2006 POMMARD 1er Cru Grand Clos des Épenots Domaine de Courcel
2006 POMMARD 1er Cru Grand Clos des Épenots Domaine de Courcel
| Grapes: Pinot Noir | Origin: France, Burgundy |
Lea & Sandeman review
Again a surprising lightness (especially after the massiveness of the 2005, but all things are relative - this is a big Pommard) and mineral drive. Firm and fine tannins supporting a dense sappy fruit, which stays on, juicy and long. Very successful, playing to the character of the vintage.Other reviews and comments
Good deep red. Complex, soil-driven aromas of redcurrant, smoke, iron and coffee; this will go truffley with bottle aging. Sweet, lush and impressively ripe for the year, with a creamy texture but no shortage of energy. Finishes with a suggestion of leather. This is 13.5% natural alcohol.
89-92/100
Stephen Tanzer's International Wine Cellar
The Courcel 2006 Pommard Grand Clos Des Epenots possesses a noticeably finer tannic structure than its predecessors in the vintage line-up, along with more lift and primary juiciness to its black fruits. The fascinating and flattering suggestions of bittersweet floral perfume and aromatic woods that accrued to the Croix Noires and Fremiers – undoubtedly traits emphasize by the inclusion of whole clusters and stems in the fermentor – are joined here by toasted nuts and a diverse melange of red and black fruits. At around 13.7% alcohol this reflects the highest ripeness of sugar achieved at the estate this year, but there is not only no warmth, this wine also preserves welcome vivacity and lift. Rich in glycerin and sappy, resinous fruit and herbal intensity, it finishes with tenacity and well-covered, fine tannins. I suspect it will be worth following for at least the better part of a decade.
Predictably, Yves Confuron picked very late (until October 12), and although malos were for the most part timely, the wines stayed in barrel through two springs, to be bottled at 20-22 months (depending on site), since which I have not tasted them. Confuron also stuck by his allegiance to long fermentation with whole clusters and stems, although he backed off slightly in both respects – as well as in pigeage – vis-a-vis 2005. By the time rot and imperfections were eliminated from the crop, it was meager even in comparison with the estate's long-term average. Confuron had an interesting and unique take on the vintage, associating its fruit with 2002 but the youthful austerity of 2001.
89-90+
David Schildnecht, The Wine Advocate
This is very Pommard in character with a pungently earthy nose featuring underbrush, cassis, blueberry and raspberry aromas that are perhaps not quite as ripe as those of the Fremiers precede rich, full and mildly rustic big-bodied flavors of both muscle and power that coat the mouth on the long finish. There is a lot of dry extract here and the significant tannins are completely buffered. This is a serious Epenots built to age. 2016+
92/100
Allen Meadows, www.Burghound.com
This is rich, broad, full-bodied, but light on its feet, drawn up by its fit energetic character. It has smoothly gliding tannins and ripe dark summer fruits with notes of wild strawberries and glints of high spice. It has a sweeping, expansive palate, quietly loosely textured, but then it tightens on the middle and finish where there is lovely fragrance. This shows its calibre on the finish, which is long and lingering. Fine++. 2011
Sarah Marsh MW, The Burgundy Briefing
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