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Raj Vaidya Raj Vaidya

First Impressions on the 2021 Vintage in the Northern Rhône

May 18, 2023

Raj Vaidya

I have just returned from a quick trip to the Northern Rhône to get a clearer picture of the vintage 2021, and wanted to share some thoughts and experiences with the Club. The ‘21 vintage in the region had some similarities with the conditions noted in Burgundy to the north and even to Champagne; there was a frost in April which had substantial effects on certain areas, especially Côte Rôtie and Sessyuel in the North, and the summer remained quite stormy with lots of rain, even significant hail in July and August. Rains arrived mid-summer and thanks to the wet, muddy conditions the vineyards were harder to work, especially at the steepest sites, and mildew became a big issue. The region dried out a bit in late August, only to have rain return right before harvest, leading many to worry about dilution in the wines. But despite all these tribulations, and the obvious difficulty of the work of viticulture that season, I have to say the wines that I’ve tasted on this trip were truly astounding in quality, reminding me of a hybrid of the 2010 and 2008 vintages.

2008 was mostly disregarded in terms of quality in its day, a rainy, dilute and yet somewhat acidic and austere profile of wine that was overshadowed by the two subsequent vintages, the heralded 2009s with tons of ripeness and richness and the elegant, more balanced 2010s. But I’ve found the ‘08s to be quite charming, if indeed a tad austere, as they have come towards maturity. They exhibit a certain restraint which is appealing after tasting the recent vintages of 2018-2020 and realizing that this kind of cool vintage profile is perhaps going the way of the Dodo. The 2010s were super impressive when young, bright and fresh while simultaneously being concentrated and dense. I much prefer most wines from ‘10 to the 2009s.

2021 seems to ride the fine line between these two. The concentration level is pretty high, achieved via the misfortune of reduced yield, first from frost and then from crop thinning and sorting at harvest due to mildew. Yet the coolness of the season is evident in the light color, low alcohols and floral, delicate nature of the palate. Jean-Louis Chave said to me that the region “needed a vintage and season like 2021, first because it teaches the young generation a lot about farming and making wine, but also because the recent hot vintages will need a lot of time to integrate and become delicious, and we’ll need some drinkable wines while we wait for those…”. He is likely right, the 2021s are already pleasurable (his are yet not bottled, but will be later this year) in their finesse and delicacy, and I don’t think it will be a vintage that needs 10 years in bottle before it is delicious.

A FEW NOTES ON SOME OF THE DOMAINES VISITED

Domaine Jean-Louis Chave, Saint-Joseph & Hermitage

The Saint-Joseph range of 2021s are stellar at Chave, no surprise, and are currently resting in tank prior to blending and bottling. This was the most open set of wines we tasted, given that they had been racked and are out of wood containers now, but have not been sulphured yet in preparation of bottling. The Hermitage range showed well, but a tad more shy, and are all structure at this stage as they are still in barrel. Colors are light and the wines show great lift and elegance.

Domaine Franck Balthazar, Cornas

Balthazar continues to reach new heights vintage after vintage, and the ‘21s are no exception, superbly long on the palate and maybe the most complex wines I tasted at the current stage. Thus far the barrels I’ve tasted have not been sulphured, so I imagine they’ll gain a bit of brawn before bottling. Also worth noting that the ‘21 vintage is the first which benefits from an additional year of ageing, so 6-8 more months in barrel, something Franck has been working towards for some years.

Domaine Pierre Gonon, Saint Joseph

Jean Gonon’s ‘21s are truly ethereal, and even though in the recent hot vintages Jean has always managed to maintain great balance his ‘21s are truly refreshing, with some pretty low alcohols (barely hitting 12 degrees) and tremendous tension. These will likely be amongst the longest lived wines from this vintage

Domaine Clusel-Roch, Côte-Rôtie

Always a favorite of mine, unsurprisingly the ‘21s are delicious already. Prepared now for bottling (some of the Vin de France and regional wines are already in bottle) the wines show pretty nice structure and a real forwardness and florality. The Vialliere will be one of the most memorable wines from this range.

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Daniel Johnnes Daniel Johnnes

Bike to Care Bordeaux - Sommelier Scholarship

Daniel Johnnes
May 10, 2023

Almost two years ago my friend Pierre-Henry Gagey of Maison Louis Jadot called me to tell me about a fundraising initiative he was hoping to launch and asked for my support. Before knowing more about it, knowing Pierre-Henry, I gave him my unconditional support.

The idea was to create a collaborative event with the goal of raising funds “for associations in the restaurant and hospitality sectors that care for people in difficulty, encourage new vocations and support the training of upcoming talent”. It was to be a 200km bike tour through Burgundy over two days.

The Jadot team was to invite ten teams from five countries, and each country would have a chef team and a sommelier team. The five countries were France, UK, USA, Denmark and Canada.

Excited by this idea, I set out to assemble my team with the goal of raising money for The Roots Fund; an organization that opens doors to people of color in or wishing to enter the wine business. La Paulee has supported this non-profit for 3 years now through our festivals and we saw this as another opportunity to mentor and diversify our community of sommeliers and wine professionals.

I called upon some of my closest friends and most influential sommeliers in America who also happened to be bikers. They were Larry Stone, Bobby Stuckey, Andre Mack, Richard Betts, Andy Chabot, and from La Paulee, Jaime Dutton and Edouard Bourgeois.

We rode the 200km under beautiful sunny skies in the Cote de Beaune and the Cote de Nuits and made new friendships, all in the spirit of a good cause.

It was so successful that Pierre-Henry and the Jadot team decided to do it again, this time n Bordeaux with close Chateau owner friends.

We have just spent 3 wonderful days in Bordeaux biking, meeting new people, riding for a mission and rediscovering Bordeaux.

Bordeaux is a beautiful city with a long history as a center of the wine trade. It is also as a region of France that produces the greatest volume of AOC wine in the country as well as some of the most spectacular and long lived wines on the planet.

My team was virtually the same as last year yet we were riding for Sommelier Scholarship, a non-profit that we founded two years ago with a mission that is closely aligned with that of Bike to Care.

Unfortunately, the weather was not as inviting and comfortable as last year but that had no effect on the spirit and the successful results of our fundraising efforts.

The core group of our host chateaux were Veronique Sanders of Chateau Haut Bailly, her husband Alexandre van Beek of Chateau Giscours and Jean-Charles Caze of Chateau Lynch Bages. We were treated like kings visiting the most iconic chateaux along our routes - Lynch Bages, Lafite Rothschild, Haut Bailly, Branaire Ducru, Chateau de Cerons and Chateau d’Yquem.

This was a journey to long remember and gave us motivation to raise even more for the next edition to take place back in Burgundy in the spring of 2024.

For all interested in supporting Bike to Care and our Sommelier Scholarship, visit our website at sommelierscholarship.org or biketocare.org .

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Edouard Bourgeois Edouard Bourgeois

Pressoir.wine Dinner Simon Bize Recap

By Edouard Bourgeois

5/5/23

Edouard Bourgeois
May 4, 2023

Simon Bize started as a vineyard owner in Savigny as far back as the late 19th century. Technology was archaic but it didn’t discourage him or his son, also named Simon, and the generations who followed to expand the family holdings and eventually built a proper winery in 1972 when Patrick Bize entered the scene. Labeled early on under the family name since the 1950’s, today, the familiar and sober label on a bottle of Bize is immediately recognizable to the savvy drinker. This is a Burgundy with rare finesse, with a real signature but the feather touch in the winemaking lets the nuances of each vintage sing. Known for a generous use of whole cluster, the wines at Bize demonstrate an extraordinary ability to age gracefully for the appellation of Savigny-les-Beaune. We were very pleased and thankful to the domaine to have the opportunity of showing twelve vintages of one the most appreciated of their premiers crus, the climat of Vergelesses. The site, facing the hill of Corton on the other side of the combe, is made of ideal geological condition with the exquisite white marl but also the presence of sandstone that gives finesse in the wines.

It was really impressive to taste throught the history of the domaine with wines made by Patrick Bize until 2013, the year of his passing, but also the brilliant wines his wife Chisa has been making for the last decade.

Below is my recap:

2019: Solar and expansive, this was not a shy wine. I felt the slight touch of stem aromatics due to whole cluster fermentation that will integrate in the wine over time. A great, wonderful start.

2018: Unfortunately, this particular bottle showed an unusual mustiness, suggesting TCA might be the culprit.

2017: My favorite wine of this first flight. As in 2016, the growing season brought a very worrying frost pressure in April but that year, the team was able to dodge the bullet more efficiently by burning up hay in the vineyard. The smoke it created was able to block the dangerous rays of sunlight that could have burned the young buds, resulting in a harvest of good quantity and gave wines of incredible finesse and brightness.

2016: As mentioned above, the frost in the Cote de Beaune will remain a historic and sad event in 2016, resulting in a 80% loss of the production at the domaine. A second generation of growth helped a little and the wines turned out quite good. I was a but mislead with the nose, finding it a touch dirty but the palate was beautiful and a touch peppery.

2015: A bigger wine for sure, although the wines at Bize are always soft spoken and pure. The higher alcohol was not an issue and I loved the black fruit concentration and energy.

2012: This was a great wine, especially considering the many challenges that Mother Nature threw, from frost and hail to diverse rot pressures. Luckily, the weather improved closer to the harvest and the thick skinned grape of that vintage gave a concentrated wine but with a superb floral character.

2011: Although the vegetal, almost asparagus like character associated with the vintage was apparent, I found a lot to love in that wine with the zippy acidity of tart red berries.

2010: I thought this was the wine that needed the most oxygen. It took quite a while to open up and its austerity brought some dryness on the palate. It kept getting better as the night went on.

2008: Excellent wine. I don’t always love that vintage in Burgundy, finding it a bit green on occasions but here, none of that. The nose was particularly expressive and the palate really rich in ripe strawberry.

2002: So much to love in this wine. Of course this was a leap back in time so this bottle really stood out but this bottle was a true reminder that the wines from Bize can really age! Perfect balance and irresitible fruit with sweet roundness on the palate.

1992: The highly anticipated 92 did not disappoint. An absolute show stopper and a perfect way to close the night. Ethereal and incredibly complex, the tertiary aromas of forest floor were laced with so much purity of fruit and impressive length. 1992 is often described as a weak vintage with very little aging potential and this bottle showed the exact opposite. This was a prisinte bottle that was kept since bottling at the domaine until a few months ago, especially shipped for us.

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Max Goldberg Liu Max Goldberg Liu

Recap: Domaine Didier Fornerol Dinner @ Houseman

by Max Goldberg Liu
Friday, April 28, 2023

by Max Goldberg Liu
Friday, April 28, 2023

We enjoyed a lovely evening last night at Houseman, a fantastic neighborhood restaurant on the border of Hudson Square and Tribeca, which recently ranked #76 on Pete Wells’ list of top 100 restaurants in New York City. The featured vigneron was Didier Fornerol, a grower in the sleepy village of Corgoloin whose wines have attained cult status and surprising rarity despite their humble Côte de Nuits Village appellation.

Corgoloin is the southernmost village in the Côte de Nuits, located just north of Ladoix-Serrigny. Along with its northern neighbor Comblanchien, Corgoloin is famous for the quality of its pinkish marble limestone which has been used as a luxury construction material for centuries, most notably in the Palais Garnier opera house in Paris. Today, the quarries are still active, and one can often hear sounds of blasting and drilling from the vineyards, which perhaps does not make for the most idyllic experience in the vines, but which reminds one of the always-present limestone.

An apocryphal story from the locals explains why Corgoloin and Comblanchien are in the Côte de Nuits Village appellation rather than being AOC villages, despite the high quality of their terroir. When the AOC system was created in the 1930’s, a large percentage of the villages’ total production of wine was purchased by the quarries to hydrate their workers - as much as 3 liters per day per person! This easily accessible market was quite lucrative for Corgoloin and Comblanchien, so rather than apply for AOC status and be subject to the associated scrutiny and bureaucracy, the villages decided to keep the status quo. Of course, it should be noted that Doctor Jules Lavalle’s mid-19th century original classification of the Côte d’Or did not mark any vineyards in the two villages as Premier Cru or Tête de Cru, so who knows…

Didier Fornerol’s estate is around 6 hectares, all in Corgoloin. Most of the vines are Côte de Nuits Villages (a small part of which are planted in Chardonnay) with small bits of Bourgogne Rouge & Blanc, Hautes Côtes de Nuits, and Passetoutgrains. He worked for many years as cellar hand and in the vines at Domaine Jules Belin in Premeaux, which upon being sold to Jean-Pierre de Smet & AXA in 1986, became known by its current name Domaine de l’Arlot. When Jean-Pierre de Smet retired in 2007, he started informally consulting with Didier, who had since returned full time to his family estate (and who amazingly works entirely by himself except during harvest time!) Didier is a talented vigneron and a little sprinkling of Jean-Pierre’s whole cluster savoir-faire from his time at Dujac & l’Arlot has added an immense amount of elegance and finesse to the wines.

They are all made with 100% whole cluster, with only gentle pump-overs, and without much new oak (10% at most). The resulting wines are floral, pure, mineral, delicately-spiced, and intensely aromatic - old-school Burgundy at its finest, without any pretense.

Here are some notes from the dinner:

Apéritif
Bourgogne Blanc 2017 - absolutely delicious - fresh and lively

Pig’s head terrine, parsley salad, grilled bread, fermented pepper mayo
Côte de Nuits Villages Rouge 2018 - rich, primary, solar
Côte de Nuits Villages Rouge 2017 - more vertical, airy, delicate but present tannins
Côte de Nuits Villages Rouge 2016 - a bit closed but elegant cherry fruit
Côte de Nuits Villages Rouge 2014 - acid-driven, much less dense than the other wines

Risotto with ramps, peas and favas
Côte de Nuits Villages Rouge 2011 - not my favorite vintage - a bit stemmy
Côte de Nuits Villages Rouge 2010 - delicious cherry cola character
Côte de Nuits Villages Rouge 2007 - lots of spice, drinking beautifully
Côte de Nuits Villages Rouge 2006 - evolving nicely, showing secondary and some tertiary aromas, tannins well-integrates

Lightly smoked quail, swiss chard, tahini cream
La Rue des Foins is a special parcel selection that was first identified as producing superior fruit in 2008

Côte de Nuits Villages "Rue des Foins" 2017 - bright, lots of finesse. Interesting to compare to the regular cuvée, has more density and color
Côte de Nuits Villages "Rue des Foins" 2016 - crunchy fruit & mineral dust
Côte de Nuits Villages "Rue des Foins" 2015 - deep & complex, lots of concentration and hidden potential

Cheeses from Saxelby
Côte de Nuits Villages "Rue des Foins" 2010 - One of my favorite wines Didier has made. Delicious!
Côte de Nuits Villages "Rue des Foins" 2009 - rich, very impressive length. Also delicious!
Côte de Nuits Villages Blanc 2005 - very impressive freshness for an 18 year old white Burgundy from this appellation! A revelation



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News from the vineyard Daniel Johnnes News from the vineyard Daniel Johnnes

News from the vineyards

Daniel Johnnes
April 14, 2023

The Canary Islands - Lanzarote

In need of a small vacation after La Paulée 2023, my wife and I decided on an expedition to the Canary Island of Lanzarote, prompted by our son who was doing some remote work there. Remote in every sense of the word! I knew of the wines of the Canary Islands and heard of the wild landscape but had never been there.

So after a day in Madrid, we hopped off to Lanzarote for 3 days. My first thought in getting off the plane was, “All I see is black volcanic soil as far as the eye can see. What in the world are we going to do here for three days”.

Lanzarote is about 125 kilometers of the coast of Morocco in the Atlantic Ocean and was the first of the eight Islands to be inhabited in the Roman era. It has a volcanic origin and the dramatic eruptions of 1730 and 1736 had a profound impact on its way of life. Prior to the eruptions, cereal was the most important agricultural activity. Post eruptions, about a quarter of the island was covered by lava and forced much of the population to flee to Cuba and the Americas.

It wasn’t until 1775 when the first winery, Il Grifo, was founded. Although we saw wines from this winery on lists, we visited only one, Bermejos, while on the island.

The principal grape varieties are Listan Blanco (Palomino) and Listan Negro, although there are 4 or 5 other indigenous varieties all on their own root stock as phylloxera never made it to the island.

I can say the wines I tried were truly volcanic and had a distinctive minerality to them, almost salty and a bit rustic in character. They are fantastic for grilled fish and meat and wonderful alternatives at very fair prices.

My first thought of worrying what to do for 3 days quickly became, “why are we leaving so soon”?

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Guest User Guest User

What's Pressoir Cooking - Raviolis à la Daube

April 13, 2023

by Victoire Chabert

The last time I made this niçoise dish from Nice, France for ravioli a la Daube in the south of France was with my mother, for some Americans who had never tasted it before. I still remember how much they loved it and how many times they had more. Years later, they still talk to me about it!


For this recipe, you can, and in fact we did, buy the ravioli at a favorite butcher, pasta shop or grocery store. The daube also goes very well with fresh pasta. But to make this recipe complete, you will also find the recipe for ricotta ravioli which goes perfectly with the Daube sauce.

Ingredients for the Daube sauce for 6 people : 


1 kg beef (the best being chuck or the tender of slice because with too lean meat it will be too dry)

1 L red wine 

1 onion 

2 beef bouillon cubes

1.5 kg carrots 

5 shallots 

Laurel + thyme

Flour

Salt and pepper



Early in the morning (or better still, the day before), cut the meat into large cubes - about 1 inch. Cut the onion in half. Place everything in a large bowl with the thyme and bay leaves and the peppercorns. Cover with the red wine. Add water so that all the meat is covered if necessary. Let rest at least 3 hours.

Then, finely chop the shallots. Drain the meat and put it in another container.
In a thick-bottomed cast-iron casserole, brown the beef cubes in a little oil, wait a few minutes, then with a skimmer, remove the meat and recover the wine lost in the casserole by the meat and add it to the marinade. Put 2 tablespoons of oil back into the pan and the meat. Cook the pieces on all sides and season with salt and pepper. Remove the beef cubes again and set aside.
Add a spoonful of oil and the shallots to the pan. Fry them until they become translucent then sprinkle with flour. Cook for a few minutes.
Moisten with the wine from the marinade and add the bouillon cubes. Put the meat back in the casserole.
Peel and cut the carrots into thin slices. Add them to the pot. Simmer over medium heat, covered, for at least one hour.


Ingredients for the ravioli pasta for 6 people: 

300 g flour

3 eggs

1 tablespoon olive oil

Salt

For the ravioli filling :

300 g ricotta cheese

1 egg yolk

60 g grated Parmesan cheese

Salt and pepper


Prepare the dough by mixing the ingredients. Let it rest for about 20 minutes and then roll it out with a rolling pin to a thickness of 2 to 3 mm. 
Prepare the filling. Crush the ricotta, add the other ingredients and place 1 teaspoon of filling on the dough. Place a second layer of pasta on top of the first with the ricotta pieces between the two ravioli doughs then press with your fingers to adhere the two doughs between each ricotta piece.

Cut out the ravioli with a serrated wheel. Cook them in boiling salted water for 4-5 minutes

Drizzle with the Daube sauce then sprinkle parsley on top and bon appetit!



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Other Edouard Bourgeois Other Edouard Bourgeois

Wine containers and how to close them

by Edouard Bourgeois
4/7/2023

Edouard Bourgeois
April 7, 2023

We always talk about “what is in the bottle” but I think it is just as important to discuss the bottle itself (around 30 billion wine bottles are used each year) and how it is closed. Wine producers around the world work extremely hard all year long, dealing with the natural challenges posed by Mother Nature and hoping to produce the most sound and authentic wine. Once this complex process is achieved, it is time to bottle the wine, store it and ship it, sometimes to the other end of the globe. The question of finding the right container then becomes crucial.

If today the familiar glass bottle is the most used container, wine was first stored in animal leather gourd types. It is easy to realize how these containers were far from ideal because of their lack of hermeticity and a tendency to alter the flavors of the wine. A small revolution happened when terra cotta started to develop in the 3rd century. Still in use today and revived with the growing trend of the Georgian qveris, these amphorae presented a new problem - their size was often quite large, making them difficult to transport so consumption remained local. However, these clay vessels were an excellent way to avoid oxidation (if kept closed) and combined with the use of corks developed by the Romans, they played a very important role in showing that wine may age gracefully overtime. Of course, as mentioned above, once open, oxidation became inevitable and the wine had to be consumed quickly.

Georgian workers transport a qveri

Earlier during the 1st century, wood entered the scene as another alternative for wine containers. Apparently first used to store milk in the Alps, the Gauls borrowed that type of container for wine and it quickly became the preferred vessel in Europe. It offered many advantages compared to the amphorae. Lighter, cheaper, easier to stack and easier to transport, the barrel was born and produced in various sizes and shapes (although always rounded). But just like the amphorae, the problem of oxidation remained. Once wine is racked from a barrel, the rest quickly gets exposed to oxygen, resulting in vinegar.

A modern, state-of-the-art barrel cellar in Bordeaux

We had to wait for the Egyptians to come up with the idea of glass, at first created using silica. The development of better ovens and a more acute understanding of glass making took a long time. but fast forward to the 16th century and the glass bottle started to be mass produced, mostly used to store wine. In the 17th century, England took another step towards more sturdy bottles with the use of coal powered ovens (instead of the more scarce wood) while Portugal established itself as the leader in cork production with its strong supply from oak forests. Today, Portugal is still the main producer of natural corks in the world, by far.

The bottle has gone a long way and today is much more than just a recipient. Its shape and size are directly connected with local traditions. The unique vin jaune can only be bottled in a clavelin, this curious, bulky 62 cl bottle proudly encrusted at the neck. Bordeaux adopted its signature angular shoulder bottle to easily retain solidified tannins while Alsace or Germany favor the long “flutes” bottles for their crisp whites. The weight of the bottle then almost became a status. You can still find heavy and thick bottles of US Cabernet or even Bordeaux or Burgundy, that some producers may use to justify what they consider to be a higher quality of wine. However, It seems that these heavy bottles tend to become less and less used as their carbon footprint poses an environmental problem. This idea was reinforced with wine critic Jancis Robinson who started to indicate the bottle weight along with her wine scores.

The timeless “clavelin”, solely used for vin jaune in the Jura. Its content of 62 cl instead of the most common 75 cl reflects the loss of wine during winemaking.

As mentioned above, the cork is the most common choice of closure for wine bottles. Corks come in different sizes and shapes as well, the crème de la crème being the “fleur de liège”: the highest quality, harvested from the heart of the tree bark where it is the most dense, with fewer asperities. Usually these corks are also cut long at a 5 centimeter length and, understandably so, used for the more expensive wines. Each one of these “luxury” corks can cost up to a dollar. Alternatives that are using treated natural cork can also be found with the company DIAM as a leader in that field. These corks, treated against the most common flaw that results in “corked wine”, the molecule 2, 4, 6 -trichloro-anisole (TCA) are adopted by more and more producers. They include some of the finest winemakers such as Dominique Lafon who made the bold move to switch his entire closure program to Diam with the vintage 2013, bottling his prized Volnay and Meursault and even Montrachet Grand Cru under Diam corks.

A DIAM cork in the background versus the untreated cork from Relentless in the foreground

More could be said about bag in boxes, screwcaps, synthetic corks and even wine on tap.

I personally believe that it is important to identify what matters the most when choosing the container and closure options so the quality of the wine is not altered, while favoring less expensive options and environmental friendly alternatives.   

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What's Pressoir cooking? Justine Puaud What's Pressoir cooking? Justine Puaud

What's Pressoir Cooking?

April 4, 2023

by Justine Puaud

Asparagus
A sure sign of spring

While asparagus is usually found year-round, like most produce, it has a peak season. Asparagus season usually starts around late February and goes until June, with the peak months in April and May, so I thought I would share a simple recipe with a mousseline sauce.

While I find delicious white asparagus in Beaune’s farmers market, I remember that in the U.S white asparagus are not common and you will more easily find green asparagus, equally good.

Green asparagus with mousseline sauce

Ingredients for 4 people

2 bunches of green asparagus

1 egg

1 handful of hazelnuts

5 sprigs of tarragon

5 sprigs of chervil

1 tablespoon of mustard (a strong Dijon mustard)

sunflower oil

salt and pepper

Instructions

  1. Cut the base of the asparagus which is a little too woody. Rinse and cook them for about 4 to 5 minutes or until tender in a large pan of boiled salted water. Immediately rinse them under cold water to stop the cooking quickly or plunge in a bowl of ice water. Drain and let cool on absorbent paper.

  2. Separate the white from the yolk of the egg. Whisk the yolk with mustard, salt and pepper, add the sunflower oil, until you get a nice mayonnaise consistency. Add the chopped herbs into the preparation.

  3. Roast the hazelnuts in a dry pan for 2 minutes then crush them with a knife.

  4. Whisk the egg white with a pinch of salt and gently fold it into the mayonnaise.

  5. Serve asparagus topped with the mousseline sauce and sprinkled with crushed hazelnuts and voilà!

Many sommeliers will say asparagus and wines are not close friends but I think a crisp mineral Chardonnay like a Saint-Romain will pair perfectly with this recipe. I recently discovered Domaine Henri & Gilles Buisson and absolutely loved their Saint-Romain. “Sous la Velle”.

Did you know?

In Burgundy, you will find another variety of asparagus named “L’Asperge des Bois”. It looks like a small ear of almond green wheat. It is picked before it blooms, a pompom of white flowers. Most often wild asparagus grow in "bands", when there is one, there are plenty .. I particularly found it in a deciduous forest, in the undergrowth, towards the wet and shaded meadows. You can just cook it simply, roasted with olive oil and garlic.

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Raj Vaidya Raj Vaidya

What's Pressoir Drinking- Champagne Jacquesson 1989

by Raj Vaidya
March 31, 2023

March 31, 2023

Raj Vaidya

I had the pleasure of dining with some friends this week for a little BYO at Gramercy Tavern and wanted to share my experience of a truly surprising and unusual bottle with you today. Jacquesson is a small house in Champagne which has always impressed me with their quality, especially in recent years where the push towards using organic sourcing and buying the bulk of the vineyards they were sourcing from really raised their bar. The house notably sold last year to Artemis Group, the wine estate arm of Francois Pinault’s empire (including other great wineries such as Eisele Estate in Napa, Bouchard, Clos de Tart and Domaine d’Eugenie in Burgundy and, of course, Château Latour in Bordeaux.) While the previous owners, the Chiquet family, are now departed from the company, I believe the commitments towards quality and great farming are secure in the hands of the current ownership. But I have had very little experience tasting these wines prior to the mid 90’s, so I had almost no perspective on how things had changed during the Chiquets’ time. The most wines I had tasted were when we were able to host a retrospective of their “Cuvée 700 Series” during La Fête du Champagne last year. I had the chance to taste each release back to the early bottlings which started around 2004, and so I was very curious when one of the diners at the BYO offered to bring a 1989.

This bottle was really interesting. A late release from the winery, disgorged in 2006, so this wine spent 15 years on the lees in the bottle. It had no dosage added at disgorgement, but I wondered if there may have been some residual sugar at bottling as there was a little sweetness to the wine, although it was far from cloying. Very deep brioche yeastiness dominated the palate, with undertones of clove like spice and a delightfully creamy texture. Very long on the palate although that slight sweetness dominated the taste on the finish. All around a very cool bottle. But it seemed to me that the older era at Jacquesson was not nearly as individual or characterful as the wines they are producing today. A treat to taste nonetheless!

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Winemaker Interviews Justine Puaud Winemaker Interviews Justine Puaud

Winemaker Interview

by Justine Puaud

Friday, March 31, 2023

The next generation at Maison Joseph Drouhin

1 - The history behind Maison Joseph Drouhin is fascinating. Can you give us a quick overview of Maison Joseph Drouhin?

Maison Joseph Drouhin is intimately connected to Beaune and Burgundy. It is here that the family business was established in 1880 by Joseph Drouhin, my great great grandfather, and where its wonderful history has been written especially through the 14 Grands Crus the estate produces. Today it is still held by the 4th (and 5th) generation of the family: my mother Véronique, and her three brothers Frederic, Laurent and Philippe.

My mother joined in September 1986 and quickly went to Oregon for harvest and did vinification at three different pioneer wineries there. In 1987 they bought land in Oregon that became Domaine Drouhin Oregon, and since then she is between Oregon and Burgundy and has made 37 vintages in each growing region.

Today we own 100 hectares (250 acres) in Oregon and 93 hectares (230 acres) in all of Burgundy, acquired gradually over the years. Two thirds of our vineyards are in Premier and Grand Cru sites, and some are among the most famous in Burgundy, such as Clos des Mouches, Musigny, Amoureuses, Griotte-Chambertin, Corton-Charlemagne….

Robert, my grandfather, was one of the first in Burgundy to introduce "culture raisonnée" (doing away with pesticides and other chemicals) and my uncle, Phillipe, moved to organic and biodynamic viticulture in the late 80’s, making Joseph Drouhin today one of the largest Burgundian estates entirely organically farmed, something we are very proud of!

2 - "Passing the baton" - Was it easy for your grandfather to pass the baton to your mom and your uncles? Did everyone find his or her right place at the beginning?

It has not been easy and it took some time and adjustments for each of them to find their own place but it finally happened naturally. Today they all occupy key and complementary positions. Philippe is passionate about viticulture, my mother about winemaking, Laurent and Frédéric on the business side.

3 - What about you? Have you always wanted to be a winemaker? What were your motivations - to work in the winery, work in the vineyards … did it take a few years to realize you wanted to be a winemaker?

Laurène Drouhin: Whenever I was asked in my early twenties if I would be seduced by winemaking one day, I always answered “well I love wine but only to drink and share it”. During my business studies I travelled, met a lot of people from all around the world, worked for Champagne houses where I got the chance to spend time with the winemaking teams and, finally growing up, roots were catching up.

I became more and more sensitive to what Drouhin means to me today: heritage, family, winemaking and sustainability. And this is how I ended up going back to school in 2018 to study viticulture and oenology in Beaune and finally joined the family estate in 2020 which definitely makes sense.

4 - Une affaire mère-fille - Véronique is simply wonderful! How is it to work with your mother? Did she help you realize you wanted to be a winemaker?

LD: She is wonderful! She never pushed me or my two siblings to be winemakers. Both my parents gave the three of us a sensibility to wine and respect for nature. I remember being really happy during harvest when after school we were going to the winery to taste the grapes and the juice. Maybe this is where it all started! Or possibly during her pregnancy as it was harvest time and she might have had a few sips…

I would say like mother, like daughter... and like great wine, always better together! We share a passion for winemaking and a deep respect for the land and the grapes that make it all possible.

5 - Can you tell us a little bit about your winery in Oregon? What is the cuvée Laurène?

LD: The history of Joseph Drouhin is not only rooted in the Côte-d'Or. It has also been written in Oregon in the USA since July 1987, when my grandfather decided to buy land in the hills of Dundee in the Willamette Valley. It was a bold idea but also part of a great pioneering tradition that has always been in the family DNA. This is how Domaine Drouhin Oregon was born, complete with the motto: “French Soul, Oregon Soil”. Our story in Oregon is also the story of a family partnership. Right from the estate’s first vintage in 1988, my grandfather asked my mother Véronique to be the winemaker and my uncle Philippe to plant and cultivate the vines.

So in 1988 they produced the first cuvée of Pinot Noir Dundee Hills. This was a crazy gamble, when they had neither vines nor winery in this lesser known winegrowing area. Today, it is the emblematic cuvée of the domaine, combining balance, elegance, and sophistication. As the first family from Burgundy to venture into Oregon, we have helped change the image and economy of an entire region.

Cuvée Laurène and its 30 vintages are something I am really proud of! I enjoy them more than I have made them... but I am really honored of having my name on this cuvée that is produced entirely from Pinot Noir grown on the family’s estate in the Dundee Hills. The fruit is handpicked into small totes, destemmed, fermented with indigenous yeasts, and then placed into French oak barrels. Once the vintage is safely in the cellar, my mother and I begin the process of selecting barrels which have an extra complexity, length, and depth — barrels which will work together as Laurène. Cuvée Laurène is not only good but it also ages very well since first vintage 1992 that is still stunning!

6 - Does climate change make it more difficult to work in the vineyards now compared to the generations before? What is your opinion about this?

LD: I would say global warming, that is a consequence of climate change, has had a positive impact on the quality of the crops in Burgundy for a few vintages. When we look at my grandfather’s time or early vintages of the 4th generation, maturity was sometimes complicated to reach.

However, we do face a huge immediate challenge with climate change. We have milder winters, dry and hot summers, harvests start earlier and earlier…we really need to adapt to the world’s changing climate, especially while working with nature.

But even more importantly we have to act now to prevent or at least slow this climate change. I am very concerned about this so we’ve just started to measure our carbon footprint to know what we should do to reduce our emissions. I am also very hopeful as we joined a group of French companies willing to be a regenerative business in the future: a company that gives back more to our planet and society than it takes.

7- Did you make some changes in the vineyard and cellar work? Any new projects you would like to talk about?

LD: Well at this point I am still in the learning part, especially because we produce around 110 appellations in Burgundy, which takes almost a life to know about... And I have to say previous generations and our teams have done and still do remarkable work. Thanks to my previous experiences, I am able to bring a little bit more structure to our processes so we can focus even more on the quality of our wines.

I have worked with our Technical Director Jérôme Faure-Brac, on following very closely our growers’ partners to guarantee the maturity we are looking for to have excellent and healthy crops.

As I mentioned before, climate change is a huge 360° challenge so the project is to bring Drouhin towards more sustainability in every step of our process: viticulture, oenology and distribution. 

8 - Are your cousins and siblings thinking about joining Maison Drouhin?

LD: I am the eldest of the 5th generation so it is still too early to know about others joining. They are all having their own experiences for now but we definitely all share an interest in wine on different levels, vineyard or winemaking or business, so hopefully some will join soon!

——————————

Merci Laurène!!!

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Recap - Pressoir.wine Dinner Chevillon

by Edouard Bourgeois
Friday, March 24, 2023

by Edouard Bourgeois
Friday, March 24, 2023

Domaine Chevillon has been around for quite a while. The family traces back its history in winemaking to the early 1900’s and the current fifth generation is led by brothers Bertrand and Denis, following the teachings of their father Robert who retired in 2003. As traditional as it gets, the winemaking is expertly managed. Despite a recent trend in the region where more and more domaines decide to include whole cluster in their fermentation process, at Chévillon grapes are fully destemmed. The result is a wine with deep color and an authentic Nuits-St-Georges with plenty of structure and black fruit. With age, Chevillon’s wines are stunning and the one thing that fascinates me about the style of the domaine is the rigorous consistency of the quality, one vintage after the other. As you will read below in the tasting notes recap, we decided to show both “easy” vintages and some more challenging ones. The consistency could be explained by the strict use of very old vines, usually around 50 years old but sometimes well into their 70s.

 

The first flight was a vertical of the Premier Cru Chaignots. Named after the oak trees (Chênes in French) that once grew there, the vineyard is located in the northern portion of the appellation, close to Vosne-Romanée. Typically fresh in style with good acidity, Chaignots was a great “opener”. 2017 was electric. Too young? Certainly. But so much pleasure. Tannins were present but refined and the acidity obviously still high. 2012, a more challenging vintage due to erratic weather patterns and mildew pressure, showed the expected concentration and tightness both on the nose and the palate. I found the wine to be quite tannic but certainly a good pairing with the first beet dish. Many guests I spoke to liked this 2012 and the one served after. Finally for this flight, the warm vintage 2009 surprised me. One should expect 2009 to express the hot weather patterns associated with that year and it was certainly a signature here but I would have liked a bit more balance and I found some “raisiny” notes plus a wine that showed more age than I had expected.

Moving on to the same trio of vintages, this time from the climat Roncières. Planted on a very steep slope at 20% incline, Roncières got its name from the gnarly bramble bushes that covered the area before Pinot Noir made its home there. The Chevillon work one hectare on this climat, located this time south of the village. The 2017 once again showed vibrant youth with more homogeneity than Chaignots. A great bottle. I couldn’t get past the distraction of a rather strong grapefruit rind flavor profile in the 2012. A pronounced bitterness marked the palate and lingered. 2012 might be in a bizarre phase right now. Again here I think the food pairing Pascaline and Chef Jonathan came up with was excellent. A perfectly cooked Arctic char was served with the Roncières flight. 2009 showed better than in the first flight. More balanced and the wine started to express black fruits and a suave texture.

The hanger steak was paired with an incredible vertical of “Cailles”. We took a leap back in time here with a beautiful trio, starting with a gorgeous 2010. With more acidity than in 2009, 2010 gave great results in Burgundy, especially in the Côte de Nuits. We just wish the quantity produced were higher. Cailles 2010 was in a lovely stage of its life. Impressive balance and real depth. Plenty of black cherry and just a hint of secondary aromas suggested a great evolution ahead of this wine. And then, 2003… This atypical vintage marked a new era in many European vineyards and the punishing heat waves that year gave birth to extreme wines. Even in Burgundy, one can be mistaken with a wine from the Rhône when tasting these powerful cuvées. The consistency I referred to above when it comes to Chevillon really came into play here as the 2003 Cailles remained charming. Sure the vintage style was present, with drying tannins and a bit of a short finish, but aromatics were pretty, suggesting roasted plum.

We closed the flight with arguably the wine of the night: Cailles 1990. The expectations were high but they were met. An overall blessed vintage for Burgundians, that is the year when Denis and Bertrand created the family company with their father Robert. The richness and power from 1990 was enhanced by the generous and joyful character of Cailles. Here the vines are almost 80 years old and planted on a clay-rich soil. The wine had irresistible sweetness and beautiful secondary notes of forest floor and underbrush while bursting with red fruit.    

The last flight was built around the same last vintages (2010, 2003 and 1990) but from “Vaucrains” this time. Interestingly, “Vaucrains” comes from the French “vaux rien” literally meaning “worthless”. If the wine made there certainly is highly valuable, it is the land that was considered for a long time worth very little because nothing would grow. Steep and hard to work, it is also one of the few vineyards in Burgundy to be planted with a slight northern exposure. It is located just above the previous Cailles and next to the prestigious “Les Saint-Georges”, all of them once again in the southern portion of the appellation.

2010 seemed more closed than its cousin Cailles. The nose required oxygen but blossomed nicely after a while. I thought the 2003 showed even better than Cailles 2003, with less of the “‘03 hot style” and deep aromas of roasted fig and tar. Finally, the 1990 Vaucrains showed more austerity than Cailles. A touch dirty suggested the presence of TCA. It certainly didn’t perform as brilliantly as the Cailles 90.  

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Nuits St Georges and Chevillon

Nuits st Georges and Chevillon

by Edouard

3/16/23

Edouard Bourgeois
March 16, 2023

If each wine producing commune of the Côte d’Or is known to give wine its distinctive signature style, I have always thought that Nuits-St-Georges truly has an expression of its own. After Beaune, the unanimous wine capital of Burgundy, Nuits-St-Georges plays an important role in the region and covers over three hundred hectares of vines, with the vast majority planted with Pinot Noir. Its pivotal location in the heart of the Côte d’Or also helps strengthen its impact. In popular culture, Nuits-St-Georges was mentioned in “Voyage around the Moon” by Jules Verne and the story gets better when, in 1971, the Apollo XV team decided to honor the village by bringing a bottle of Nuits-St-Georges and left it in one the moon’s craters famously named “Crater St-Georges”.

Vineyards are planted both to the north of the village where the proximity of Vosne-Romanee is often believed to confer elegance and charm to the wines, and to the south of the village, towards Premeaux. This portion is where the most famous climat, Les St-Georges, which gave its name to the commune, is found.

A myriad of producers may be listed such as Domaine de l’Arlot, Jean-Jacques Confuron, the large house Faiveley, the historic Henri Gouges and of course we can’t forget to mention the unofficial sister of the Hospices de Beaune, the Hospices de Nuits, holding its own wine auction in March rather than in November.

But of course, here we want to speak particularly about my favorite producer in Nuits-St-Georges, Domaine Robert Chevillon. I guess what I like most in Chevillon’s wines is their consistency, no matter how rainy or challenging a vintage can be, the wines are always great. Furthermore, they’re delicious young and old. The fruit is black and succulent during the first decade in bottle but the patient drinker gets rewarded with a festival for the senses when tasting a wine from the 1990’s or older. Last year, I had the pleasure of visiting the domaine with Daniel and our host, Bertrand who, after tasting the entire range out of barrels, poured us a blind wine from a dusty bottle. It was a gorgeous bottle of Bousselots 2001, a vintage that is not particularly praised for its quality but showed wonderfully. More recently, during La Paulée in New York, I shared a glass of Vaucrains 1983 with Bertrand. This was a wine I have had the chance to taste during my sommelier years at restaurant Daniel and always an amazing experience.

The eight Premiers Crus proudly vinified by Bertrand and his brother Denis are completely de-stemmed and going over the winemaking process would be useless as it follows the most traditional methods everyone is familiar with. The wines are just like Bertrand Chevillon. Honest, generous, and full of life, without compromise.

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WHAT'S PRESSOIR COOKING?

Victoire Chabert

March 15, 2023


A few more days of cold weather before the spring season... why not get a head start and start thinking about sunny recipes? Here is the recipe of a dish that my mother makes every year and that delights the tastebuds of many… and which I must now master to take over the tradition and heritage!


Ingredients for 4 persons :

4 tomatoes

100 g of white ham

100 g ground beef

100 g sausage meat

1 shallot

1 clove garlic

10 g butter

2 tbsp olive oil

1 egg

1 tbsp fresh cream

2 tablespoons of parsley and oregano

Salt, pepper and breadcrumbs


With a knife, cut off the top of the tomatoes (reserve the caps). Gently scoop out the tomatoes with a teaspoon, keeping the pulp removed: be careful not to pierce the tomatoes. Salt the bottom of the tomatoes and turn them over on a plate so that they give up their water.

Peel garlic and shallot. Chop the garlic after removing the germ. Finely chop the shallot. Drain the tomato pulp well to remove excess water and cut into small pieces.

Preheat the oven to 410 degrees F. Put the butter and 1 tablespoon of olive oil in a pan. Brown the shallots and garlic. Add the tomato pulp, sprinkle with parsley and oregano. Season with salt and pepper. Simmer over low heat until most of the liquid has evaporated (about 8 to 10 minutes).

Meanwhile, finely chop the white ham. Put it in a bowl with the ground beef and sausage meat. Add the garlic/shallot/tomato mixture and mix well. Add the whole egg and cream. Mix well. Season with salt and pepper if necessary.

Put this filling in the hollowed-out tomatoes and place them in a pre-oiled casserole. Cover tomatoes with their caps. Drizzle with 2 tablespoons olive oil and sprinkle with breadcrumbs. Place in the oven for about 45 minutes (if the top of the tomatoes becomes too brown, cover with aluminum foil to finish cooking). In your dish, add the rice between all your tomatoes and put it back in the oven for a few minutes to brown the rice and get the sauce’s taste.

Here is the classic recipe of the famous stuffed tomatoes but I love to have a dish with several vegetables like zucchini, onion or eggplant where you can follow the same instructions. I personally find the mix of tastes and flavors even better together.


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La Paulée at Blackberry Farm

Daniel Johnnes

03/08/2023

La Paulée at Blackberry Farm

Coming to Blackberry Farm has always been a dream of mine.

This idyllic 4200 acre paradise nestled in the great Smokey Mountains of Tennessee invited me and Jaime, under the banner of La Paulée and the Sommelier Scholarship, to host three days of Burgundy, lunches, dinners and seminars with two winemakers.

Since the reputation preceded the invitation, it was easy work convincing Nicolas Rossignol from Domaine Nicolas Rossignol and Loic Dugat-Py from Domaine Dugat-Py to make the journey.

Both contributed significant quantities of wine from some of their best appellations to accompany the meals and to present at the seminars. The most notable wines from Nicolas were the Volnay Caillerets 2018 and Pommard 1er Cru Epenots 2017 for the first meal and Dugat-Py’s Gevrey-Chambertin Evocelles 2018, Gevrey 1er Cru Petites Chapelle 2018.

In addition to those stunners were fascinating comparative tastings of the 2017, ‘18 and ‘19 vintages from Nicolas’s Pommard Petit Noizons and Volnay Santenots. I’m still a big fan of 2017!

Not only were we treated like royalty but Blackberry made a significant pledge to our Sommelier Scholarship from the event’s proceeds, and hosted an additional auction fo the non-profit’s benefit. The auction lot was for a couple to spend a day in the most prestigious cellars of Burgundy on the next Sommelier Scholarship trip in 2024. Bidding was fierce and came to a tie where we agreed to satisfy both by taking a second couple on an additional trip.

All in all we raised $80,000 which will fund 4 or 5 trips over the next year or two, enabling us to bring up to 15 young scholars to France with the hope of having an impact on their career and introducing them to the culture and traditions of viticultural France.

To top it off, one of the attendees made an separate contribution today.

We are completely exhausted after La Paulée de New York and then 3 days at Blackberry but in spite of the fatigue, I feel completely energized by the new contacts and knowing the Scholarship is thriving.

Cheers,

Daniel

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What's Pressoir drinking? Raj Vaidya What's Pressoir drinking? Raj Vaidya

La Paulée Recap: Domaine Dujac Clos Saint-Denis Dinner at 63 Clinton

3/8/2023
Raj Vaidya

Daniel has been dreaming of hosting a focused Clos Saint-Denis dinner with Jeremy Seysses for quite some time, as it has long been a favorite appellation of his (and mine also…) and is somewhat overshadowed in the eyes of many collectors and enthusiasts by the Clos de la Roche from Dujac. Indeed, Clos de la Roche tends to be a richer, more structured and generally larger wine than the Clos Saint-Denis, which perhaps is more akin in style to Grand Crus from the Chambolle side of Morey-Saint-Denis.

This fantastic retrospective ran us from the 2017 vintage back to 1990 and provided some really exceptional experiences and some surprises to boot. Jeremy was keen on having the restaurant be a bit more modern and inventive than a very classic French place so we tapped the skills and warm hospitality of 63 Clinton, a jewel box of a restaurant on the Lower East Side with Michelin pedigree (and a star of its own.)

Chef Samuel Clonts of 63 Clinton with Diana and Jeremy Seysses and the Paulée team: Raj Vaidya and Jaime Dutton

After starting with some 2014 whites (Puligny Folatières stole that show) we dove into Clos Saint-Denis fully, leading with younger vintages and moving chronologically back to 1990. The 2017 was the standout in the first flight, superbly open and singing, with great salinity already noticeable and yet a core of ripe and balanced fruit. I had fully expected the 2010 to be a stunner and indeed it was, though in the same flight the 2012 stood out as a surprise, much fuller than I’d experienced previously and with tremendous energy and length.

As we entered into some older wines, Jeremy spoke about ‘famous’ vintages in Burgundy and a belief he has that many heralded vintages create the scenario where a collector comments upon drinking 10 out of the 12 bottles in a case, “…this is going to be really great, someday!” The concern over so called ‘great’ vintages is that they’ll fail to offer actual pleasure during consumption…

2005 certainly could be accused of this, and even though we double decanted this vintage quite early, the wine still showed somewhat closed and burly, fine but without elegance or pleasure. The 1999 on the other hand proved to be a 'great’ vintage which is also a GREAT wine, and a delicious experience.

The last flight proved Jeremy’s point well also, with the 1990 showing very well (as expected) but the ‘98 and the ‘95 exceeding most guests’ expectations. 1998 had a lovely brooding savory quality to it, yet because of Jeremy’s dad Jacques’ light touch and inclusion of whole clusters, the wine had a balancing effect of very light body and tremendous aromatic complexity.

The 1995 was my wine of the night, classic Dujac spicy nose, salty mineral notes throughout, very light in color and body yet superbly long on the palate. Truly an expression of mastery.

The Menu and Wine Line Up

Razor clam tostada, white bean puree, calabrian chilies and lime zest

Domaine Dujac, Morey-Saint-Denis 1er Cru Les Monts Luisants 2014 en magnum

Domaine Dujac, Puligny-Montrachet 1er Cru Les Folatières 2014 en magnum

Domaine Dujac, Puligny-Montrachet 1er Cru Les Combettes 2014

Grilled prawns, foie gras and house furikake

Domaine Dujac, Clos Saint-Denis Grand Cru 2017

Domaine Dujac, Clos Saint-Denis Grand Cru 2015

Domaine Dujac, Clos Saint-Denis Grand Cru 2014

Wild caught turbot, nantua sauce and grilled spring onions

Domaine Dujac, Clos Saint-Denis Grand Cru 2012

Domaine Dujac, Clos Saint-Denis Grand Cru 2010

Domaine Dujac, Clos Saint-Denis Grand Cru 2008

Roasted squab, braised and spiced red cabbage

Domaine Dujac, Clos Saint-Denis Grand Cru 2005

Domaine Dujac, Clos Saint-Denis Grand Cru 2002

Domaine Dujac, Clos Saint-Denis Grand Cru 1999

Black truffle stuffed lamb chop with black pepper and comte cheese potato gratin, lamb jus

Domaine Dujac, Clos Saint-Denis Grand Cru 1998

Domaine Dujac, Clos Saint-Denis Grand Cru 1995

Domaine Dujac, Clos Saint-Denis Grand Cru 1990

Mignardise

Orange and raspberry mignardise

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What's Pressoir Drinking?

What’s Pressoir Drinking

by Edouard

2/27/23

Edouard Bourgeois
March 1, 2023

When I moved to the US in 2008, one of my motivations as a sommelier was to learn about American  wines. Soon I had my first sip of Cabernet Sauvignon from Ridge Vineyards and I was sold. But the most surprising discovery for me was Ridge’s Zinfandel. I have been a fan of Ridge wines ever since and I am always on a hunt for an old bottle of their Zinfandel. Although I am not typically a fan of big, bold flavor wines, I have always found a great energy in these wines and the powerful character of the grape variety never speaks too loudly, letting terroir express itself.

30 years ago, Ridge made its first Monte Bello, now a legendary US Meritage. Two years later, Ridge bottled their first Zinfandel. The winery has been on a constant hunt for California’s ideal vineyard so the climate, soil, and varietal are perfectly matched. To bring the distinctive character of each vineyard to the wine, they use minimal handling that is typical of traditional winemaking.

I recently acquired a bottle of a 1991 Beatty Vineyard Zinfandel from the online Acker auction and opened it last week. Ridge is known for their numerous experiments with different grape varieties and vineyards, and it is easy to get lost on their website trying to navigate the plethora of wines that have been made there. Because of that diverse portfolio, some cuvées were made only a few times before a vineyard got replanted or a lease ended. This Beatty vineyard is a good example of that, having been made only four times, in 1983, 1984, 1988 and 1991.

Though Howell Mountain is on the dry side of Napa Valley, and the open, chaparral-covered slopes seem to bake in the August sun, this is a cool microclimate. With a late start and full crop in 1991, these grapes did not ripen completely until the first week of November. Anticipating firm tannins, the winery used small, five-ton fermentors; a third of the grapes in each tank were whole clusters. This approach adds a floral, bright fruit character, and Petite Sirah contributes spice and structure.

Paul Draper in 2014

Draper first gained recognition for his 1971 Monte Bello Cabernet Sauvignon when it placed fifth at the Judgment of Paris wine tasting. I was blessed to meet this true gentleman in 2013 at Cafe Boulud during a marvelous Ridge wine dinner and later during a visit at the Santa Cruz winery.

The Beatty 1991 was everything I love about Old Zinfandel. The nose at first was a touch dirty and not completely homogeneous with a touch of dusty old library. But the fruit started to blossom quickly with aeration and displayed stewed plum and roasted berries with the signature of herbs and spices that makes the greater Zinfandel very unique wines.

Ridge Winery

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Pressoir.Wine Dinner Recap – Domaine Mugneret-Gibourg

Pressoir.wine Dinner Recap Domaine Mugneret Gibourg

By Edouard

2/17/23

Pressoir.Wine Dinner – Mugneret-Gibourg

 It is always such a pleasure to revisit the gorgeous wines from this family that we like so much. The Mugneret sisters are running an impeccable eight hectare estate spread on nine different appellations, mostly concentrated around Vosne-Romanée, where the winery has been based since 1933. Although the domaine was founded that year, important vineyards were acquired with the second generation, embodied by the legendary Georges Mugneret who purchased plots in various Premiers Crus of Nuits-Saint-Georges, Clos Vougeot, Chambolle 1er Cru Feusselottes and the mythical Ruchottes Chambertin, acquired from Thomas Bassot. Georges Mugneret made the domaine famous but the generations that followed, driven by women, have been making stunning wines - brilliant and authentic wines - that are often placed at the highest level.

After Georges passed away suddenly in 1988, both his daughters helped their mother at the domaine. They changed the name back to Domaine Mugneret-Gibourg in 2009 (Georges Mugneret had named it Domaine Georges Mugneret when he took over). Today, Lucie (Marie-Christine’s daughter) oversees the winemaking while Marie Andrée’s daughters Fanny and Marion are also involved in the family activities.

1st FLIGHT: VOSNE-ROMANEE

Our dinner focused on four wines from various vintages, starting with a flight of Vosne-Romanée. The domaine sources this village level wine from five climats, all acquired from the initial 1930’s domaine creation (Champ Gourdin, Croix Blanche, Colombiere, Pré de la Folie and Chalandin).

2018. I still feel the heat of that vintage in red Burgundy overall. Although I will say this bottle was very elegant. It was a good idea to double decant it I think.

2017. A very different wine with fresh acidity. In 2017, the domaine decided to light up bonfires in the vineyards in April to avoid frost damage on the young buds. Interestingly enough, it is not the heat of these fires that helped fight the frost effect but the smoke it created. That screen of smoke reduced the burning effect of the sunlight on the ice-covered buds.

2015. That vintage showed beautifully in each flight. The hot and sunny summer of that year produced concentrated wines with tannins that took some time to soften but patience is rewarding us today.

2ND FLIGHT: NUITS-SAINT-GEORGES 1er CRU CHAIGNOTS

“A Nuits with hints of Vosne”, according to the family. The Chaignots vineyard was acquired by the visionary Georges Mugneret who purchased these vineyards in 1971, along with the parcels of Clos Vougeot, Ruchottes-Chambertin and Chambolle Feusselottes, purchased during that same decade.

2017. Overall, the flight of Chaignots was marked by sharp acidity and I almost feel like we could have reversed the order on flight #1 and flight #2. 2017 was particularly austere but in the best way, reminiscent of tart griotte cherries.

2015. Another delicious 2015 here, offering darker fruit and a meatier wine with depth and concentration as the ultimate vintage signature.

2014. This challenging vintage rewarded the vignerons who were meticulous enough to sort out grapes affected by rot. An invading fruit fly hungry for black grapes did a lot of damage in 2014, in Burgundy but also in the northern Rhône Valley where Syrah suffered from the insect bite. It is not a surprise to find a beautifully balanced wine here as we know the Mugneret sisters’ attention to details and skill.

3RD FLIGHT: ECHEZEAUX GRAND CRU

With nearly 100 acres, the Grand Cru Echezeaux is a large appellation where quality can vary. With two plots, one located in the upper portion of the slope (Rouges du Bas) and one in the lower one (Quartiers de Nuits), Domaine Mugneret-Gibourg is able to offer a complete lecture of the vineyard and the wine is superb.

2015. Irresistible notes of kirsch. Magnificent and multi-layered.

2014. Another gorgeous wine, maybe my favorite of the night, most certainly because of the surprise factor. I didn’t expect such a generous aromatic burst from a 2014. Blooming with red fruits and almost exuberant.

2011. A very similar happy surprise here. While 2011 is often overwhelmingly vegetal and green, this wine was solidly anchored with high quality tannins and developed beautiful violet flowers laced with cranberries and damp earth. Congratulations on making such a pretty wine in such a difficult, rainy season.

4TH FLIGHT: RUCHOTTES-CHAMBERTIN GRAND CRU

“A Chambertin raised in Vosne” as legend Henri Jayer wrote about Ruchottes. Georges purchased his parcel of Ruchottes from the Thomas Bassot estate after M. Rousseau himself decided not to buy it all for himself! This rocky vineyard with very little topsoil is located at the end of the Combe de Lavaux and mirrors the Clos saint Jacques, on the other side of the Combe.

2015. Another slam dunk for 2015! Real Grand Cru material with intensity, built like an athlete.

2014. Back to sharper acidity, fortunately balanced by enough depth and a lovely grippy texture, excellent with food.

2011. I felt the green undertones that are characteristic of the vintage, more obvious here than with the Echezeaux. Nevertheless, a gorgeous wine.

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What's Pressoir Drinking? Some Rousseau bottles which taught me to reconsider decanting...

2/21/2023

Raj Vaidya

I recently had occasion to taste a couple of bottles for a friend and client who was entertaining at home. She loves Domaine Armand Rousseau so I took the opportunity to pick out a couple of bottles I wanted to check in on to see how they were developing. The perks of having friends with such a deep cellar!

1980 was a peculiar vintage for red Burgundy, sometimes having produced superlative wines though many of which are now sadly on their way downhill, somewhat over-mature. Rousseau’s Clos de la Roche was vastly replanted after the frosts of 1981, so I figured the vines were pretty old at the time of the ‘80 harvest, and decided to give it a go.

The bottle showed some moldy aromas at first, I even wondered if it was simply corked, but upon tasting I realized it just needed air. With decanting it opened up quite beautifully, with aromas of black truffle dominating the nose and woody, earthy notes on the palate. It was a delightful wine, light in body and not powerful but very compelling and long on the palate. I had been worried about decanting such a delicate, old wine, and so had decanted just before serving it, meaning that when the dinner guests tasted it at first, that moldy aroma lingered and distracted from the prettiness of the wine. As it turned out the wine was excellent, even 4 hours later in the decanter at the end of the meal. It would have been best handled with an earlier decant.

Just before opening the ‘80 CDLR I double decanted the 1996 Clos Saint Jacques. I know ‘96s need air to mellow the intense acidity of the vintage, indeed it is a vintage Daniel and I disagree on often, I am more of a fan of this bright style of wine while he finds them often to be too acidic. I served the wine blind after the 1980 and just told the rest of the party it was Rousseau, asking them to guess the vintage and appellation. Everyone believed it to be Grand Cru, unsurprisingly, as the Clos Saint Jacques from this domaine is Premier Cru only in name, not in stature. This cuvée often outperforms the rest of the domaine’s holdings, save for Chambertin and Clos de Beze. But nobody guessed the vintage, with several experienced tasters placing it in the early 2000s, vintages generally thought of as more rich and powerful. The high acidity stayed with the wine but the double decanting aggressively introduced a good bit of air to the liquid and brought out superb fruit and spice aromas which made this the wine of the night. I have been wary of double decanting in the past when it comes to maturing Burgundy, the worry being that too much air could make the fruit dissipate and leave only that acidic backbone with nothing to balance it. But my intuition on this bottle turned out to be correct, and the wine sang.
All around a lovely evening thanks to these two very special bottles!

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News from the vineyard Daniel Johnnes News from the vineyard Daniel Johnnes

HENRI JAYER

February 14, 2023

by Daniel Johnnes

Born in 1922, Henri Jayer’s intention was not to be a winemaker but as the youngest of three children, rather than going to war, he stayed behind to look after the family holdings in Vosne-Romanée and worked alongside his father at the age of 17. He later went to the University of Dijon to study oenology and allegedly had another resident of Vosne-Romanée, René Engel, as his professor.

Little by little he expanded his production to around 6 hectares from his own holdings and later from a sharecropping arrangement with Madame Noirot-Camuzet where he took care of the vineyards, made the wine and shared the production, with his portion bottled under his own name and label. This arrangement lasted until 1987 though he remained as a consultant until Jean-Nicolas Méo took full control in 1989.

Those vineyards mostly around Vosne-Romanée were Richebourg, Echezeaux (Les Cruots and Les Treux lieux dits), Vosne Romanée 1er Cru Les Brulées, Vosne-Romanée 1er Cru Les Beaumonts, Vosne-Romanée Village from 3 plots (Les Barreaux, Les Saules et Les Vigneux), Nuits Saints Georges 1er Cru Les Meurgers and the famous Vosne-Romanée 1er Cru Cros Parantoux.

Cros Parantoux (1.1 hectares) has mythic status. It is a vineyard high on the slope just above Richebourg and wedged between Richebourg and Petits Monts. The soil is poor and was abandoned after World War II. A previous owner turned it into a field of jerusalem artichokes but Henri purchased 0.72 hectares (with Meo-Camuzet owning .30ha) and with the aid of dynamite blasted through the rocks - and artichoke - and planted Pinot Noir).

Henri nurtured his plot and bottled it along with his Vosne-Romanée village until 1978, after which he decided to label the wine as Cros Parantoux until his last vintage in 2001. Today it is owned by his nephew Emanuel Rouget and the remainder stays with Meo-Camuzet.

Even though Jayer retired officially in 1995, he continued to produce one or two barrels of his legendary Vosne-Romanée 1er Cru Cros Parantoux wine until 2001. As one can imagine, this wine is extremely rare and can sell for around $10,000 for one bottle.

One wonders what caused Jayer to achieve the status he had up until his retirement and retains today. No question the wines were delicious but his personality was one of an artisan who had an instinctive, intuitive approach to making the wine. Once when I was speaking with him in his office, I asked what his philosophy was about making wine. His answer shocked me but also informed me that he was not following any formulas or recipes whatsoever. He told me he looks at his grapes in the vineyard close to harvest and has a vision of what kind of wine they could become. His imagination of this wine would guide him through the work in the winery and cellar.

He was ahead of his times with a visionary approach to viticulture and winemaking. Where chemical treatments, fertilizer and high yields were the norm after World War II and Burgundy wines were not in high demand until the late 90s and early 2000s, he did not succumb to the chemical sales pitch. He was not concerned with the market for his wines. Instead, he was driven by minimal intervention and quality first.

He was an early practitioner of low yields in the vineyard, sorting out any unripe or disease infected grapes, fully destemming the grapes before vatting and a cold presoak for 3-5 days prior to fermentation with natural yeast. This seems natural and almost trendy today but at the time he had more of a look of a heretic. After pressing, the baby wine would always go into expensive 100% new oak barrels. If a taster asked him if his wine was over-oaked with such an abundance of new oak, his answer was, “if a wine tastes of oak, the wine is not over-oaked, it is under-wined”. Meaning the wine was not concentrated enough and could not handle the oak.

He was always practical. I remember talking to him about the wines produced after the hot 2003 summer. It was the first time Burgundy had experienced such extreme heat and started its harvest in August. 

The theory is a grape vine requires 100 days of ripening between when the vine flowers to when the grapes are ready to pick. Pick too early and the wine is underripe, the stems green and can produce a green tasting astringent wine. The sugar levels may have looked good in a laboratory but in reality, the vine was not ready to deliver its fruit.

When I asked Henri about those who picked around August 16-17, because they were afraid of the grapes shriveling on the vines and producing raisiny, pruney flavors, he said, “You can’t pick after 87 days. The vine isn’t ready. It needs 100 days!

There are quite a few examples of 2003s that show under ripe flavors. A winemaker needs to take chances, as they are at the mercy of mother nature. But time and time again, I hear the great winemakers are willing to push the limits and wait through risky conditions because they know or maybe sense that the grapes are not at perfect ripeness. This is how Henri lived.

He also lived with a big heart. Until fairly recently it was uncommon for winemakers to share their knowledge with anyone outside the family and the domaine. I remember once at La Paulée de San Francisco I had a panel discussion and tasting with several winemakers. One of them was from Meursault and the question came from the audience how he would describe the wines of Meursault compared to those of Puligny-Montrachet. His answer was shocking and funny at the same time. He hesitated a moment and then said, “I’m not really sure although I did at one time go to Puligny”. Puligny is only about 4.5 kilometers from Meursault! I have also observed numerous times at La Paulée de New York or San Francisco or Los Angeles how, among the 35 or 40 different domaines representing the Cote de Nuits and the Côte de Beaune, many of them had never met before. It is common to hear, “I had to cross the ocean to meet my neighbors”.

This was not the case with Henri. He was an open book and had nothing to hide. In the mid 80s, when a new generation was succeeding their parents, he would either visit or receive in his cellar rising superstars such as Dominique Lafon, Christophe Roumier or Veronique Drouhin. He would share his knowledge and offer his wisdom in a nearly mystical yet unpretentious way. And always with encouragement, joy, confidence, a splash of humor and a twinkle in his eye.

His wines clearly reflected his personality. They were/are lively, joyous, clear, textural, nuanced, balanced complex and always delicious. Delicious was his key descriptor. I remember asking him about when would be the best time to drink his wine. His answer was, '“a good wine should always be delicious. It should not need to age to come into balance and give pleasure. It should give pleasure from the moment it is released from the cellar. Of course, it develops different traits with age but it is always DELICIOUS!”

Of the many times I would meet, speak and taste with him, there are two moments that stand out for me. The first was during a tasting in his cellar. He went into another room and came back with a bottle. There is nothing more troublesome than to be blind tasted by a legendary winemaker in his or her own cellar. First, the wine has never traveled. So, even if I had tasted the wine before, it would not taste as youthful as one that just traveled a few feet and had been stored at the perfect temperature. So, there is the fear of saying it is older than it is. There is also the fear of saying the wine is from a lower appellation than what he is tasting me on. How could I say an Echezeaux 2000 tastes like a Vosne-Romanée village ten or fifteen years older? I would lose credibility. This one had brilliant ruby reflections. It had an aroma of crushed black and red berries, cherries, violets and a hint of spice. It had a texture of velvet and a persistent long finish. “Cros Parantoux 1990!”, I declared. Wrong. Vosne-Romanée Village 1992. I was glad it wasn’t the other way around. Simply delicious but it clearly over delivered on its appellation and vintage. Typical Jayer

The other memorable experience was the last time I saw him.

We had become fairly close ever since I threw a retirement party for him in New York in 1997. I would pay him visits in his office. There was no longer any wine to taste yet he enjoyed sitting and sharing stories and his experiences, answering any questions I might have. How I felt privileged! I never felt intimidated or embarrassed speaking with such a legend. He became my Burgundy Yoda.

Henri suffered for several years with cancer and when I would ask to visit he would politely and quietly say, “not now, I’m tired. Call me another time”. After a couple of years of trying to see him again, he answered by asking me to come to the office.

This time was different. We talked and after about 20 minutes about his life as a vigneron, he said, “Daniel, I wanted you to come so I could say goodbye”.

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What's Pressoir drinking? Raj Vaidya What's Pressoir drinking? Raj Vaidya

PRESSOIR.WINE DIRECT ACCESS: DOMAINE CLOS DE LA CHAPELLE IN VOLNAY

2/14/2023

Raj Vaidya


The first trip I took to Burgundy with Daniel was, to say the least, a memorable one. We visited the great domaines I’d been following throughout my career; Rousseau, Roumier, Roulot, DRC, and indulged in tasting some of the greatest bottles we could find. It was around the middle of the trip where we found ourselves dining with a friend in the courtyard of the Hotel de Beaune and drinking a fancy bottle of Jayer Cros Parentoux 1990, a very generous gift from said friend. Given that we had such a fancy bottle on the table, it was no surprise that other diners at the restaurant stopped over to say hi (perhaps hoping against reason that our host would share a taste with them?) and amongst the visitors was an American gentleman who introduced himself as Mark O’Connell. Mark knew Daniel and our host well and after a little chit chat to catch up told us he had just signed a deal purchasing a Volnay domaine which he was renaming after the most famed climat amongst the holdings, Clos de la Chapelle. This was back in 2010 and so began Mark’s deep dive into Burgundian culture, along with his business partner and winemaker, Pierre Meurgey.

The wines have soared in quality, and many more appellations have since been acquired since 2010. Today marks the occasion of our fourth offering of the domaine’s wines via our Direct Access program, and I couldn’t be happier to present the stellar 2020 vintage to our club!


Dear friends,

We are pleased to share this exclusive offer of the great 2020 vintage from a superb estate in Volnay,  Domaine Clos de la Chapelle.

The domaine is named after its signature monopole vineyard which can trace its history back to 1789 when it was purchased by the négociant Patriarche et Fils. The Boillot family acquired it in the mid 19th century and were the first to ever use the name Clos de la Chapelle. In 2010, Mark O’Connell was approached by his friend Pierre Meurgey who asked him if he had ever considered the life of a vigneron. Mark has had a great love for Burgundy for decades, and had been buying barrels from the Hospice de Beaune auctions since 2005, and so had dipped his toe into the métier, but had never considered it possible to become an owner of a vineyard. With Pierre’s help and partnership, he found that opportunity and bought the domaine in 2010, with 2011 being their first commercial vintage. Since then Pierre and Mark have grown the domaine to 11 appellations and a total of 4 hectares.

 

Orders must be placed and paid by Monday, February 20. Check or ACH preferred. Credit card payments will add a 3% surcharge.

 

Thanks, and as always, feel free to reach out directly with any questions.

Raj Vaidya
raj@lapaulee.com

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