2016 Bonnes-Mares Grand Cru
France
Chambolle Musigny
Burgundy
Red
Pinot Noir
00
2025 - 2060
Subscriber Access Only
or Sign Up
You'll Find The Article Name Here
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Integer vitae aliquam odio. Aliquam purus diam, tempor et consectetur vitae, eleifend ac quam. Proin nec mauris ac odio iaculis semper. Integer posuere pharetra aliquet. Nullam tincidunt sagittis est in maximus. Donec sem orci, vulputate ac quam non, consectetur fermentum diam. In dignissim magna id orci dignissim convallis. Integer sit amet placerat dui. Aliquam pharetra ornare nulla at vulputate. Sed dictum, mi eget fringilla lacinia, nisl tortor condimentum mi, vitae ultrices quam diam ac neque. Donec hendrerit vulputate felis, fringilla varius massa.
- By Author Name on Month Date, Year
00
Subscriber Access Only
or Sign Up
You'll Find The Article Name Here
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Integer vitae aliquam odio. Aliquam purus diam, tempor et consectetur vitae, eleifend ac quam. Proin nec mauris ac odio iaculis semper. Integer posuere pharetra aliquet. Nullam tincidunt sagittis est in maximus. Donec sem orci, vulputate ac quam non, consectetur fermentum diam. In dignissim magna id orci dignissim convallis. Integer sit amet placerat dui. Aliquam pharetra ornare nulla at vulputate. Sed dictum, mi eget fringilla lacinia, nisl tortor condimentum mi, vitae ultrices quam diam ac neque. Donec hendrerit vulputate felis, fringilla varius massa.
- By Author Name on Month Date, Year
The secondary buds carried very little fruit in 2016, and the new shoots took another three to four weeks to grow, said Christophe Roumier. “But the good, hot summer compressed the differences in ripeness.” Yields varied dramatically, as Roumier’s home village of Chambolle-Musigny was hit hard by the frost. He lost about 50% of his fruit in Musigny and Les Amoureuses, two-thirds in Les Cras, and all of his Bourgogne Rouge and Corton-Charlemagne. His tiny quantity of Chambolle-Musigny Les Combottes went into his Chambolle villages.
Roumier started harvesting on September 24, bringing in what he described as “ripe, clean fruit—normal-sized grapes with thick skins”; some parcels were as high as 13% potential alcohol and did not require chaptalization. Roumier told me that he did not change his normal vinification in 2016, except for doing fewer punchdowns than usual. The wines have lowish total acidity but average pHs, Roumier told me, and he believes that, with their generosity and ripe, broad tannins, the ‘16s are built to age.
Roumier described 2015 as “a great vintage with a very good balance between strength and elegance, and the acidity and tannins for good aging capacity.” His only quibble was that some wines are a bit too high in alcohol for his taste. And he also believes that 2015 generally shows a tendency toward reduction, and that the wines are already shutting down in bottle. Like a number of producers I visited this fall and winter, Roumier is now using new corks from Bouchons Trescases (labeled “ND”) that are individually tested for TCA using gas chromatography.