Winemaker Notes
"Les Cailles" has a luminous and fairly sustained color. From its youth, charm, freshness and fruitiness seduce you. A mixture of fresh fruit with a hint of vanilla, a touch of wild cherry, rosewood and old rose mingle with fine licorice and spicy scents. Throughout the vintages, the wine maintains a constant profile in which volume, airy fullness and silky texture dominate in the mouth, enhanced by freshness.
Professional Ratings
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Jasper Morris
Rather a classy nose albeit also showing a little touch of recent oak. Medium purple. Firmer tannins but surrounded by the dark raspberry fruit. This will harmonise. It is not the most demonstrative wine in the cellar, but all is there. Drink from 2027-2033.
Barrel Sample: 91-94 -
Robert Parker's Wine Advocate
The 2021 Nuits-Saint-Georges 1er Cru Les Cailles wafts from the glass with aromas of sweet red berries and plums mingled with rose petals, spices and orange zest. Medium to full-bodied, seamless and elegant, it's an ample, suave, sensual wine with lively acids and beautifully refined tannins.
Barrel Sample: 92-94
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.”
Inhabiting the bottom end of the northern half of the Côte d’Or, Nuits-St-Georges is a busy, market-driven town and home to many of Burgundy’s negociants. It is also the largest town in the Côte d’Or after Beaune and contributes "nuits" to the name of Côte de Nuits (i.e., the northern half of the Côte d’Or).
The appellation itself is divided into two parts, where in the north it directly borders Vosne-Romanée, the southerly end is the commune of Prémeaux. There are no Grands Crus in this village, though it does have a large number of Premiers Crus.
The best Nuits-St-Georges Pinot Noir are layered with cherry, plum, underbrush and sandalwood. The fruit is sweet, the wine energetic, and the finish long and lush.