2016 Côte de Nuits-Villages

Wine Details
Place of Origin

France

Côtes De Nuits Villages

Burgundy

Color

Red

Grape/Blend

Pinot Noir

Reviews & Tasting Notes

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Although Sylvie Esmonin's estate-wide yield in 2016 was just 27 hectoliters per hectare, production ranged widely according to the vagaries of the frost, with the heaviest losses in her Bourgogne and Côte de Nuits-Villages holdings. Her Clos Saint-Jacques yielded 27 hectoliters per hectare, while her village Gevrey-Chambertin vines produced a tad more. Esmonin harvested from September 24 through 29, doing a maximum of half a degree of chaptalization. “The challenge in 2016 was to retain the leaves despite the mildew,” she told me, adding that she did 12 treatments from April through June. “Some of the grapes dried out and fell but this had no influence on the rest of the fruit, and mildew does not block maturity like oidium does.” Happily, the grapes were healthy at harvest-time, thanks to very good weather in July, August and September, and Esmonin made her normal use of whole-cluster vinification.

Esmonin compares 2016 to 2010 in texture, finesse and length. She expressed the opinion that 2016 and 2015 “are both great vintages but very different, with 2016 more a vintage of terroir." She went on "The 2016s have a bit less acidity than the ‘15s, and the ‘15s are more opulent and expressive. They’re also exuberant and already very digestible. They resist oxidation very well and they should age very well. I’m not sure they will ever close up in bottle. With the 2016s, we’ll need to wait.” The ‘16s had been moved into cuves and sulfited before the ’17s went into barrel in mid-October, as is the normal practice at this address.