POMMARD

2018 1er Cru Épenots Domaine Nicolas Rossignol

Grapes Pinot Noir
Colour Red
Origin France, Burgundy
District Côte d'Or
Sub-district Côte de Beaune
Village Pommard
Classification 1er Cru
ABV 13%
Vineyard Épenots

Finesse, elegance and power in one package, and it's already more expressive than many of the wines in this cellar. Finely silky and fresh, then saline, then it tightens on noble Pommard tannins. Very long and really top class. L&S (Nov 2019)


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(from both Grands and Petits Epenots with some vines that are 115 years of age; 70% whole clusters). This is often the best wine chez Rossignol and so it is again in 2018 with its brooding nose of violet, plum, spice and warm earth. There is superb concentration to the plush but impressively powerful and muscular big-bodied flavors that deliver strikingly good length on the firm, youthfully austere and built-to-age finale. Like the Santenots, this is a wine to buy and forget you own it for at least a decade, but it should be something to see at its apogee. Drinking range: 2036 - Rating: 92-95 Allen Meadows, www.Burghound.com (Apr 2020)

Nico Rossignol uses the 115-year-old vines that make up 70% of his parcel here ('my grand cru') for massal selections. This rich, dense red from one of the village's best site is spicy and sappy, with 60% whole bunches adding extra complexity. Drinking range: 2024 - 2035 Rating: 95 Tim Atkin MW - Decanter (Dec 2019)

70% of the vineyard is 110 years old and the rest 45 years old. 60% whole bunch. 20–25% new oak. Rossignol is taking mass selection from the old vines – which he had been thinking of pulling up when he took the parcel on in 2013 – when he replants. Rather than pulling them up he changed the posts and nurtured the vineyard. Different-sized berries on the bunch seem to bring complexity – he doesn’t know if it is vine age or the plant material. He thinks this wine sums up his wines. Deep, rich-fruited. Super-ripe and intense and concentrated but not overripe. Chewy, compact but fine-grained, impressive concentration here but it is fruit not tannins. Tannins are dense, not astringent, firm grip, confident wine with depth and complexity. Big and long. Embryonic and incipient finesse. As you continue tasting the tannins become more fine, more elegant. A wine that gets more elegant as you continue to taste rather than the tannins building. Chalky finesse on the finish. Drinking range: 2028 - 2040 Rating: 17.5+ Julia Harding MW, www.JancisRobinson.com (Dec 2019)

Domaine Nicolas Rossignol

Born in 1974, Nicolas represents the fifth generation of his family in Volnay (a village which seems to be populated almost entirely by families with Rossignol somewhere in the name). He started to make the wines of his 'Rossignol-Jeanniard' family domaine when he was just twenty.

After studies at the Lycée viticole in Beaune, he worked with Joseph Voillot in Volnay, who became a mentor to him, for Louis Latour at their estate in the Ardèche, and for Vieux Télégraphe on Châteauneuf, where he loved the combination of richness and elegance in the wines, which influenced the style of wines he would later want to make himself. He also made wine in Boschendal in South Africa, and for Château la Cardonne in Bordeaux (then managed by the Lafite team).

In 1997, Nico started his own domaine with three hectares of vines inherited from an uncle. After a period in which some of the wines he made were labelled 'Domaine Rossignol-Jeanniard', and some 'Domaine Nicolas Rossignol', he began to buy the fruit from his (Rossignol-Jeanniard) family, and label these simply 'Nicolas Rossignol' (without the 'domaine'). Now the vines (all 16 hectares) are finally in the 'Domaine Nicolas Rossignol', and labelled as such. To handle this sizeable domaine, Nico needed a new winery. Having started with a chaotic assemblage of tanks in a building in the village of Volnay, he had moved to share Ben Leroux's winery on the Beaune ring road, but Nico had dreams of his own place and built his impressive new winery in 2016. A fantastic bespoke build, admittedly in a ZI (Zone Industrielle) on the outskirts of Beaune, which he recognises is not ideal for the 'folklore' aspect, it is a perfect tool for the job, and does have a good view of all 'his' bits of the Côte - from a sort of eyrie on the roof.

Like many Burgundy domaines, the appellations have proliferated as the surface area of the vineyard has increased with lots of little (and some quite large) parcels of vines in Aloxe ('village'), Savigny ('village' and two Premiers Crus), Beaune (three Premiers Crus), Pernand ('village' and one Premier Cru), Pommard (three 'village' wines and six Premiers Crus) and Volnay ('village' and seven Premiers Crus). With two cuvées of Bourgogne Rouge, this adds up to twenty-eight different wines. Like Burgundy more generally, the joy of tasting here is recognising the individual character of each plot, modulated by the conditions of the vintage, of course, but each with their own distinct personality

The viticulture of the domaine is inspired by biodynamics, but Nico is pragmatic, and although no weedkillers are used and the vineyards are maintained by ploughing, he says that there are both good and bad things in biodynamics, and he will use conventional fungicides to combat disease. At harvest time the grapes are picked into eight kilo boxes, and transported to the winery in them to minimise handling. They are then carefully sorted, before either being de-stemmed (but with the berries left intact) before being put in the fermentation vat, or put in directly as whole bunches. Nico uses varying proportions of whole bunch fermentation depending on the type of wine each vineyard gives, and of course on the health and 'ripeness' of the stems. A classic fermentation using the natural yeats on the grapes ensues, with punchdowns (pigeage) and pumpovers (remontage) used to extract flavour from the grapes, or to oxygenate the wine and refine its structure - the amount used judged by tastings throughout the process. After the vatting the free-run juice is separated from the pressed juice - the latter being blended back as required if necessary after tasting. The wine is put into barrel by gravity (with the amount of new wood between 0 and 50%), and aged for between ten and twenty months depending on the wine and the vintage, always on the lees without racking. The wood and the amount of heat used in making the barrels is also modulated for each wine. The malolactic fermentation is delayed for six months to increase aromatic complexity and structure to the wines. At the end of the ageing the wines are racked and blended in tank, before bottling without fining or filtration.

Nicolas makes deeply-coloured, flavourful wines. He is always keen to rubbish the generalisation that Pommard makes structured 'masculine' wines, as opposed to Volnay's supposedly 'feminine' ones, and proves his point with Pommards grown on clay and Volnays like his punchily structured 'Ronceret'. Each wine is very site-specific.

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