2011 Harvest Outlook
Harvest 2011 will be here in just a moment. By the looks of scanning a few websites, it feels as though harvest threatens to be here tomorrow. Alas, we are still looking quite green in the vineyards, with no color change shown in any of the vineyards which I checked on today. Any moment now, the grapes will soften a bit, and flecks of red will move in, deepening, and remind of just how much more beautiful the region’s vineyards can be with only the slightest suggestion of color. As it turns out, while the days seem to crawl early in the growing season, the last months leading to harvest seem to move at a consistently increasing pace, until you find yourself in the moment, doing your best to execute and modify your strategy as the logistics of harvest do not care one bit for your best laid plans.
With this in mind, I have begun to finalize harvest preparations. Just today, I confirmed my last fruit increase for the harvest. This is to say that everything that I brought on this year is fruit that I plan to have in the future – these are no one shot deals. Today I added 3 barrels worth of grapes for Le Chambertin from my same source as before. This brings my totals (providing a full harvest) to:
Le Chambertin Grand Cru 5 bbls
Charmes-Chambertin Grand Cru “Aux Charmes Haute” 7 bbls
Morey Saint Denis 1er Cru “Les Chaffots” 5 bbls
Morey Saint Denis 1er Cru “Monts Luisants” 5 bbls
Gevrey-Chambertin 1er Cru “Les Corbeaux” 2 bbls
Chambolle-Musigny 1er Cru “Les Feusselottes” 2 bbls
Volnay 1er Cru “Les Robardelles” 5 bbls
Looking at the list above, I think that I will be taking a huge break from taking on any new sources for a while, unless it is is special. The goal, of course is not to have a lot of cuvées, but to work with special grapes and to preserve as best I can what makes them unique. This is a very tall order which I hope that I can live up to. Having a control of as much as I can requires a small production scale. Taking the fruit sources that I have has been done with the understanding that I am working inside of truly tiny, heavily allocated space (see:garage). If nothing else, it will be fun!
Cheers!
Ray
Snow in the vineyard of Chambertin
Here are a few shots I took at Le Chambertin a few days ago. The snow has just came on a couple of shirt days before. They are no doubt much more covered today as we have around 5″+ of snow now.
Enjoy!
Wines are back from the lab
Fresh from the lab and the numbers are looking excellent. The numbers are as follows:
Morey Saint Denis ‘Les Chaffots’ 1er Cru 13.29% alc
Charmes-Chambertin ‘Aux Charmes’ 13.59% alc
Le Chambertin 13.16% alc
The alcohol levels are right where I wanted them, on paper and through tasting. The ph levels are a bit higher than what we would like to see in Burgundy (mine are between 3.49-3.71). I could have made adjustments in the winery. By adding a bit of acid but my preference is to see what comes from the vineyard without adjustments. I also stayed away from chapitalization (adding sugar for boosting alc). These practices are used with success here but each person has their preferences. Mine is to do only what is necessary in the winery and the vintage was very easy on this philosophy.
Also of note, malic numbers are a bit low this year generally speaking. And with the chill now coming in, we are potentially looking at a long time to start and to finish malo.
Cheers
Done and done
Finally, I am back with some more updates! I have been using my iPhone while in France and my WordPress app has been keeping me from updating everyone. With a quick delete and reinstall I am back up and running.
The wines are now resting comfortably in barrel. I enlisted the help from the guys from South Africa from Domaine Clivet in Beaune. I couldn’t contain my enthusiasm for starting the pressing process. This was an excellent year apprently for juice. Most that I spoke with reported a great amount of free run with exceptional color.
I ended up with a shortage on both my Morey Saint Denis and my Charmes-Chambertin. However I was able to fill 2 full sized 228 liter barrels and a 114 liter barrel (feullette) with Le Chambertin which is quite a bit more than the 2 I was expecting.
I am very happy with the results. Is this the vintage of the decade that many are making it out to be? I think 2012 is shaping up to be a bit better. Meaning, it’s best not to get too caught up in the best, greatest and so forth. Being in France has taught me that I should be more focused on the benefit of one without depreciating the other. There is no best, just different. This vintage is showing to be one with many strenghts, however the enjoyment will only be known to the person with the glass in hand.
Here are a few pics from the weeks that the blog was down. My apologies for the down time.
Thanks again for the emails and replies. It means a lot knowing that others are along with me for the ride.
Cheers
Just back from Gevrey-Chambertin
Fresh from visiting Gevrey-Chambertin and the gravity of it all has a grip on me. I think it was the courtier naming off the producers I will be shoulder to shoulder with come harvest time that drove the point home. I am officially in contract on all of my fruit.
Now onto the vineyards. The Charmes-Chambertin I am sourcing is all from within ‘Aux Charmes’ which is roughly 10 feet (the width of the road which separates the two) away from Le Chambertin. Grapes from close to the RN74 are in Mazoyeres, but can be labeled as Charmes-Chambertin Grand Cru. My source is located higher above, on a gentle slope. The grapes were really were sorted curently. When tasted from the vine today, the Charmes had a nice thickness of skin, a soft flesh, lightly browned seeds, and bright toned fruit. The clusters hanging were very few in number, with truly a modest set of berries on each.
Chicken and Egg
The fruit from Aux Charmes is showing a generous amount of chicken and egg, which is excellent. When you have uniform berry sizes, the skin thicknesses (which are quite important for a Pinot noir), water/grape skin ratio are similar throughout the cluster. When you have both tiny and regular sized berries, older wine makers have always called it Chicken and Egg. The common thought is that with these circumstances, there are more nuances to the wine, which makes for something more interesting. When tasting the grapes, there is a noticable difference in the tannin feel, brightness of fruit, and the perceptible feeling of the flesh around the seeds. Will it be better? I have no idea, but whatever the results both the chicken and egg are apparent.
Le Chambertin
This vineyard is roughly 10 feet higher up te slope than Charmes, possibly 20 feet. The elevation has more variability than the gentle sloping soil below the feet of Aux Charmes. Chambertin has quite an angle as it reaches up the slope. My vines go from the street up to the top of Chambertin. The vines seem to point East/West as opposed to the North/South situation of Aux Charmes. The berries are just a bit bigger at times here, and at others impossibly small. There is quite a bit chicken and egg here as well. The soil has just as many stones as the other vineyard, however the stone looks finer at times, broken into rubble. The soil is also at times are a deeper hue of red than others.
The grapes have a deeper tone, the skin is thicker, more packed with everything. Deeper tone to the seed, more intense fruit impression, tigher flesh around the seed and more of the sense of acid. Before tasting these grapes side by side I would never have guessed at this point that they would have so many perceptible differences. Now, you couldn’t blind guess these at this point. However, side by side, most people, non people would clearly notice they weren’t the same.
Tonight I am happy to report all of this to my wife. My head is aching from thinking about all the variables in play. It’s a good sore. But I am anxious, waiting again for what seems like the shot before a marathon begins.
Well, to bed for now…to think, and to listen for that shot before I take off.











































