Beaune Grèves, Les Trois Journaux, 1er Cru
    Château de Meursault

    Beaune Grèves, Les Trois Journaux, 1er Cru,

    Destination

    vintage

    Château de Meursault, Beaune Grèves, Les Trois Journaux, 1er Cru, 2016

    Justerini & Brooks Tasting note
    Château de Meursault, Beaune Grèves, Les Trois Journaux, 1er Cru, 2016

    Exquisite Beaune, top class. Floral cherry blossom fruit precede a full but silky palate bursting with morello, damson and griotte fruit. Fresh but ample, sensual and enticing. Long suave flavours. Top notch. Troix journaux refers to the old measurement for the amount of land one horse could work in a day, equating to 0.33ha. This is a spectacular parcel of 0.99 hectares in the upper part of Beaune-Grèves, the poor soil here gives wines of incredible finesse and delicacy.

    ABV:
    13.5%
    86/100
    Neal Martin, Vinous
    The 2016 Beaune Grèves Les Trois Journaux 1er Cru is all over the place on the nose - very muddled and fatigued. Some oxidation here? The palate is marked by dry tannins, raw with a volatile finish. I hope this bottle is not representative. Tasted blind at the 2016 Burgfest tasting in Burgundy.
    Date Reviewed:
    10/2019

    specifications

    country:
    France
    region:
    Burgundy
    Appellation:
    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.
    Château de Meursault

    Château de Meursault

    A wonderful, historic Domaine that has the Côte de Beaune’s most impressive vaulted cellars. Château de Meursault has for a long time been on the tourist trail and is the impressive venue for the famous Paulee de Meursault in November. Their vineyard holdings have always been the envy of the Côte but a reliance on passing tourist trade, lack of know-how and investment meant that traditionally the wines failed to live up to their promise. However the Château’s fortunes changed in 2012 when it was bought by Olivier Halley with the intention to make it one of the most hallowed estates in Burgundy, money no object. The Château is now firmly on the Burgundy lover’s map. In 2012 Olivier brought in Stephane Follin-Arbelet to run the estate, brother of Frank Follin-Arbelet and former director of Bouchard, Stephane knows a thing or two about what it means to make top quality Burgundy and what it takes to manage a large estate. Conversion to organics, planting cover crops, increasing the size of picking teams (up to 200 people to shorten the harvest period) and lowering yields are just some of the many effective innovations he has brought in. The winemaking is respectful to terroir, new oak ranges from 25-40% and the wines are aged for 15-18 months in the enormous, cool, vaulted cellars underneath the Château. A new star of Burgundy is born. Along with sister estate, Château de Marsannay, this will soon be one of the biggest certified organic estates in the Côte d'Or.

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