a return to taste: de montille 06 bourgogne

By Peter Sidebotham on September 23, 2009 #degustation#peter's posts

montilleBR06
It’s been a long time since I posted, and I think there have been too many “harvest” entries and not enough slurping – so here is a TN for you.

It may have been the occasion – a pique-nique en famille – or merely the fact that this bottle was a gift (and therefore free of intellectual investment on my part) – but this one simply delighted, and delighted simply. Highly recommended, and adds its modest weight to my personal view that 2006 is going to turn out to be a very pleasing vintage for the lover of red burgundy – a vintage I continue to buy for my personal cellar.

2006 de Montille, Bourgogne Rouge
Pale bright cherry red, with a broad paler rim showing pinkish still. Bright but slight, spicy cherry, nose. Fresh youthful and rustic, it makes me think of rolling in hay. Mouth entry is pure and sweet, but very small. Nice flavours – very fresh red fruit and spicy, bubblegummy, earth. The mid-palate shows good acidity and grip but no real size, and then it ends. Not quite clipped, but certainly short, though in a way that leaves you wanting more, rather than dissatisfied. Not a serious wine, but just the ticket for a picnic or a roll in the hay.

A week or so later we tried a bottle of the 2004, which was a different kettle of ladybirds. Not one to drink now, but I will hold and hope.

harvest 2009 – producer updates – monday 21st sept

By billn on September 21, 2009 #vintage 2009

I asked a few producers how things were looking in the cuverie:

Intense colors – for the reds 😉
pH’s that basically (if I may) are not increasing during fermentation – we should end up with levels around 3.60 – 3.70 which is close to my goal. Tannins, after being a bit sharp at mid fermentation, are really softening nicely with the prolongation of macerations, and showing a good concentration, will lead to wines with a good if not overwelming tannic structure. The whites are showing a beautiful fruit, entering the cellar is an enchantment. acid balance seems good, but difficult to taste at this stage.
Carel Voorhuis, Domaine d’Ardhuy

I am afraid it’s too early to talk about extraction as it is the beginning of the alcoholic fermentation only. The only thing we know is that the color is easy to get and that the tannins are of good quality.
Philippe de Marcilly, Albert Bichot

We can say so far about 09 that the tannins are easy to extract, the skins are thick and really mature, it is top quality. The first wines we have are dense and full-bodied, but without any aggressivity. Natural maturity was so high that we did not add sugar to any of our wines. The wines almost fell sweet, and there is no sugar left (red Savigny Vieilles vignes). The vintage will be softer than 05s, because the pH are higher in 2009, the grapes kept on maturing during the summer without any of the blocage that happened with 2005. 2005 were more acidic, I expect 2009 are pure pleasure with a big concentration and velvety stucture…
Juliette Chenu, Domaine Louis Chenu

The fruit and colors seem excellent – my Beaune Les Cras has almost finished its alcoholic fermentation. Tannins seemed a little ‘strict’ at one stage but that was just a phase. From what I recall of 2005, we seem to be getting more fruit with less extraction for this crop. Less tannin than 2005 – perhaps closer to 2002. I think I will get better results from this vintage than 05 actually, but that is more about preparation than specifically fruit/vintage quality – for 05 I’d only been in the domaine a few weeks, the work in the vineyard was not mine and all the equipment was unknown…
David Croix, Domaine des Croix

Bill, we finished on Wednesday 16th. Picking conditions, as you experienced them, were fantastic, the grapes were ripe and healthy and the quantities looked good for all the vineyards with the exceptions of the ones that got hailed in May (Clos St Denis, Clos de la Roche and Combottes). The skins seemed pretty thick, the colors and tannins seem to be extracting nicely. I like the aromatics that are already coming out. In short, everything seems to be there for us to make good wine this year. I can’t picture these turning into the tannic masses that were the 2005s. They may have something in common with the 1999s, certainly analytically, but it is very early days and the opportunities to screw up are still plentiful.
Jeremy Seysses: Domaine Dujac

Jeremy sent two nice photos (in the gallery that follows – I love the vendangeur…), I also asked him how the fruit triage went with the charity ‘Climats du CÅ“ur‘ project:

The Climats du Cœur grapes that were delivered to me looked great. The contributors from Gevrey really put their best foot forward. The grapes are not yet fermenting, so can’t talk about the wine yet. I’m expecting interest to rise with news of the vintage looking like a good one.
Jeremy Seysses

Gallery:

mark – pernand-vergelesses day 4 friday 11th Sept

By on September 20, 2009 #picture gallery#vintage 2009

A few words on other matters before getting into Friday’s picking activities et al.

One of the many things I have quickly come to love here is the view across the steep sided valley in which Pernand sits on one side – on the right heading up towards Echevronne. Domaine D-F is probably circa half way up the village or more but, sat in the courtyard, as I can be with spare moments, looking straight across, in one’s eye line is the wonderfully named terroir of “Sous le bois de Noel et ses Belles Filles” (Under the Wood of Noel and his beautiful daughters – not sure who the Noel was by the way) . Think that’s the full name (without checking). The vines plunge steeply down from below the well wooded dense top part of the hill. Off the top of my head Domaine Remi Rollin sell a very reasonably priced example (rouge). Recall the 2005 en primeur, not yet tasted as still in bond / storage, cost GBP 100 from Justerini’s in the UK (no association other than occasional customer).

Beer o’clock – eh ??? This term amused me no end and is great in what it represents. The cuverie staff under Monsieur Bernard’s genial and benevolent but serious leadership (he’s 70 but fully involved & bright as a tick – a lovely man) have an early morning cuverie wine break (honestly) and also again in the evening, before putting the triage table away, have another wine break – usually with something more than decent e.g a Corton-Charlemagne featured one evening when I was lucky enough to be there. Into this ‘well oiled’ working routine Aussie stagiste, Kirsten, told M. Bernard about the Aussie winery practice of afternoon “beer o’clock”. This was seized on as a great idea and is now adopted, as a French idea of course (!), about 4 p.m using likes of Kronenbourg. Superbe !!!

A few words on the domaine layout in Pernand. I have already mentioned the house, courtyard, bureau etc in Rue Rameau-Lamarosse but what I hadn’t appreciated, until asking M Bernard one day to show me the barrel cellar below the cuverie was how the whole, from cuverie to house, ‘knitted’ together down the hillside within the village. The cuverie (very modern, air conditioned / temperature controlled, very well equipped, has stainless everything and lots of it) is accessed (other than on foot coming up through the very large and private house garden) by entering the tasting room / ‘cellar door shop’ at the back of the courtyard. If one goes through the tasting room this opens out materially to a substantial bottle store of umpteen metal cages. M Bernard told me one day there were about 80,000 bottles held – wow !!! To the right of the bottle store are stairs which lead up to the floor above which is the sizable barrel cellar (can’t recall exactly but recollect might be up to 300 barrels). To the right hand side of the barrel cellar is another flight of stairs which lead into the back of the cuverie. At the front of the cuverie is a dropping circular loop of tarmac from the plateau above of car parking and garage / store for vans, tractors etc which access from a narrow street above. In essence one has, from the top street, the whole from garage / store, ramp to cuverie, then cuverie, barrel store, to bottle store / tasting room following the contour down the hillside to the domaine courtyard. Gravity operation is possible from cuverie, to barrel store, to bottle store.

Visitors to the domaine for tasting and purchase were regular, if low in number, but included Belgians, French, a family of 4 Brits and a couple of Americans.

A word on the vintage thus far. I know full well it’s very early days indeed but simply report what I see and hear. Our vendange has been conducted from start to finish (am typing this now post conclusion) in probably perfect weather – very hot in parts and dry throughout. It actually started spitting with rain during the afternoon of the 15th after we finished the domaine’s vendange that lunchtime in Corton En Charlemagne. The grape quality, red and white, has been fantastic. This was my 3rd vendange (2006 Chassagne-Montrachet, 2008 Morey-St-Denis and this one). The only rot I recall seeing this time was a quite modest amount in Corton Pougets. Hence grape quality is excellent. Early on, and in my experience the Burgundians are careful and not prone to getting carried away, talk of a really classy vintage emerged. This continued and translated to comparisons with both 1999 and, incroyable, 2005 on a regular basis. With the 2008 vintage to sell in early 2010 one can’t imagine the UK wine trade will want to hear such sentiments. That said I believe 2008 itself will be good and I, for one, will be looking to buy reds from Arlaud and others. I believe 2008 whites may be similar to 2007 or better with plenty of acidity. We’ll see I guess. Those domaines who waited in 2009 will have had the rain from Thurs 17th to contend with.

Right, to the Friday 11th action. Think it was the previous night a few of us post dinner spent a convivial evening with other domaine vendangeurs at Pernand’s only bar – “La Grappe de Pernand”. We despatched numerous jugs of Amstel at my expense to leave some fragility the following morning as we moved to our first site. This was the gorgeous hill top terroir of, for me, the much anticipated ‘Sous Fretille’ blanc. Have no idea if I could find this again from the winding route through woods on rough tracks – even looking at maps back in the UK. Nevertheless lovely terroir but we soon seemed to have the quality Chardonnay stripped and moved on to Corton Pougets. We had a little rest before starting this which we ultimately did in 2 or 2 and a half passes. Tiffin, one of the youngsters, and an Arsenal fan / shirt wearer, actually had a snooze in a dry field drain alongside the road – see photos to follow. It was a bit chilly here, not for me though with my Lowe Alpine base layer and thick t shirt over so I readily agreed to lend my fleece to my fellow van front seat occupant, Lauren, an intelligent trainee maritime lawyer from Paris – ‘veteran’ of a few vendanges and trusted “older sister” type to the 14 & 9 yr old Gruere-Dubreuil daughters; Clementime & Autance. A little rot in Pougets, nothing major, but stand out compared to the generally perfect quality thus far. Part way through and having got back to the road from one pass we were watched, photographed etc by a group of older people in 2 minibuses. Getting into conversation with them turned out they were Swedish tourists. One of them was particularly intrigued by our rates of pay which he quizzed me on, ultimately following me half way down a row to check our hourly euro rate as I grappled with a particular vine ! From here we moved to what was either Aloxe of Pernand village to take us up to lunch and a welcome break. I had, on a last minute whim, brought a bottle of wine with me which I gave to Christine D-F on arrival. This was a Cloudy Bay 2003 Chardonnay. Broached at lunchtime and shared around would be fair to say it didnt show well against the straight D-F Bourgogne Chard or Aligote (vin blanc nature) which was our regular tipple. The New Zealander seemed blowsy, heavy and very over oaked – being kind to say a food wine. Quite took me by surprise – a real victory for the old world.

Post lunch we took the road out alongside the wonderful old church (with it’s superb on the hour / half hour clock) towards Magny-Les-Villers to the site of P-V Villages Les Clous just off the road. Another lovely piece of terroir. Very hot here and a tester after lunch with some gradient. More lovely grapes. I love picking quality Chardonnay – tis what I started with in 2006 in Chassagne and have since always preferred to Pinot and found easier. Very essential need to be a flailing hooligan in leaf stripping though to avoid missing decent bunches. From here we changed tack completely passing through the village of Aloxe-Corton to tackle premier cru A-X Les Vercots. Afternoon concluded with either Pernand or A-X village (or could indeed have been P-V 1er cru Les Fichots) back towards Pernand not far from Corton-Charlemagne.

On most afternoons rather than rushing back to the communal house for beer, gin, fags etc it was my habit to go to the cuverie and mingle – check out the triage table, use the jetwasher to clean my boots or Merrrells, or clean cases and buckets – always something to do. I think it was this day that Kirsten got me up on the gantry around the stainless steel tanks of settling Pinot holding a heavy pipe for remontage (pumping over). This was fine for a while until we came to unhook at which point and by accident, casually holding the pipe whilst Kirsten unhooked down below, I inadvertently sprayed myself all down my left side from head to foot – not my fault but all rather damp !! Was always worth being around the cuverie team around 6 p.m for an early evening drink of something tasty from M.Bernard.

Day 5 to follow with altitude, gradient in Savigny; comment on the mighty Liverpool FC in comparison to some rubbish Manchester team; a move onto Corton Charlemagne; punching the cap down; and a very special evening dinner with special wines.

harvest 2009 – saturday 19th sept

By billn on September 19, 2009 #vintage 2009

Rain overnight but by 9:30 a.m. it’s stopped and the sun is peaking through.

The home team is bringing in Chambertin – it looks almost as good as yesterday’s Latricières, the grapes are a bit wet, still, the vibrating table is removing most of it and the rain doesn’t seemed to have affected the berry size. This is all the fruit for today, though in the cuverie the Ladoix and the Savigny Peuillets are getting some punch-downs. There is still some Santenay villages which is not quite ripe enough and a little Beaune blanc remaining on the vines, the plan is to bring these in on Monday. Météo France are now suggesting rain, rather than storms for Sunday.

A quick tour of some other domaines shows that Kellen Lignier has finished, Carel Voorhuis was aiming to finish yesterday and David Clark was expecting to be done by tomorrow.

Next update on Monday, with some info on the fermentations & extractions…

harvest 2009 – friday 18th sept

By billn on September 19, 2009 #vintage 2009

So it’s Friday, and given the forecasts, and depending on which you believe – Météo France get short shrift from many – quite a number are aiming to end their harvest today. It’s a misty start which doesn’t whisk away the overnight damp very easily, but slowly the sun starts to poke through. By lunchtime there’s not a cloud in the sky and the afternoon basks in 22°C.

At the home domaine they are working flat out! Santenay Clos Rousseau which is super fruit, Marsannay villages (a new contract) that needs about 5% triage for botrytis, otherwise nice, and crowning glory, Latricières-Chambertin, a plot whose produce can be a real mixed bag – only 35kg triaged from 2 tonnes of millerande fruit. The team is stunned! It’s one of the best of the year – I expect great things. One disappointment is that despite pushing, it wasn’t possible to get the Chambertin in, so it will have to wait until tomorrow (Saturday).

harvest 2009 – thursday 17th sept

By billn on September 18, 2009 #vintage 2009

Fog and rain starts the day in Beaune – there is no morning picking at the home domaine. The report is that some growers in Marsannay have cancelled their plans to pick today.

In the late-afternoon the home domaine grapes arrive from Vosne and Charmes-Chambertin – all are in very good shape. Like the previous couple of years the Vosne parcel has very nice fruit so there are about 10-15% whole bunches for the fermentations (nothing to do with the DRC from the other night!).

The reports are still for thunder and lightening at the weekend, so whatever the weather on Friday, the last grapes from Santenay Clos Rousseau – which still look superb – and the rest of the gevrey grand crus will be brought in.

Last for today, a message from Ray, our new boy in the Côtes:

The Charmes and Morey have been cut. Chambertin tomorrow possibly. Things are good. I ended up with the equivelant of 8 barrels of Charmes from Aux Charmes and my Chassin barrels just came in today. So I am happy. Also I got an old 1987 BMW 3 series to run around in. I feel much more at home now with my thrifty lil car. 1200 Euros and it runs like a champ.
Ray Walker, Maison Ilan

harvest 2009 – wednesday 16th sept

By billn on September 17, 2009 #vintage 2009

home_team
The home team 2009: Gareth, Gillian, Marie, David & Shane (Joseph is missing, he was working away from the cuverie)

After the exertions of the Duvault-Blochet the night before (and it turns out the sauce was actually based on Nuits St.Georges!) it comes as something of a shock to be greeted by early morning skies that are far from blue – in fact they are leaden. At least they are retaining their moisture and the streets are now largely dry.

I arrive at the home domaine to find that our planned picking of the Vosne is delayed to the next day due to the rain and cold of yesterday – the rain stopped in the early hours – but at least we have some breeze that’s slowly drying the place. We are still waiting for grapes from both extremities of the Côtes – Gevrey grand crus plus Santenay and Maranges. The grapes sound absolutely perfect in the south, but I’ve no info yet on the Gevrey ‘big boys’. Okay there’s still much to do before lunch…

Lunch is a busy affair (oops, inappropriate word – but our chef has anyway returned!); a tasty ‘salad’ of chopped potatoes, sausage, beans etc., followed by ribs done in a dark and tasty honey glaze, the ubiquitous cheese and bread followed by up-side-down pineapple sponge. Clearly that needed washing down with a combination of Vosne, Cazetiers, Combe-Aux-Moines, Vaucrains and Chapelle from 2007! We contemplate a delivery from Gevrey over our coffee – it should arrive sometime in the late afternoon. I decide to ’embrace’ our chef on our last day – he comments that at least I shaved, my wife too 😉

I pack my bags and make a quick tour as I head for home – a quick visit to Maison Nicolas Potel but they are quite busy with a TV crew from Hong-Kong TV who are filming their triage. Next to Morey, first to see Kellen Lignier – she only has her aligoté to bring in which she will do tomorrow (Thursday) morning – she looks very satisfied, and has decided to bottle her Combottes only in magnums! Next to Domaine David Clark – he’s chatting to his Dutch importer and Jan van Roekel. He’s already brough in some perfect Vosne villages and is waiting for the weekend for his Côte de Nuits and Bourgogne. The Morey also waits on the vines but it’s only a tiny parcel so he has the luxury of waiting for ‘perfection’. He’s also very happy with what he’s so-far harvested.

Vicki Fourrier tells me that Domaine Fourrier are starting their harvest campaign tomorrow (Thursday) and will pass on more info as they see what goes into their tanks.

In the late-afternoon the home domaine grapes arrive from, Gevrey and in very good shape. The plan is now to get everything in by Friday as the forecast is rain for Thursday and maybe storms – thunder and lightening – at the weekend. Muddy boots and wet grapes or not, it looks like a spin of the roulette wheel for those planning to pick at the weekend or beyond.

And that’s it for first-hand reports I’m sad to say – of-course it won’t end here…

PS – Vincent Dancer reminds us what it’s all about with – jus!

mark – pernand-vergelesses day 3 thurs 10th sept

By on September 16, 2009 #vintage 2009

Morning over to Volnay. Now here’s a genuine steal cum bargain of a wine in that a la Dubreuil-Fontaine the Volnay is a blend of premier cru and village and is currently Euros 18 !!! Think I need some. Quite often when a domaine wine has been produced for tasting it has been a Volnay.

For the record the 3 PC sites, all below the RN74, are Carelle Sous Chapelle, Les Brouillards and Les Lurets. The latter was a mystery to me until today. We started in Carelle and a hard morning’s graft switching sites saw all Volnay done. The Carelle was right up to the Chapelle wall off which the sun bounced.

The afternoon per my notes seems unremarkable – Pernand 1er cru Ile des Vergelesses again and yet more of what seems the unremitting Aloxe Corton rouge (although I have wondered if I’m getting my P-V and A-C villages mixed up .?)

This was “it” vineyards wise – one soon gets settled into a daily routine. Emotions picking can be mixed from the initial (for me) early morning stiffness, peer pressure fear of keeping up / not wanting to fall behind, exhilaration at the sometimes achingly beautiful sites and vistas, cursing the blunt secateurs (swapped mine a few days in getting so exasperated), getting cross with the lack of effort from certain vendangeurs and unwillingness to help others, getting cross with the porteur who was supposed to empty one’s bucket when full, cursing the bunches of grapes which are twisted amongst vines, stems, wires and refuse to be parted, the essential constant water volume intake to slake a thirst like no other, relief / exhilaration at completing a row, etc etc.

Our full day’s routine starts with breakfast ( coffee, tea, or chocolate with bread + jam or marmalade) at 7 a.m., then gathering in the courtyard with Madame Annie Dubreuil taking a register of attendance with long wooden clipboard, followed by ‘mounting’ one of the 3 camions (vans) to the initial destination. Certain need to be both organised and initially warm – for me I need to check I have secateurs, rubber glove for left hand only (prefer to keep right hand ‘free’ for secateurs), knee pads, blackberry for any spare journal moments (fleeting hence my being so behind), camera, water bottle, reading glasses and suitable clothing. Has soon got warm but first thing can be a bit ‘nippy’.

The usual main events of the day (morning departure, lunch, dinner) are all signalled by the vigorous ringing of a wall mounted metal bell. We are usually in the first vineyard by 8 unless going a distance and, like Arlaud last year, Dubreuil-Fontaine seem to be one of always the first into the vines. We work flat out until somewhere between 9 and 10 and then seems to a religious break. At this point many of my fellow vendangeurs produce a large salami and soft cheese sandwich (chass-croux ?) which are made in the refectory kitchen pre departure. Almost unbelievably (to me) for the hour bottles of wine are also produced at this point – drunk from paper cups. Back to hard graft until around 12 then back to base for cleaning up then long leisurely lunch (vin rouge et blanc both on ‘free flow’ here). Lunch takes form of a salade or jambon persille type starter, main course of meat, poultry (duck and chicken), or sausage casserole, cheese board (keenly anticipated – something the English might usefully adopt as ‘standard’ then desert – a choice of fruit pot yoghurt. Apples and bananas both available for the pocket or immediate consumption. Vendangeurs, tractor cases pick up crew and cuverie staff plus family all sit down together at long trestle tables.

Lunch break concludes around 1.30 then off we go again until between 5.30 and 6. Time to clean up then, grab a shower and change for 7.30 ish relaxing dinner and convivial chat.

Besides the regular white and red wines (both delicious – I think 07) we have sampled all manner of wines including P-V 2006 Sous Fretille, Volnay 2006, Pommard 2003 1er cru Grand Epenots, P-V 2001 Ile des Vergelesses, Aloxe-Corton Les Vercots 1994 and, in the cuverie at early evening wine time M. Bernard one night produced a Chapoutier 2001 Coteaux D’Ardeche. More terrific wine details in another instalment. This blackberry is giving me RSI !!!

Markis de Pernand

harvest 2009 – tuesday 15th sept

By billn on September 15, 2009 #picture gallery#vintage 2009

Tuesday – and another glorious blue sky.

Our grapes during the morning are Nuits 1er Les Vaucrains – much anticipated as they are normally super. This year, we have a problem. The first case looks a bit disappointing as there is a mix of both shrivelled and unripe grapes – in the same bunches! – it seems to get worse from there on as oïdium begins to rear its head. The weather mirrors the mood as it becomes windy and cloudy – it’s quite chilly – we expect rain anytime, though it never comes. The triage table is set to the slowest speed, with six people sorting and still we need to periodically stop the table as the throw-away bins fill almost as fast as the the hopper of decent stuff. Big disappointment here – the fruit we retain is ‘okay’, but we really didn’t expect to be throwing away such a significant quantity – some consultation with the broker is called for.

The weather seems to be playing with us because as soon as we finish sorting the Vaucrains and reach for a thicker pullover, the sun returns and the wind slows. Anyway, to lunch and a developing, if unrequited romance; Guy, our chef has delighted everyone to such an extent that one of our number dreams of of their next meetings and begins to wonder how he will survive once they are parted! Should he offer a big, manly, antipodean hug to Guy(?) Let’s see…

Lunch is a nice salad followed by a roast with a super sauce and girolle accompaniment, plus cauliflower cheese! The ubiquitous cheese and bread came next, to be followed by tarte tartin – mmmm once more. Two wines from Rousillon filled our glasses.

So, thicker pullover to the ready and we have Gevrey-Chambertin and Santenay 1er cru les Comme – full-speed table and minimal triage – mainly an occasional under-ripe bunch – good! Actually the Gevrey is excellent, then comes Corton Clos du Roi – good but not great (now it’s starting with light rain) then comes ‘Corton’ – this ‘okay’.

Off to Remoissenet to taste 08’s, this turns out to be a semi-waste as the wines were sulfured just before harvest – maybe another day then – though the Montrachet tasted good, as did the 78 Pommard. Back to the home team and it’s raining a little harder now. More Gevrey to triage – the grapes are getting a little wet now. We finish cleaning-up at 9pm.

Dinner is a mix of melon, leftovers and rabbit that we left in the oven for too long – not burnt but a bit dry – followed by the obligatory cheese and and bread then the ‘piece of resistance’ a lovely looking dish (see pic) of poached pears in a semi-jelly that gave me the impression of being made from pinot noir and sugar (I will have to ask). To accompany was a rather too tight (completely unyielding) 05 Vosne-Romanée, followed by 99 Vosne-Romanée 1er cru (Duvault-Blochet or something – you can see it in the picture below). The latter wine was an aromatic superstar, the colour of a two or three year old, and quite unready on the palate – complex with acidity that still need to ‘mend’ in the finish. Did anyone else notice that our chef decided not to join us for dinner? Maybe there is already a problem in the relationship(!)

The rain that was incessant but not that heavy (since about 3:30) is now fading a little as we head to bed, but it’s clouded whether we will pick the Vosne tomorrow or not…

Burgundy Report

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