Corton Charlemagne, Grand Cru
Bruno Clair

Corton Charlemagne, Grand Cru


Destination

vintage


Broking

Broking
These are wines from our broking list and have an average delivery window of 15 working days.


2017

6x75cl

DP

£1,339.22


2020

6x75cl

DP

£1,339.22


2020

6x75cl

DP

£1,411.22


2020

6x75cl

DP

£1,459.22


2021

6x75cl

DP

£1,339.22



Bruno Clair, Corton Charlemagne, Grand Cru, 2017

2017

Justerini & Brooks Tasting note

Bruno Clair, Corton Charlemagne, Grand Cru, 2017

Probably one of their best ever efforts. A top Corton-Charlemangne. Ripe fruit with a clear stony character adding dimension and a nice crisp Sicilian lemon freshness. Balanced long and intense, with hints of citrus skin hazelnut and flint on the finish. Superb. From two plots, planted in 1972 and 1976, located in the upper part of the slope in the commune of Aloxe-Corton where the wines offer ripeness and freshness in equal measure.

ABV:
13%

specifications

country:
France

region:
Burgundy

Appellation:

Producer:
Bruno Clair

style:

Grape Variety:

Allergen Information:
This product may contain sulphites. Full allergen information is available upon request, please call our Customer Relations Team on +44 (0)20 7484 6430.


Bruno Clair

Bruno Clair

Bruno Clair started his own domaine in 1979 with small holdings in Marsannay, Fixin, Morey and Savigny Dominode. Alongside this sat his family's Clair-Dau estate, one of the great Burgundian domaines, however following the death of his grandfather Joseph Clair family disaggreements sadly lead to its dismantling in 1985. The following year, to add to his own small domaine, Bruno was entrusted with the vineyards of his parents, brothers and sisters which included those of Clos de Bèze, Cazetiers, Clos St-Jacques, Vosne-Romanée, Clos du Fonteny and Chambolle-Musigny. Bruno Clair’s wings are spread widely over the Côte d’Or covering nine appellations in total.

Bruno, first and foremost, is a vigneron adopting an approach that involves back-breaking vineyard work and minimal intervention winemaking, using a mixture of large old wooden foudres and smaller barriques for the long slow ageing process. New oak, though used, is kept relatively low - rarely going above 40% even for the Grands Crus. Edouard and Arthur Clair, Bruno's sons, are an exciting, committed new generation gradually taking over, gently introducing a few enhancements such as increased whole bunch percentages and less sulphur usage. There is no doubt that Bruno Clair have upped their game over the last ten years and have well and truly broken into the top league of estates in the Côte de Nuits.

discover Bruno Clair