, flurries of snow – only a flurry this morning in Beaune and nothing remains. In the Côte de Nuits it was a little more than a flurry and all was white!
This time last year, it was more like 20°C…

A nice lineup this weekend:
1979 André Nudant, Corton-Charlemagne
Hmm – this is really not so dark a colour – I see more in some 2012s! Medium, medium-plus golden. The nose is wide, faintly sweet, citrussy pineapple, waxy, deep, lanolin and cream – very fine. Fresh, saline, modestly sweet, long, faintly creamy in the length – and it’s great length. I’ve had a few of these and every one was a little different, but no duds. Yum!
Rebuy – No Chance!
2000 Clos des Lambrays
Medium colour, starting to show a little age too. Hmm – this is nice – wide aromas that are deep, complex and seemingly well on the road to maturity. In the mouth it’s very similar, but modest of weight, modest of energy too – it was certainly much more interesting and involving a couple of years ago – or maybe it’s just this bottle to blame. Tasty, satisfying, good wine, but today, not really grand cru. I have a 2 or 3 more – it’s a hard choice, I’m considering drinking them over the next 18 months, but if all are only modestly involving, maybe better to just forget them for another 15 years 😉
Rebuy – Maybe
2010 Jean-Marc Bouley, Pommard 1er Fremiers
Decanted right from the start – Thomas usually has a bucket-load of CO2 in his wines. After about an hour, the dark, silky nose is opening just a little – but still only very modestly. Take a sip – and yum! This is wide, sleek, with a little muscle and plenty of energy. Lovely complex, dark red, almost black fruit – it plays a great tune on your tongue and in the finish. The whole table, directly prefers this to the more sombre Lambrays – I agree. Lovely, engaging wine – extra yum!
Rebuy – Yes

2013 Chezeaux, Gevrey-Chambertin 1er Lavaux St.Jacques
I guess that this will be the first of these vinified by Amèlie Berthaut…
Rather deeply coloured. Wide and sweet, the nose has a macerating black cherry note, very faintly accented with floral references. Large and intensely flavoured – almost black fruit. A subtle undertow of tannic texture, then another wave of flavour in the mid-palate. I’ve always been more of a fan of more red-fruited wines, but here is a sleek, super-tasty Gevrey – I think I should have opened the villages and saved this for a rainy day in 10 years – but such is life! Fine wine!
Rebuy – Yes

Or, as Erwan Faiveley described it “the inaguration of a renovation!”
Faiveley have spared few Euros in the last years, significantly repositioning themselves from ‘maison’ to ‘domaine’ and with attention to every detail too. Strategically, a very important and astute move for their future.
Today (Tuesday evening the 1st March, 2016) we are at their winery in Mercurey, La Framboisière, the subject of nearly 3 years and €3.5 millon of renovations – note that Faiveley have always been a significant domaine here, responsible for 70 hectares of vines and for the last 80 years too*.
The basic shell is the same as the part-finished project I visited to taste with winemaker Julien Bordet almost 1 year ago – but now all the illumination for the parking, the wood cladding and the chinz is also in position. Here there is now the feel of an important Champagne house, a far cry from the discreet, old, sometimes dour facilities of many parts of Mercurey. But all the other producers of Mercurey syndicat were invited to this opening too – maybe we are about 100 – and that’s important, because we have something here that should help push up the renown not just of Faiveley but of the whole appellation too. You might say that Faiveley can’t do it on their own, but it seems to me that they are prepared to try!
The mayor of Mercurey, Dominique Juillot, described the facility as “A totem of excellence at the entry of our village” – I agree! And the timing is not bad either, as Mercurey will also be the heart of the Saint Vincent next January…
*The Faiveley family has been present in the Côte Chalonnaise for 4 generations. Georges Faiveley first farmed the land in Mercurey in 1933. His son Guy then firmly established the Faiveley family in the Côte Chalonnaise with the purchase of Domaine Colcombet in 1963.
Edit-Quote: Faiveley.

48 domaines. Over 500 wines. Comment from their producers. The extra-special highlighted – as always.
https://wp.me/PjmsF-ajB
Of-course for subscribers, for the next 18 months, then everyone…
You are using an outdated browser. Please update your browser to view this website correctly: https://browsehappy.com/;