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Notes from Harpswell: No. 10

From our deck above Harpswell Sound we can watch the turn from Summer to Fall. Morning still carries the throaty rumble of lobster boat engines, but there are fewer traps and fewer boats now. Last evening half a dozen seals returned to the rocks beyond our dock; soon they’ll move south and stay there until Spring. Morning occasionally brings dense fog, and the rising sun burns it away slowly, revealing our view bit by bit: first Dog’s Head, then Zeke’s Island, then High Head. It might easily be a painting by Bingham or Catlin.

I returned about a week ago from working the harvest at the Domaine Michel Gros in Vosne-Romanée. Very different in obvious ways from the coast of Maine, but not entirely so. Striking topography defines both places. Here it is a jagged border between land and ocean, there a thirty-mile hillside with a near-perfect combination of soil, rock, sun and airflow. Each has drawn admirers for centuries, and each produces unique products of remarkable quality.

For years we have written about Michel Gros’s exceptional terroir: the lone premier cru monopole in Vosne-Romanée along with excellent plots in Chambolle-Musigny, Nuits St. Georges, Morey St. Denis and the Hautes Côtes de Nuits. What the harvest showed us is how much work it takes to tend this terroir. Michel has been producing some of Burgundy’s finest wines for more than four decades, and so he brings vast experience to the art. His days are long and tiring — I found him in the cuverie every morning as I descended from my bunk on its upper floor, and I saw him working there every night as I went off to bed.

Managing the harvest is an art, even with forty years of meticulous records about weather and ripeness levels in every vineyard. Judgments about harvest timing can be crucial to the results. The element of chance remains, too, as I learned when we chatted about making those choices. The team of forty or so hand-harvesters must know the start date at least two weeks in advance, and so in the end the critical decision of when to begin is partly a guess, if a very educated one.

The harvesters are not the occasional labor found in vineyards across France at harvest time. At the Domaine Michel Gros the same people come every year, and from far flung places. There are a Canadian from Calgary, a radio disc jockey from Berlin, and others from as far as Taiwan and as near as Belgium — all join join the local French regulars every year in what resembles a family reunion as much as a week of physical work. (At lunch one day, someone noted that our table of ten harvesters had citizens of seven countries.) During the week we celebrated the 50th consecutive harvest of the dean of the vendangeurs, and many others had not missed a harvest since the 1980s or 1990s.

They work hard, in the vines for three hours every morning and four every afternoon, until all the grapes are in and the indigenous yeasts have begun their work. If we ever wondered how Michel’s wines were so consistently clean and precise, we do no more. The coupeurs are told to clip every unripe grape and every bit of mold from their bunches. Then every pail gets sorted again by someone on its way into the boxes — and as if this double inspection weren’t enough, Michel personally inspects every box as it is hoisted onto the trailers. The loaded trailers then roll slowly back to the Domaine, where the grapes are looked over yet again before they go into the crusher.

The harvesters work, eat, and drink with equal parts gusto and good humor. The day starts with a light French breakfast — bowls of strong coffee and warm baguettes slathered with fresh butter and homemade jams and jellies the harvesters bring each year. Lunch and dinner are both full meals, each with entrée, plat, a cheese course, and dessert — all washed down with a prodigious quantity of wine from the domaine. The traditional apéritif is the Communard, a blend of red and red: Crême de Cassis and vin rouge (hence the wink to Marx in the name).

With the evening meal, Michel brings out the just-bottled wine from the vineyards harvested that day. It’s a wonderful way to reflect on what the work is all about, and it makes every dinner something special. I had the great good fortune to be there just after the bottling of the 2015s. They are terrific, and if anything we have understated their great potential in our earlier fulsome praise for them. The only challenge with the 2015s will be keeping our hands off them while they develop in the bottle — they are ripe, full and simply delicious already.

The harvesters are a companionable and occasionally boisterous group. Near the end of a picking day the unripe bunches become ammunition, with volleys of grapes flying between rows. And for newer pickers, there is always the risk of “le baptême,” a surprise baptism where an entire pail of crushed grapes is dumped over an unsuspecting newcomer’s head. Harvesters are known to show up in costume from time to time, and late one night a parade of musicians with improvised instruments passed through my sleeping area above the cuverie.

At the end of the harvest there is the Paulée, the traditional banquet to mark its end. It begins with a Champagne reception in the cuverie, where the aromas of active fermentation mix with the bubbles and the hors d’oeuvres. The celebration continues in the dining room, where the table is set with magnums of older wine from the cellars. There are speeches, songs, prizes and abundant good cheer. This vendangeur, having done more physical work in a week than he did in a quarter century as a Philadelphia lawyer, crept off to bed around midnight. Others returned closer to daybreak.

People have made wine in the Côte d’Or for more than a millennium. Among the early stewards who understood its unique excellence were the monks from nearby Abbeys — Citeaux, Vergy, and others — who methodically mapped its climats from taste alone. Michel Gros’s family has owned Vosne-Romanée’s Clos des Réas for more than 150 years, and certainly Michel is as good a steward as his family’s extraordinary properties have known. There’s more to making the “supremely elegant” (Jasper Morris, MW) wine than terroir alone, and it was a great pleasure to spend a week watching the culmination of his year’s work in the vineyards. Two years from now, we will be eagerly pulling corks to sample the fruits of that labor.

 

MW

 

 

 

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Exquisite Premier Cru White Burgundy: 2015 Chablis, 91 points

Chablis continues to be one of the best bargains in the wine world. Though the past few years have brought devastating frosts and hailstorms to the region and the available quantities have plummeted, winemakers have only gently raised prices. Where village level white Burgundies from the Côte d’Or quickly push past $50, fine Premier Cru Chablis can still be had for under $40.

And despite Mother Nature’s best efforts at complicating viticulture, the wines of Chablis have never been better. A case in point is today’s 2015 Chablis 1er cru “Les Forêts” from the Domaine Jean Collet — it shows a lively palate and smooth, mouth filling texture. Showing only a whisper of oak, winemaker Romain calls the 2015s “fleshy,” and we have to agree — their roundness makes them irresistibly drinkable today.

 

 

Romain Collet took over the winemaking at his family’s domaine a few years ago, and the result has been a jump in both quality and consistency. He avoided the over-oaking trap into which many young winemakers fall, explaining that while oaky wines can be good, “they’re just not Chablis.” Burghound (Allen Meadows) as taken note as well, adding Collet last year to the selective list of winemakers he reviews.

This wine has lots of everything — lots of richness, plenty of acidity, loads of fruit, and all in perfect balance. Burghound awarded 91 points, finding “notes of citrus peel, apple, sea breeze” and “impressive richness.” We expect this to drink well for a few years to come, but it’s awfully hard to have just one glass today.

 

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Collet Chablis 1er cru “Forêts” 2015

Ansonia Retail: $42
6+ bottle price : $36/bot

 

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Bursting 2015 Red Burgundy: Cranberry and Violets. $16

Jean-Marc Monnet is one of those winemakers an importer dreams about finding: no website, no press reviews, no American importer, not even a road sign. Located in Juliénas in the Beaujolais, Monnet’s wines are pure gamay — clean, juicy, and bursting. They’re vibrant expressions of the lush rolling hills from which they come.

Many readers picked up some of Monnet’s 2015 Juliénas earlier this month, a chewy, gulpable red Burgundy with exceptional depth. Today we’re re-releasing his 2015 Chiroubles, a sister cuvée to the Juliénas, with more elegance and finesse. Like most other 2015 red Burgundies, this is bursting with ripe, sunny fruit.

 

 

The Chiroubles is prettier than the Juliénas, with a perfumed and floral nose, but the same juicy, gulpable mouthfeel. The nose is precise and ripe, with notes of cranberry, violets, graphite and minerals. The mouth is a delight — vibrant with crackling fruit and delicious, juicy tannins.

With the weather finally catching up with the calendar next week, this should fit right into your autumn red rotation. The combination of supple tannins with ripe young fruit means it pairs perfectly with a wide range of foods — think hearty winter salads or simple cheese on crackers. And if there’s any left it’s a perfect wine for thanksgiving, but we’re betting it won’t last that long.

 

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Monnet Chiroubles 2015

Ansonia Retail: $20
6+ bottle price : $16/bot

 

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Mixed Case: Oyster Pairing Sampler (plus Free Ansonia Oyster Knife)

Oysters are a common sight at French markets. Huitres are a natural pairing for wine, in both the gustatory and philosophical senses. Just like wine, they’re an expression of terroir (or merrior, if you like) whose character changes with their origin. And in matters gustatory, well, it’s a match made in heaven.

Having relocated much of the Wilcox family to Maine in recent years, we’ve taken a liking to oysters on this side of the Atlantic as well. Our consumption of shellfish has skyrocketed, as has our collection of whites to match. Oysters pair well with lots of French whites, but nothing quite so well as the unoaked and barely-oaked wines from Chablis and Muscadet.

So here’s a mixed case designed for oyster lovers — three Chablis and a Muscadet. And packed with each case will be one of our brand new Ansonia Wines Oyster Knives. (If oysters aren’t your thing, it’s a handy slicer for a piece of fromage.)

 

 

Gautheron Chablis Vieilles Vignes 2015
Gautheron’s old vines produce a Chablis with an extra dose of richness. The classic minerals and lemon peel are there, but there’s a tad more material to round out the mouth.

Collet Chablis VV 2015
Collet’s old-vine chablis is more classic, with no oak at all and a brisk mineral line. Look for notes of mango and lime zest in the nose, and green apple, stones, and saline in the mouth.

Gautheron Chablis 1er cru Vaucoupin 2015
Gautheron’s most elegant wine is their premier cru Vaucoupin. Recalling the complexity of a fine Côte d’Or white Burgundy, this is luxurious and elegant, with notes of white flowers and lemon.

Martin-Luneau Muscadet “Gorges” 2013
Muscadet is near the mouth of the Loire River, not far from France’s finest oyster region. This classic pairing is aged on lees for three years, showing brioche, baked lemon, and stones.

 

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Mixed Case: Oyster Pairing Sampler

Ansonia Retail: $330
case price : $285/case

+ Free Ansonia Oyster Knife

 

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New Pure Syrah from the Northern Rhône: Blackberries and Spice. $25

Elegance.  For fans of Syrah, France’s Northern Rhône Valley is Mecca. It’s at the grape’s northern ripening limit, a geographic marker where grapes usually find their finest expression. The most famous reds from the Northern Rhône — from towns like Côte Rôtie, Hermitage, and St-Joseph — are some of the longest lived and most highly sought after wines in the world.

Many wines from the Northern Rhône require patience and investment. Our source for Côte Rôtie, the Domaine Bonnefond, makes classic, delicious wines that age beautifully. (If you’re in the market for some to put away, we’ve got suggestions.)

But for readers with nearer term thirsts, Bonnefond’s simpler Syrah is an exceptional value. It requires no patience at all, and at $25 only modest investment. If you’ve got a taste for Northern Rhône Syrah, but want something to drink while all your fancier wines mature, look no further.

 

 

Everyday.  Robert Parker calls the Bonnefond Domaine “among the finest in the appellation,” and Vinous’s Josh Raynolds notes Bonnefond’s style as “refined” and “extroverted.” We have long marveled at their ability to achieve wines that are at once rich, mouthfilling, and lively. They have all the dark, meaty characteristics of Syrah, but with unusual lift and grace.

The 2016 Syrah “Sensation du Nord” from Bonnefond is, as one taster at the warehouse last weekend put it, “highly drinkable.” The nose is spiced and expressive, with notes of blackberries, tapenade, black pepper, and game. The mouth is beautifully balanced — at 12.5% alcohol it’s elegant and long, with dense plum fruits and graceful minerality.

With its fresh fruit and peppery mouthfeel this is excellent food wine — lamb and duck are particularly nice matches. But even a simple, hearty French onion soup will pair beautifully and lead you right into autumn.

 

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Bonnefond Syrah 2016

Ansonia Retail: $30
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“Seamless” New 91 Point Gigondas: Raspberry and Earth. $25

Weekday luxury. Châteauneuf-du-Pape is one of the most recognizable brands in wine. Made famous by French popes in the 14th century, and then again by Robert Parker in the 1980s, the appellation’s place on the winemaking map is well established. And well deserved — the wines can be extraordinary, though they often come at a “special occasion” price point for most wine enthusiasts.

Enter Gigondas. Wine from this appellation, about 20 minutes across the valley, shares many of the same rich, dark qualities that draw people to Châteauneuf-du-Pape. Gigondas isn’t quite as deep or as long lived as its more famous neighbor, but its price encourages more frequent enjoyment. It’s a great choice for the autumn months ahead.

 

 

Balance.  For many years our pick from Gigondas (as well as Robert Parker’s and Jancis Robinson’s) has been the Domaine les Goubert. The always-excellent wines have become even more refined since the family’s daughter Florence took over the winemaking a few years ago. The 2014 vintage has just arrived in our warehouse, and it’s delightful.

Vinous’s Josh Raynolds was effusive about the 2014, awarding 91 points and calling it “supple and seamless,” and remarking how the fruits “caress the palate.” His comment about the wine’s weight — “concentrated but lively as well” — is particularly perceptive. We found dense, silky notes of plum, lavender, and dried raspberries. The mouth is clean and smooth, managing somehow to achieve richness and lift at the same time.

This may be the most refined and precise Goubert Gigondas in recent memory.

 

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Goubert Gigondas 2014

Ansonia Retail: $30
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“Rich and Fleshy”: Affordable 2014 Red Burgundy from Michel Gros.

The most important thing to know about a wine from Burgundy is the location of the vines, but knowing the winemaker is a close second. We’ve had disappointing bottles from famous Grand Crus and brilliant wines from lesser terroirs. Often a highly skilled producer can create unusually good wine from humble origins.

A case in point is the Hautes-Côtes de Nuits rouge from Michel Gros. Gros is a world class winemaker who brings his remarkable talent to every vineyard he works; and his wines from the Hautes-Côtes de Nuits are every bit as well made as his fanciest Vosne-Romanée.

Gros’s 2014 HCDN has just arrived in our warehouse, and it’s a delight. Classic, smooth, earthy red Burgundy from an excellent year and a phenomenal producer.

 

 

The Hautes-Côtes de Nuits are a patchwork of vineyards in the hills just west of the famous Côte d’Or. The land is 100 meters higher and ripens about a week later — but with rising temperatures and aging vines, this wine gets better each year. It’s near the bottom of Gros’s impressive lineup in terms of price and prestige, but it shows the results of meticulous winemaking and excellent terroir.

This wine is classic Michel Gros — it combines an earthy, toasty palate with an effortlessly silky mouthfeel. The nose shows plum, baked strawberry, licorice, and earth. The mouth is long and elegant, but with great density and persistence. Burghound (Allen Meadows) found it “rich and fleshy,” citing “dark currants and floral hints.” It should age nicely for another few years, but after you open your first bottle you’ll have a hard time aging any at all.

When the moment calls for Burgundy but you don’t want to pony up for Chambolle-Musigny, here’s a great option at less than half the price.

 

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Michel Gros Hautes-Côtes de Nuits 2014

Ansonia Retail: $40
6+ bottle price : $34/bot

 

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2015 Grand Cru White Burgundy: 1,200 Years of Extraordinary Wine

Only two white wine terroirs in Burgundy’s Côte d’Or hold the status of Grand Cru. Montrachet and its satellites, in the south between Chassagne and Puligny, are the more famous. The other is Corton-Charlemagne, perched on a large hill marking the midpoint of the Côte d’Or, so named after it was made a gift from the Holy Roman Emperor.

Upon donating the Hill of Corton to a local abbey in 775, the Emperor Charlemagne ordered that it be planted entirely with red grapes. Legend has it that his fourth wife was unhappy with the red wine stains on her husband’s beard, and convinced him to replant a portion of the vineyard with white. The wine was renamed to honor the emperor, and the world was given an extraordinary new wine.

 

 

Corton-Charlemagne is the highest caliber of white Burgundy. Its richness and depth is equaled only by Montrachet, and its ability to age is nearly unrivaled. Our source for this exceptionally fine chardonnay is the Domaine Ravaut, a small family domaine located at the base of the great hill of Corton.

Ravaut’s 2015 Corton-Charlemagne Grand Cru is in its infancy, but it’s already giving hints of remarkable things to come. We opened a bottle a few weeks ago with steamed lobster, and while experience promises a long life ahead, it’s hard to imagine it drinking better than today. Now the nose shows baked apples, juniper, and honey. The mouth is dense, spiced, rich, and impossibly long. As it ages, look for truffle, mushroom, and woodsy notes.

We like to have other white Burgundy around for everyday drinking. But when it’s time to make your guest feel like an emperor, pull out a bottle of this.

 

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Ravaut Corton-Charlemagne Grand Cru 2015

Ansonia Retail: $100
2+ bottle price : $85/bot

 

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2015 Juliénas Returns: Inky, Delicious, “Gulpable” Red Burgundy. $16

Discovery.  The Gamay grape has had a turbulent history. In 1395 Duke Philip the Bold concluded Gamay was “evil and disloyal,” and banished it from the northern half of Burgundy. For the past six centuries it has found refuge in Beaujolais, where it produces mostly simple reds — fruit-forward and inexpensive.

Last June we happened across an small-scale, undiscovered Beaujolais producer named Jean-Marc Monnet. From a year with unusual sunshine and warmth, Monnet’s three Cru Beaujolais from 2015 are more intense and vibrant than any Beaujolais we’ve had before; Monnet ended up being one of most exciting discoveries of our trip.

Forget everything you know about Beaujolais (particularly nouveau), this is intense, delicious, inky red wine — think the fruit profile of a Pinot Noir, but the weight of a Northern Rhone Syrah.

 

 

Smooth.  After this wine sold out in a few hours last year, we called Monsieur Monnet to reserve more, and the second wave has just arrived in our warehouse. Made from 25-50 year old vines, this is smooth, rich, complex and simply delicious. It has more concentration and energy than much Bourgogne rouge from further north, and comes in at about half the price.

The color is inky purple, with a dark and earthy nose showing cranberry and pure wild cherry. The mouthfeel is intense and smooth with a long, dense finish of graphite and violets. This is delicious and intense, but, as Jancis Robinson puts it, “meant to be drunk, not contemplated.” It’s best described in French as gouleyant, a wonderfully onomatopoeic word that means “gulpable,” which perfectly captures the essence of good Beaujolais.

We opened this yesterday at our warehouse tasting in Newton, and based on how much walked out the door, it might be even tastier than it was last year. Skip the Nouveau this fall — for a buck or two more, Monnet’s dense, silky reds might be the best $16 you’ll spend all season.

 

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Monnet Juliénas 2015

Ansonia Retail: $20
6+ bottle price : $16/bot

 

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Exciting New Left-Bank Bordeaux: a 6-Year-Old “Gem” from Pauillac

The famous wine writer Hugh Johnson once wrote, “If one had to single out one commune of Bordeaux to head the list, there would be no argument. It would be Pauillac.” This tiny town in the heart of Bordeaux is most famous for its three superstar chateaux: Latour, Lafite-Rothschild, and Mouton-Rothschild. But there’s more to Pauillac than just these legendary vineyards.

This spring we were pleased to discover a small scale producer here, one that Decanter’s Jane Anson calls one of “the last little guys of Pauillac.” Indeed Adrien Lagneaux’s property is tiny — a mere 3000 bottles from just over an acre of vines — but the quality is exceptional. Lagneaux’s high percentage of Merlot (80%) makes it smoother and less austere at this stage than many other wines from the town.


This is young wine, with no small amount of oak showing through. But the oak has already started to knit together nicely since it arrived in June, and by the holidays it should be a treat. The nose is ripe and very deep, with a melange of ripe raspberry, plum, iodine, earth and minerals. The mouth is extremely dense and rich, with juicy plum fruit and a cool woodsiness.

Anson from Decanter called it “rich, intense, powerful,” and “sexy.” We expect this to age well for another decade or more — it’s dense wine and certainly built to stand the test of time. But the bottle we opened last night rounded out beautifully after an hour — next to a stew or well browned meat this fall or winter, it will be a welcome guest on your table.

Chateau Lafite this wine is not. But at $780 a bottle, Lafite is 11 times the price, and we’re pretty confident it isn’t eleven times better. If you’ve got room in your cellar for a Pauillac to enjoy over the next decade, consider this one.

 

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Lagneaux à Pauillac 2011

Ansonia Retail: $80
3+ bottle price : $69/bot

 

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Elegant, Old-Vine, No Oak White Burgundy. $25

Chablis remains among the best bargains in the wine world. Its wines are always more affordable than their counterparts in the Côte d’Or, a result of damage to the name from imitation “California Chablis” of decades ago. Drawing from the distinctive Kimmeridgean terroir and a tradition of subtle or no oak, the winemakers of Chablis create some of the purest expressions of Chardonnay in the world.

Today we’re excited to introduce a wine back into our lineup — the old-vine Chablis from the Domaine Jean Collet. Collet is an excellent producer with properties in well-known Premier Cru and Grand Cru vineyards, but their simpler wines are just as well made, making them exceptional values. This is classic Chablis — crisp, dry, fresh, and brisk.

 

 

We’ve just restocked on the 2015 Chablis cuvées from Collet, and they’re simply delicious. Grown in a year with record heat around France, they carry a bit more roundness than Chablis often does — but father and son winemakers Gilles and Romain Collet were careful to pick early enough to retain freshness and acidity.

The result is an excellent balance between crisp chardonnay fruit and stony mineral freshness — the added ripeness means these will drink well immediately. The 2015 Chablis Vieilles Vignes is bright and savory in the nose, with notes of herbs and lime rind. The mouth is dense and electric, with notes of lemon, saline, and white flowers.

With its refreshing mouthfeel, Chablis is a perfect food wine — think salads, roast chicken, and anything from the sea. But with 2015 giving just a bit more softness than usual, this will makes a lovely aperitif as well.

 

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Collet Chablis Vieilles Vignes 2015

Ansonia Retail: $30
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Curated Six: Old Red Burgundies, 2001-2010. ($105 off)

The père half of Ansonia is in Burgundy this week, working as a member of a harvesting team in Vosne-Romanée (check our Facebook page for visuals). Early signs point to an excellent 2017 vintage, though we won’t get our hands on it any time soon. Most won’t be in the bottle until 2019, and the wines themselves will mature over the following decade.

As the grapes begin their long journey this week, it can seem like an eternity until that wine is ready to drink. But luckily we’ve got some bottles kicking around the cellar that have already completed much of their aging. Today’s collection is a half-case of six of our favorite red Burgundies — five from the exceptional 2009 and 2010 vintages, and a drink-now 2001 thrown in as well.

This six-pack ships for free, and includes one bottle of each wine; quantities extremely limited.

 

 

Clerget Vosne-Romanée “Violettes” 2010
Clerget’s style is refined and classy; they destem all their fruit, resulting in smooth, ripe wines that are easy to like. Clerget’s Violettes vines are over 70 years old, and their small, concentrated yields produce only 100 cases per year.

Bourée Morey-St-Denis 1er cru “Les Baulets” 2001
With 16 years under its belt, this wine is at perfect maturity; it has been stored perfectly in the Bourée cellars until last year. It’s deep, intense, and woodsy in the nose, showing stewed prunes, barnyard, mineral, and spices.

Gros Nuits-St-Georges “les Chaliots” 2009
Michel Gros’s Nuits-St-Georges is from the heart of the appellation, near the famous “les Saint Georges” vineyard. The terroir there produces dense, meaty wines. When married with Gros’s signature silkiness, the result is unusually elegant for a Nuits.

Prunier Beaune 1er cru “les Sizies” 2010
Prunier’s premier cru reds can be difficult in their youth, but with 7 years since harvest the edges have all softened in this wine. From a plot just west of the city of Beaune, this wine shows baked spiced cherries and notes of cedar and earth.

Gros Vosne-Romanée 1er cru “Aux Brûlées” 2009
The Aux Brûlées vineyard sits immediately next to the famous Richebourg vineyard, on the most famous slope of vines in the world. Michel Gros’s Vosne 1er cru is exceptionally pretty, with a perfumed nose of violets, cassis, and stones.

Amiot Morey-St-Denis 1er cru “les Millandes” 2010
Pierre Amiot’s style has shifted in recent years to create earlier maturing cuvées. But the wines still age gracefully and with style. This wine is drinking exceptionally well today, showing smoke and mushroom and plum in the nose, with cool minerals and elegant silky fruit in the mouth.

 

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Curated Six: Old Red Burgundies, 2001-2010

Ansonia Retail: $531
Sale price : $429/sixpack

 

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“Seductive” Drink-Now Premier Cru Red Burgundy.

Complex.  Burgundy can be an intimidating place. Its classification rules are complicated, and its wines often require precise and careful cellaring. Even for experienced collectors it can tricky to time the optimum drinking window, and getting it wrong can be disappointing and expensive.

But not all of Burgundy’s wines are complicated. In Santenay, a town at the southern end of the Côte d’Or, Roger Belland and his daughter Julie make wines that are neither pretentious nor pricey. The Bellands use a cool, slow fermentation to preserve the fruit in their wines, and the results and friendly, attractive, delicious red Burgundies that need no patience.

 

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Drinkable.  In fact Belland’s wines age quite well, but they’re so drinkable young that most don’t make it past a year or two in our inventory. Today’s we’re suggesting the Santenay 1er cru “Beauregard” red from 2014. We’re nearing the end of our stocks, and as often happens with Belland’s wines, it’s drinking better than ever.

This wine is a delight. The nose is classic Belland, with bright red fruits, spring flowers, and intense berries. The mouth is punchy and dense, with attractive, juicy tannins and a silky palate bursting with raspberry and wild cherries. Burghound found it “deeply pitched,” “rich and seductively textured,” and with “good vibrancy.”

In a world of red Burgundies that need time and investment, here’s a drink-now cuvée for under $35.

 

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Belland Santenay 1er cru “Beauregard” red 14

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Violets and Cloves: “Perfectly Formed” Côte Rotie, 94 points

Unique.  The impossibly steep hillsides of the Côte Rôtie seem like the last place in the world to grow vines. With slopes reaching 60 degrees in places, all field work — planting, pruning, treating, harvesting — must be done entirely by hand. Every time we visit we wonder aloud what on earth would drive people to plant vines here.

And then we visit the Bonnefonds. Côte Rôtie syrah is unlike any other — at once dense and balanced, inky and crisp, mouthfilling and fresh. Christophe and his brother Patrick produce small batches of beautiful, concentrated syrah. Their domaine is a bit hard to find, but their wines are pure and fine; Robert Parker calls them “some of the finest in the appellation.”

 

 

Finest.  Today’s offer is for one of their two top cuvées — the Côte Rôtie “Côte Roziers” 2014. Syrah simply doesn’t get any better than this. From a plot bordering the famous La Landonne, the Bonnefond brothers produce only 125 cases of their Côte Rozier per year. Think of a flabby, high-alcohol, warm weather shiraz — this is the opposite.

Côte Rôtie famously ages well, and this wine will rewards a decade or more of patience. But as Josh Raynolds of Vinous puts it, the Bonnefonds produce “some of the most extroverted Côte Rôties,” and these wines are also enjoyable young. Raynolds awarded the 2014 Roziers 92-94 points, calling it “extremely long,” “seamless in texture” and “powerful yet lithe.” Jancis Robinson’s reviewer called it “perfectly formed.”

We found a dark perfumed nose of violets, cloves, and black raspberries. The mouth is inky and long with sturdy tannins but an unmistakable elegance — the texture is dense and very fine. On the palate there’s cherry jam, black pepper, and a hint of smoke. With proper care and some patience, this can be every bit as rewarding as a well-aged red Burgundy.

 

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Bonnefond Côte Rôtie “Côte Rozier” 2014

Ansonia Retail: $70
3+ bottle price : $59/bot

 

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Rich, Elegant White Burgundy from a Hidden Source.

Value.  Burgundies are not getting any cheaper. With limited supply and ever-increasing demand, good values are harder and harder to find. But one Burgundian town that continues to deliver far more than people expect is St-Aubin. And we’re not the only ones to notice.

Jancis Robinson wrote recently that “St-Aubin, once regarded as definitively inferior to the most famous white wine villages Meursault, Puligny-Montrachet, and Chassagne-Montrachet, should now be regarded as virtually their equal. Many is the fine white from St-Aubin nowadays, but the prices have yet to catch up.”

The wines of St-Aubin have everything we look for in White Burgundy. Clear chardonnay fruit, good balance between minerality and richness, and the ability to gain complexity with age. Our source here is Domaine Gérard Thomas, who makes excellent wine with his two daughters from their 30 acres of vines.

 

 

Opulent.  Thomas’s Bourgogne blanc is the house white at many of our readers’ homes. It’s inexpensive, refreshing, and pairs with a wide range of dishes. Their St-Aubin has everything we like about the Bourgogne, only more of it. There’s a noticeable jump in richness which, particularly in a ripe year like 2015, makes this drink like a much fancier wine.

The 2015 St-Aubin is immediately expressive in the nose, showing almonds, white flowers, and toast. The mouth is rich but lively — there’s a tense, citrus freshness balancing out 2015’s ripeness. Look for notes of baked lemons and honey, and a mouthfilling richness. This should be wonderful for another few years, but it’s awfully hard to put down today.

 

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Thomas St-Aubin 2015

Ansonia Retail: $35
6+ bottle price : $29/bot

 

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