Domaine Bachelet-Monnot Maranges Clos de la Boutiere Premier Cru 2018

  • 92 James
    Suckling
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Domaine Bachelet-Monnot Maranges Clos de la Boutiere Premier Cru 2018  Front Bottle Shot
Domaine Bachelet-Monnot Maranges Clos de la Boutiere Premier Cru 2018  Front Bottle Shot Domaine Bachelet-Monnot Maranges Clos de la Boutiere Premier Cru 2018  Front Label

Product Details


Varietal

Region

Producer

Vintage
2018

Size
750ML

Features
Boutique

Your Rating

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Somm Note

Winemaker Notes

The wine tends toward red fruit and is a structured, old-vine creation.

Professional Ratings

  • 92

    Plums, dark cherries, tobacco and tea leaves on the nose. together with dark-chocolate and some savory-meat notes. It’s medium-bodied with tight-grained tannins. Serious and austere mineral expression. Crystal clear. Try from 2022, but already so good to drink.

Other Vintages

2021
  • 92 Vinous
2020
  • 93 Jasper
    Morris
2019
  • 92 Robert
    Parker
Domaine Bachelet-Monnot

Domaine Bachelet-Monnot

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Domaine Bachelet-Monnot, France
Domaine Bachelet-Monnot Marc Bachelet & Alex Bachelet Winery Image
In 2005 Marc and Alex Bachelet formed their domaine with the aid of their Uncle Monnot and father. Given the combination of exceptional vineyards, an excellent vintage, and the brothers’ attention to detail in the vines and in the cellar, the first release of the domaine’s Puligny wines garnered immediate recognition, locally as well as internationally. In the conservative world of Burgundy’s top communes, such rapid rise to prominence is as rare as it is telling. The brothers do the Côte de Beaune’s rising generation proud.

The domaine farms just over twenty hectares (50 acres) of vines. It is a mix of family-owned vineyards and long-term leased vineyards. Marc and Alex’s grandfather was a vigneron and created Domaine Bernard Bachelet et Fils in Chassagne-Montrachet. Their father, Jean-François Bachelet, made wine for most of his professional life at this domaine.

Following his studies at the Lycée Viticole in Beaune, Marc did internships at domaines Lucien Muzard in Santenay and Parent in Pommard, as well as stints in the southern Rhône and in Australia. After similar studies, his younger brother Alex did internships at domaines Nouveau in the Hautes Côtes and Bouzereau in Meursault, as well as at Monteillet in Côte-Rôtie. Both boys worked five harvests at their father’s domaine prior to embarking on Bachelet-Monnot.

The seat of the domaine is the family homestead in Dezize-lès-Maranges, just southwest of Santenay. In the vineyards, no herbicide is used and the rows are plowed regularly to manage weeds, aerate the soil, and cut the horizontal roots to encourage deep growth. In the cellar, the percentage of new barrels used is roughly 25%; the wine is aged for twelve months before being racked into tank (or, in the case of the reds, cement vats) for another six to eight months of ageing on the lees before bottling. This, to one degree or another, is the general pattern of élevage for all of the wines made here of both colors.

Total annual production in a normal vintage is around 8,300 cases, roughly divided equally between red and white wine.

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Thin-skinned, finicky and temperamental, Pinot Noir is also one of the most rewarding grapes to grow and remains a labor of love for some of the greatest vignerons in Burgundy. Fairly adaptable but highly reflective of the environment in which it is grown, Pinot Noir prefers a cool climate and requires low yields to achieve high quality. Outside of France, outstanding examples come from in Oregon, California and throughout specific locations in wine-producing world. Somm Secret—André Tchelistcheff, California’s most influential post-Prohibition winemaker decidedly stayed away from the grape, claiming “God made Cabernet. The Devil made Pinot Noir.”

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Maranges Wine

Cote de Beaune, Burgundy

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Forming a transition between the Côte d’Or and the Saône-et-Loire of the Côte Chalonnaise, Maranges is the southernmost village of the Côte de Beaune district of Burgundy and includes seven Premiers Crus. Wines grown in Maranges may claim the names of their respective communes, Cheilly-lès-Maranges, Dezize-lès-Maranges or Sampigny-lès-Maranges, or Côte de Beaune-Villages. Confusingly they may also be called Maranges or Maranges Côte de Beaune. Nevertheless, the village’s vineyards, primarily composed of limestone and pebbly soils, produce charming, medium-bodied, fleshy Pinot Noir, laden with red or purple fruit and a touch of spice. A small percentage of admirable and fresh whites come from Maranges, made of Chardonnay.

SRKFRBAC3518_2018 Item# 645446

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