Typical for this wine – from an appellation of which the Pavelots do not yet seem able to make the best (or are the limitations inherent in their 20 year-old vines?) – their 2008 Beaune Bressandes features leathery, saline, dried red fruit aromas, joined by briny black olive, bitter fruit pit, and salted beef broth on a palate rather stiff with tannin. This is fascinating and impressively persistent Pinot but its tannins are tough and its fruit impression desiccated. Perhaps in 3-5 years it will have resolved its structural “issues,” but I am skeptical.
The Pavelot 2008s did not even begin their malos until July, and none had been bottled when I visited to taste them late last winter, but I tasted them – with the exception of a Narbantons Pavelots weren’t ready to show me – in final form. Hugues Pavelot insists that he and his father didn’t need to cull more than 5% of the fruit they harvested in either 2008 or 2007, and given the exciting quality of their 2008s, all that remains necessary to verify his claim is to count barrels. Assiduous greening of the rows was especially beneficial in 2008 for controlling water and thus vineyard humidity and rot, Pavelot maintains. Hail in this commune hit both Bourgogne and non-cru Savigny vineyards, but you would never know it to taste the corresponding wines at this address. This estate (like the best wines of Savigny in general) has long represented an under-appreciated source of outstanding value, but never more so than from 2008; and while the several 2007s I tasted pointed to a more pedestrian performance, they nevertheless confirmed Domaine Pavelot’s reliability. (Incidentally, 2008 is the inaugural vintage for an amazing Pavelot Corton-Charlemagne, about which I’ll publish notes on a later occasion.)
Becky Wassserman Selections (various importers), Le Serbet, Beaune; fax 011-33-3-80-24-29-70