Entries from June 2018

weekend wines – week 23 2018

By billn on June 11, 2018 #degustation


I see that Chézeaux have reverted to the slightly different 1990s labels with the faint image of the family house in the Clos de Chézeaux in Gevrey-Chambertin…

2015 des Chézeaux / Ponsot, Griotte-Chambertin
Hmm, for a 2015 there’s a lot of freshness here – a silky, round fruit is more reticent but present. In the mouth this remains a wine of surprises with its fine acidity and a much more mineral stance than I usually see. Very fine, mouth-watering, long-reaching flavours that are modest but impressively long. A wine that will age and age and at the same time shows none of the excesses of the vintage. Should I mark it down for being non-standard? I think not – returning 3 hours later to the the last third of the bottle, the air has made quite some changes to this wine; now I might consider the word opulent – for both aroma and palate – yet there is still agreat line of acidity. Bravo – but be patient or make a long carafe…
Rebuy – Yes

2015 des Chézeaux / Berthaut-Gerbet, Gevrey-Chambertin
Lots of colour. A nose that goes very deep, silky and accented with spice. Round and like the nose, very silky. Dark fruited yet still with plenty of freshness, much more composed than the 2014 drunk a week-or-so ago. Modest width in the mid and finishing flavour, modest intensity too, but still with good length. All-in-all, a wine that’s very tasty and also very easy to drink – certainly more accessible directly from opening versus the Griotte. Lovely!
Rebuy – Yes

a few grand cru views from yesterday…

By billn on June 07, 2018 #travels in burgundy 2018

Firstly, in Gevrey:
 


Then in Morey:

a few weekend wines – week 22 2018

By billn on June 06, 2018 #degustation

2014 Françoise André, Savigny-lès-Beaune 1er Les Vergelesses
There’s a little curl of vanilla to what is otherwise a nice line of aromatic freshness with faint lime citrus. A sheen of fresh minerality over the palate – again accented with vanilla – but it’s a much fainter accent than the nose. Lovely incisive minerality. Fresh and clean as a whistle – yum!
Rebuy – Yes

2008 Albert Bichot, Latricières-Chambertin
Hmm, this is rather good – deep, pure dark fruit that slowly shows a purity of wild strawberry, just starting to show a little age-related complexity too. Ooh – this is sleek and very-much acid-driven – there’s a little mouth-puckering here when the wine is cool – a little less-so as it warms in the glass – a little! I’m an acid-lover and so this is okay for me – it avoids crossing my own line – but many of you may disagree!
Rebuy – Maybe

2014 des Chézeaux / Berthaut-Gerbet, Gevrey-Chambertin
Medium, medium-plus colour. Good aromatic depth with a little dark stone fruit, faint Kirsch and a hint of pyrazine. Ooh – this has a super width of flavour good line and though with plenty of herb, almost pyrazine again – but balanced with creamy depth of flavour. The line ingrains into your palate making this exceptionally long for a villages! Complex, kirsch-fruited and herby, but engrossing. I wish all wines would have such character!
Rebuy – Maybe

2000 Thomas-Moillard, Romanée St.Vivant
Ooh – what a great nose – classically spicy, with extra age-related complexity – yes! In the mouth this is a little more rustic, perhaps a little mineral too – it’s relatively young – unlike the nose which could hardly be better. You should never drink a TM less than 20 years old, but this was half great!
Rebuy – Maybe

2015 Louis Max, Rully Les Plantenays
A round and almost textured nose – a little oak too. In the mouth it’s like the nose – a depth fine texture, richness and a little oak too. I like my wine with a little more direction and a little less padding, but this is very tasty all the same.
Rebuy – Maybe

2013 Yvon & Laurent Vocoret, Chablis 1er Fourchaume – Exquise
Hmm, lots of aromatic freshness and minerality here – but attractively so, and none of the vintage’s apricot aromas. Hmm, a lovely line, a wine that vibrates with energy. We drank this quite quickly, enjoying every drop. A super wine, particularly so for the vintage.
Rebuy – Yes

chardonnay – as you’ve never seen it before!

By billn on June 05, 2018 #a bit of science

Way back in 2010 I had a contact in Basel who did, and still does, some extra-ordinary work with his electron microscope. Dr Martin Oeggerli has been published worldwide by the BBC, National Geographic, Nature and so many others. See here: www.micronaut.ch

Having seen so a lot of his work with plants I asked if he would like to do the same with some pinot and chardonnay from Burgundy – we also collected some aligoté and gamay. I thought if the images were as great as I expected, then I could do a nice sideline, selling special fine-art prints of the images – they would have been expensive, but hey!

I recruited a certain David Clark, formerly of Morey St.Denis, to collect samples at flowering – and then passed on the phials to Martin in Basel.

As it turned out, for quite some time afterwards Martin was simply snowed-under with publishing work, then my own position became complicated after the company where I worked was acquired. I saw some interesting black and white images from Martin but colouration – and all such images that you see require many, many hours of colouration – was put on the back-burner and eventually forgotten – by me – but seemingly not Martin!

Today he sent me this great image – “Bill. Today, I finished a picture from a sample you originally provided back in 2010 (Chardonnay; enclosed)… hope you like it.” Now how cool is that?

We had a short conversation which I will include so that you may understand what you’re seeing:

Me: “Is that the tip from the flower, post fertilisation?

Martin: “Exactly. To me, the stigma looks pretty fresh. I guess, it is showing the tip of the pistil (with the stigma in red) during, or just very shortly after fertilization. One pollen grain has hydrated and grows a pollen tube across the stigma. Since I am working on a project on plant tissue I was digging in the archive…

Enjoy…

predatory wine retailing?

By billn on June 04, 2018 #the market

It’s a question of ethics, I suppose. And I don’t know all the details – so maybe some of the ethics are fine – but it’s still a tale that leaves a nasty taste in my mouth.

A retailer in the UK is offering, nudge-nudge, wink-wink, cheap Domaine Leflaive under another label – and of-course they can’t actually say Leflaive, but, wink-wink, it’s Leflaive. That’s how their sales-pitch goes. But why would anyone offer relabelled Leflaive for cheap? Well, for a start there are endless reports on the internet of oxidised wine coming from that domaine since the start of the 2000s, and the tacit acceptance of that by the domaine, by recently changing to DIAM seals in order to combat that.

Of-course, if the retailer is standing behind every bottle, and replacing them if faulty – for instance oxidised – then, to my mind, there is at least the basis for a transaction. But even if that is the case, what about bottles found to be oxidised in another 2 years, or 5, or…

Then of-course we have reason to question the ethics of the producer – assuming that the domaine actually knows what the merchant is doing – and, of-course, why they are doing it! The why is important, because historically, wine with a provenance of being sourced direct from a domaine usually has a premium – not comes (wink-wink) at half price – for that reason I think it may not be the domaine at work. I have seen some suggestion that wine may be from a family member, not actually the domaine itself – then we would have to assume the corks still show the original producer’s name – unlike the labels – if not, why the need to change the corks?

It’s a can of worms, no mistake. I’ll leave you to make up your own minds:

Dear XXX
I am very pleased to let you know I have access to parcels of one of the most exciting opportunities we’ve ever seen come out of Burgundy. Grand & 1er Cru whites, made by one of the region’s great domaines, kept in their cellars for years and re-labelled as Joseph Paget earlier this year. We’re not allowed to say who they’re from, but only one producer makes all of these and in terms of White Burgundy, it doesn’t get any better.
The demand among Burgundy collectors across the globe who recognised what this parcel represents was rapid and meant that 75% of the stocks have sold. I am therefore delighted to present what is left; a handful of cases from the Grand Crus of Chevalier, Batard and Bienvenues Batard Montrachet and 1er Crus from Pucelles and (here’s a big potential clue to the origin) Puligny Montrachet Les Clavoillons.
As this parcel is, to our knowledge, a complete one-off once these remaining cases are sold there will never be more. This is all there is and all there ever will be so if you’d like some, now is the time. I am delighted to offer:
[No need to give you the (low) prices – Bill]
Offered subject to final confirmation.
Many thanks,
Kind regards,
XXX | Private Client Account Manager

[Edit: The wines had been recorked and are now ‘generic.’ The domaine were pretty unhappy when they heard about this. They want to underline that it has absolutely nothing to do with them and that they are pretty unhappy with this type of ‘publicity!’]

the april-2018 burgundy report

By billn on June 01, 2018 #reports

A modest Burgundy Report for subscribers:

A profile of Gevrey-Chambertin’s grand cru – Latricières-Chambertin:

  • 11 of it’s 12 proprietors profiled (I tried for 12!)
  • 47 different Latricières tasted by me on your behalf!

Oh, and how to avoid oxidised white burgundy completely!
For those of you who find the annual subscription of 85 swiss francs too steep to learn about this, that’s a shame, but you buy this single article – oh-so cheap, here. After which you will be able to read it here.

I think it’s an issue that’s worth your time!

PS Yes I know that there’s a problem with not all the articles showing in the right-hand navigation of each separate report – it’s why I’m late publishing – I still haven’t found the reason/solution. But I’m still working on it!

Burgundy Report

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