2000 Clos de La Roche Grand Cru

Wine Details
Place of Origin

France

Clos De La Roche

Burgundy

Color

Red

Grape/Blend

Pinot Noir

Reviews & Tasting Notes

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Virgile Lignier, whose father previously sold his fruit to negociants began vinifying in 1996 and is bottling a higher percentage of the estate's fruit each year. The estate owns eight hectares of vines in Chambolle-Musigny, Morey-Saint-Denis and Gevrey-Chambertin, including pieces of three premier crus and a bit of Clos de la Roche. My visit here this year seemed well-timed, as 2001 looks to be the finest vintage to date for Lignier. I was more serious about everything in 2001, in the vines and in the vinification," Lignier told me. The tannins were ripe, though not as ripe as in 2002, and the wines show much purer fruit than my previous wines, partly because I used higher-quality barrels." (With the 2001 vintage, Lignier switched from almost all Rousseau barrels, which he feels lack finesse, to mostly Berthomieu and Francois.) Lignier describes his 2000s as best suited for drinking on the early side. I like my '99s okay, but the '98s were too hard." Lignier does a pre-fermentation cold soak lasting five or six days, but emphasized that he never goes for strong extraction, punching down the cap once a day and de-cuving quickly after the sugar fermentation is finished. The 2001s had been racked and assembled in cuve a month prior to my visit, and were slated for a January bottling (with fining but no filtration). This is yet another excellent source of Burgundy in Morey-Saint-Denis, a village that now has a very high percentage of estates worth pursuing.