2016 Vosne-Romanée Village
France
Vosne Romanée
Burgundy
Red
Pinot Noir
00
2020 - 2028
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- By Author Name on Month Date, Year
Technical director/winemaker Jérôme Faure-Brac described 2016 as a “a very complicated year meteorologically, with a very rainy, humid spring, lots of mildew and the severe frost that, unusually, affected the hillsides." The harvest, he went on, was the longest he could recall, "with a good window for picking." Drouhin started harvesting Pinot Noir on the Côte de Beaune on September 24, but some of their purchased grapes on the Hautes-Côtes came in as late as October 11. Owing to the often-severe crop losses, Drouhin made a lot of tiny cuvées, often vinifying with a percentage of whole clusters to add volume to the fermenters. Faure-Brac noted that he also did a bit more “_vinification intégrale” in barrels to get more aromatic complexity and gentler extraction than in previous vintages.
Except for the Nuits Procès, Chambolle Baudes, Mazis-Chambertin and Clos Vougeot, which finished their malolactic fermentations very late, the ‘16s were bottled in December. Faure-Brac told me he likes the classic side of the vintage; he describes the wines as “very tasty and with good tension.” As a general rule, he finds a blacker fruit character and slightly higher pHs in the wines from frosted sites, while the vineyards that were mostly spared yielded redder fruit flavors. And the frosted wines are a bit less suave on the attack, he added.
Faure-Brac described 2015 as “a vintage of heat, less classic than 2016 but given energy by the use of whole clusters." Interestingly, Drouhin carried out longer post-fermentation maceration than usual (between five and eight days) in both 2016 and 2015, in 2016 because the wines were gaining in volume and complexity and in 2015 due to the serious tannins of the vintage. The ‘15s got a slightly later bottling than the ‘16s, in February and March of 2017.
00
2024 - 2033
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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
Technical director/winemaker Jérôme Faure-Brac described 2016 as a “a very complicated year meteorologically, with a very rainy, humid spring, lots of mildew and the severe frost that, unusually, affected the hillsides." The harvest, he went on, was the longest he could recall, "with a good window for picking." Drouhin started harvesting Pinot Noir on the Côte de Beaune on September 24, but some of their purchased grapes on the Hautes-Côtes came in as late as October 11. Owing to the often-severe crop losses, Drouhin made a lot of tiny cuvées, often vinifying with a percentage of whole clusters to add volume to the fermenters. Faure-Brac noted that he also did a bit more “_vinification intégrale” in barrels to get more aromatic complexity and gentler extraction than in previous vintages.
Except for the Nuits Procès, Chambolle Baudes, Mazis-Chambertin and Clos Vougeot, which finished their malolactic fermentations very late, the ‘16s were bottled in December. Faure-Brac told me he likes the classic side of the vintage; he describes the wines as “very tasty and with good tension.” As a general rule, he finds a blacker fruit character and slightly higher pHs in the wines from frosted sites, while the vineyards that were mostly spared yielded redder fruit flavors. And the frosted wines are a bit less suave on the attack, he added.
Faure-Brac described 2015 as “a vintage of heat, less classic than 2016 but given energy by the use of whole clusters." Interestingly, Drouhin carried out longer post-fermentation maceration than usual (between five and eight days) in both 2016 and 2015, in 2016 because the wines were gaining in volume and complexity and in 2015 due to the serious tannins of the vintage. The ‘15s got a slightly later bottling than the ‘16s, in February and March of 2017.