Tuesday 23 July 2013

Drouhin Laroze: Recognition at last!

Posted by Martin Buchanan
Drouhin-Laroze

As prices for a small selection of Burgundian wine producers continue to fly into the stratosphere, those of us who love Burgundy are learning that there is more to life than Rousseau. A lot more...


At Justerinis we have long sought to find our own path and follow producers who we believe in; we are so pleased when these producers start to get the recognition they deserve. We have recently seen demand for and prices of Bruno Clair jump significantly as the world wakes up to the brilliance of this great domaine and are now seeing signs of the same for Drouhin-Laroze. The key thing these two domaines have in common is great holdings. In the case of Drouhin Laroze nice chunks of Bonnes Mares, Clos de Beze and Clos Vougeot. There are plenty of producers who sadly don’t make good use of their land and others who excel with comparatively minor sites; but in the end Burgundy is all about terroir and the magic happens when the right sites get into the right hands. This is what has happened at Drouhin-Laroze.


We have long believed in this domaine but things have really started to step up since 2001. Clive Coates suggests that before 2001 the winemaking was a little too prominent at the expense of terroir, which is a fair comment, however he is now getting more positive ever year describing them as “fresher, more individual, more stylish” and awarding some very high scores in his 3 year retrospective tastings. Jasper Morris also seems to be a fan and comments that Philippe Drouhin is “a rare Gevrey producer who succeeds with wines from Chambolle, most triumphantly with his excellent Bonnes Mares.” Burghound is on board too heaping big scores on these wines in recent vintages and on some older examples (Clos de Beze 1978, Bonnes Mares 1964 and Bonnes Mares 1966). It seems that, as is often the case, terroir reasserts itself given enough time.

The highlights of the Drouhin-Laroze holdings are as follows…


In Bonnes Mares they have various plots clustered around the centre of the vineyard, all on the terres blanches as opposed to the terres rouges. Bonnes Mares is split by a diagonal path which neatly separates the two different soil types. Wines from the terres blanches tend to be more mineral and spicy with firmer tannins whereas those from the terres rouges are typically more muscular and rich but with slightly softer, rounder tannins. Coates describes wines from the terres blanches as more civilised (which is a rather nice way of putting it) and according to Christopher Roumier they are “more spiritual”. It is common to vinify parcels from each soil type separately and blend, such is the difference.

Chambertin Clos de Beze (1.39 Hectares):

Drouhin-Laroze has one large parcel which runs the full height of the vineyard next to Pierre Damoy and a couple of smaller blocks down at the bottom. Their Beze is very fine and elegant; ethereal. Very much a Beze rather than the typically weightier Chambertin.

Clos Vougeot (1.03 Hectares):

Château de Clos de Vougeot
All of Philippe Drouhin’s Clos Vougeot is situated at the top of the vineyard, up near Grands-Echezeaux. There is great variation in Clos Vougeot and the top is widely held to yield finer wines than lower down the slope. Like so much of this terroir dogma, when you stand in the vineyard this makes perfect sense. The top part of Clos Vougeot is in the sweet spot of the slope. Drouhin-Laroze’s Vougeot is powerful and dense but there is a real brightness to the fruit and vibrancy which marks it out. There is no sense of heaviness at all, it is a chiselled Vougeot with great line and drive.

We massively believe in this estate and as the enthusiasm of the critics continues to increase, these wines are starting to look seriously under-priced.