Notes from the Burgundy trail, Pt. 4
Tuesday, May 11th, 2010One of the best meals I had on this last trip was not at a “restaurant”. The Cook’s Atelier is a private cooking class/market-tour/supper-club that is housed in the way cool 17th-century Beaune apartment of American ex-pat Marjorie Taylor (whose daughter Kendall interned for us and Domaine Huber-Verdereau a couple of years ago and now works fulltime in the wine business in Beaune.) Marjorie was a restaurateur in Arizona and trained under Anne Willan in France at La Varenne, and is now living the dream in Burgundy.
At the end of the long zinc-topped dining table is a large piece of blackboard slate emblazoned with the great Julia Child quote - “If you’re afraid of butter, use cream”! Marjorie’s cuisine is beautiful in its simplicity - whatever is fresh and delicious at the market, simply prepared to show off the natural flavors inherent in the ingredients. The night I went she made a ridiculously good Boeuf Bourguignon (which she said was based on the classic Julia Child recipe, with a bit of Thomas Keller’s twist, and her own to boot.) Wherever it came from, it worked. Meltingly tender chunks of beef in a deep, rich sauce, perfect baby carrots halved-lengthwise, the onions… The Cook’s Atelier is a bit of an insider’s secret for now, but I suspect it won’t be long before the word is out. I highly recommend it for your next visit to Beaune…
Back into the cellars (for that’s where I do my best work!) - one of my favorite tastings every visit is with François Millet, the esteemed winemaker at Domaine Comte Georges de Vogüé in Chambolle-Musigny. (We do not import the de Vogüé wines, but I’ve been fortunate to have befriended François and GM Jean-Luc Pepin over the years.) Widely considered to be one of the elite estates in Burgundy, the reputation is clearly deserved. Along with the Mugnier wines, these are some of the most pure, precise, and thrilling wines on the planet year after year. I find the de Vogüé wines texturally denser and sometimes more concentrated than their counterparts at Mugnier, yet they are both stunningly elegant and graceful. I believe I could drink nothing but Mugnier and de Vogüé for the rest of my days and be quite happy, if I had to!
We tasted the 2009s in barrel, as none of them had started malo yet, and the 2008s had just been bottled and were not ready for their close-ups. I have never tasted such a richness of fruit in young pinot pre-malo. François called it the “cream of the fruit”, a perfect descriptor for the lush yet refined richness of of the fruit. Only a hint of the green-apple acid showed up on the back end of some of the wines, and that of course will be gone after malo. Could these wines be even lusher and richer then? It will be very interesting to check in on them again in the fall.
Even through the creamy fruit, the minerality of Chambolle was showing - to a lesser extent in the Chambolle villages, and more prominently in the Chambolle 1er Cru (the declassified young-vine Musigny.) The Amoureuses was very precise and expressive, all minerals and cream, while the Musigny was, as always, a class apart, with a lovely magenta-ruby color and the texture and taste of honeyed raspberries. The Bonnes Mares (which comes from “different blood” as Millet pointed out) is also showing the ‘09 cream of fruit - but in this case it is cream of black and blue fruits - mostly blackberries and very rich blueberries on the day. In all, a superb range at the very top of what Burgundy can produce. I cannot wait to drink these in their prime.
There is never enough time nor enough words to fully express what one goes through during a tasting at Lucien Le Moine in Beaune. They make about 50 different wines, for starters. And they are all from Burgundy’s best Grand Cru and Premier Cru vineyards (no lowly villages wine in this house!) Mounir Saouma and his wife Rotem are the husband and wife team who do everything at this micro-negoce, and they are each among Burgundy’s top true characters. Outspoken, never shy with their opinions, and with a very clear vision of what they’re trying to do, they have quickly risen to the ranks of the elite.
I found their ’08s fascinating - and so did they. They found that the 08s went through four very distinct phases of evolution - starting with what they thought were fresh and fruity wines to drink young, which then added toughness and acidity, only to get deeper and more serious, to finally arrive at what they think are true “Vins de Garde” - wines to age for a good long time. There is a bright acidity and structure to the wines, but a lot of fruit sweetness as well. The best wines will clearly need 10 years or more, but they are indeed wonderful.
Among the whites, it’s always fascinating to taste the three top Meursault 1er Crus - Charmes, Genevrières, and Perrières - side by side. If one had any doubts about “terroir”, they’d be gone after these examples. Flowers and richness in Charmes, succulent minerality in the Genevrières. and an intense minerality to the 10th power in the Perrières. Fascinating stuff. It’s also very educational to taste their Corton Blanc (from the east facing slope) and the Corton-Charlemagne (from the west-facing slope) one after the other. A crème-brulèe richness and open-knit texture to the former and a loud mineral intensity to the latter - another great illustration of the concept of terroir.
On the red side, I tasted two different cuvées of Bonnes Mares - one from the northern end of the vineyard near the Morey side and the other from the southern section in Chambolle. It wasn’t hard to pick them out blind - the southern version had a very elegant entry, flowing into powerful but very refined tannins. The northern version was all black fruits and heavier, denser tannins. I thought all of the Chambolle and Vosne-based wines were showing excellently on the day, with the Richebourg in a class of its own in richness, roundness, length and complexity -a truly astounding wine. In the recent issue of Burghound, Allen Meadows’s listed the top 33 highest-scoring wines of the vintage, and fully 10 of those 33 are from Lucien Le Moine. I would say they had a successful 2008!
More soon with my final thoughts on another great visit up and down the Côte…


















