2016 Corton-Charlemagne Quintessence Grand Cru
France
Corton Charlemagne
Burgundy
White
Chardonnay
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Eric Germain told me he was pessimistic about the 2016 whites at the beginning but is happy with the vintage today. “It’s a classic year with healthy skins and no rot,” he reported in early June. “The only difference from other years is a lack of depth due to moderate ripeness. The skins are not as ripe as in 2015, which can give some of the wines a slightly herbaceous quality, but they really don’t have any faults. It’s not a little vintage but it’s not great either.” There wasn’t much surmaturité and potential alcohol levels ranged from 12.3% up to 13.1, said Germain.
The village and generic wines were most affected by frost in 2016, Germain told me, adding that he’s happiest with his wines from Puligny-Montrachet, which he believes are more elegant in style and show clearly terroir character. Somehow, he made all of the normal Girardin cuvées in ’16, although quantities of some of them were tiny, requiring him to make use of feuillettes, the small 112-liter barrels commonly found in Chablis cellars, although less frequently nowadays. The malolactic fermentations were mostly finished—or almost finished—but not all of the wines had been sulfured. Germain planned to assemble them in December and bottle next March.
Germain prefers 2015 to 2016 as he finds the earlier set of wines more minerally. “The 2016s are more facile, more flatteur, but 2015 is great. Owing to their moderate density, the ‘16s should probably be drunk in the next six or seven years, before the ‘15s, which are also higher in acidity.” Germain added that he loves the 2014 whites but thinks the ‘15s are better. “They’re powerful, rich wines that will be great with food, while the 2014s are more minerally and taut.”
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