Given the coming price increases and limited quantity of the 2020 red Burugndies, we’ve been asking around for back vintages at our favorite Côte de Nuits domaines. There’s not much out there, but this section is a hodgepodge of what we’ve been able to find: Gevrey and Morey from Amiot, Hautes-Côtes and Nuits from Gros, and Chambolle from Boursot.
Regular readers may have noticed our post on the remaining 2019s from Pierre Amiot last Sunday. Both Morey-St-Denis 1er crus sold out before the day was out, so neither Charmes nor Millandes in 750s is included here. But we have three other ideas from Amiot, all in similarly small quantities, and we’ve also been able to add some back vintages from Michel Gros..
In 750s at Amiot, we’ve been offered several cases of the 2019 Gevrey-Chambertin “les Combottes,” a supremely well-located premier cru vineyard surrounded by such luminaries as Clos de la Roche, Latricières-Chambertin, Mazoyeres-Chambertin, and others. An exceptional plot in a superb year, this is an excellent candidate for the back of the cellar. Burghound awarded 91-93 points calling it “lovely” and “outstanding” along with “excellent volume” and “beguiling texture.” As with most 2019s this is dense, intense, and tightly packed – patience will be required but handsomely rewarded.
For (somewhat) earlier enjoyment, consider Amiot’s Morey-St-Denis 1er cru “Les Millandes.” The 750s sold out last Sunday, but we have a few cases of magnums. This wine comes from the family’s tiny plot of 50 year old vines in stony soils scattered with round rocks called “têtes de loups” (wolf heads). Millandes is always one of Amiot’s most precise, sophisticated cuvées, and though the 2019 is riper and more muscular than usual, it retains its buttoned up, polished character.
The nose is multi-layered, a blend of oak and fruit. Burghound awarded 90-92 points and praised its “brooding liqueur-like aromas of plum, dark currant, earth and a whiff of Asian-style tea.” The wine also won a “Tastevinage” from the Chevaliers du Tastevin, the Burgundy trade group that blind tastes through the vintage each year and singles out particularly noteworthy wines.
Finally, Amiot’s best premier cru plot in Morey-St-Denis is “Ruchots,” a vineyard just across the road from the famous Grand Cru Clos de Tart. We’ve bought Amiot’s last 2019 magnums of this wine (the 750s sold out long ago). It’s generally accepted as the finest premier cru in the town, and a taste leaves no doubt why. Amiot’s 2019 Ruchots is in a class of its own, showing gorgeous berries, violets, and spices, with excellent intensity and depth. Burghound awarded 90-93, calling it “outstanding” and “delicious” with “fine volume” and “fine length.”
At Michel Gros, we have three regional ideas, and one village level 2018. Michel’s wines from the Hautes-Côtes de Nuits have fared beautifully in recent hot vintages – they’re terrific values from true Burgundian terroir that until recently was often on the margins of ripeness. First the Hautes-Côtes de Nuits from 2019 – a lovely, dense wine with dark red fruits and a nice mineral line. There’s lots of stuffing here, so no rush at all to drink this wine. Burghound found it “outstanding” finding “refined texture” with “solid depth” and “pure, racy, lightly stony flavors.” Entry level red Burgundy is seldom better than this.
We’re also suggesting an Hautes-Côtes wines from 2017, a vintage with an entirely different character from 2019. The 2017s have less intensity and less tannin than their counterparts in 2019, and the resulting wines are more approachable. Notwithstanding the vintage, the Hautes-Côtes “Au Vallon” 2017 is only beginning to enter its drinking window, and we expect it to provide excellent weeknight drinking for another 2-4 years. The wine is bright and fruit forward, with a sunny character and pleasant mineral chalkiness. It drinks well early and in 2017 is particularly floral and lovely. Master of Wine Sarah Marsh called it “fresh and peppy.”
Finally, the only village wine of any vintage still available at Gros is the 2018 Nuits-St-Georges. We offer it both for the same reason someone climbs Everest (“because it’s there”), but also because the bottle we opened last week was delicious. This is from Gros’s plots on the northern side of the town, near the Nuits-Vosne border. This wine is often less bold and masculine than Gros’s other Nuits cuvée from the center of the appellation, but in this vintage the wine is unmistakably a Nuits-St-Georges. The nose is lovely and dark, bursting with dark blue fruits and a pleasantly rugged earthiness. The mouth is ripe (classically 2018) but not the slightest bit flabby, and shows an untamed essence that calls to mind the charming wildness of rural France – picture something between a medieval castle and a cozy farmhouse fireplace. This isn’t the most complex or most refined of Gros’s cuvées, but it’s perfectly crafted, and an excellent value for the price.
The Boursot family has made wine in Chambolle-Musigny since the 16th century, but have only started bottling their own wine in the last few decades. Their portfolio of terroirs is the stuff of winemaker dreams — village and premier cru plots around Chambolle-Musigny, including a large plot of old vines in “Les Fuées,” one of the town’s top plots. Their star is on the rise, and as they gain winemaking experience the new generation has begun to gain critical acclaim. Neal Martin calls their wines “superb” and finds “a foundation for a promising future.”
We’re revisiting two of their excellent 2019s still available, and offering a terrific 2016 as well. At the village level, the 2019 Chambolle-Musigny “Nazoires” is first rate Chambolle. The nose offers a pleasant mix of ripe fruit and muted oak. The palate has just the right shape — silky with just a hint of structure, and it persists well through the finish. It shows the gorgeous texture and balance for which the vintage has become known. Excellent village level Chambolle in a terrific year.
We were excited to find two vintages still available of Boursot’s top cuvée, Chambolle-Musigny 1er cru “les Fuées,” along with Amoureuses the most celebrated of Chambolle’s premier crus. The 2019 vintage is still quite young, but all the elements of a great vintage are there: deep intensity, good supporting acidity, and supple tannins. Vinous’s Neal Martin gave 91-93 points, finding “fine length” and a “refined bouquet that displays good terroir expression.” However much you have of this, in a few years we bet you’ll wish you had more.
For more immediate enjoyment, there’s Boursot’s Chambolle-Musigny 1er “Fuées” from 2016. This often overlooked vintage produced wines with real class and sleek, beautifully balanced palates. This has many happy years ahead of it, but it is showing beautifully right now, with a lovely nose of plums and violets and excellent balance. Martin also loved this wine, calling it “superb Chambolle-Musigny with great tension and a long, cassis-tinged finish,” concluding simply, “Excellent.”