The 2010 Chassagne-Montrachet Morgeot is wonderfully alive and vivid in the glass. It boasts intense minerality and brightness along with a personality that is hard to fully grasp today. There is a fabulous element of push and pull between the fruit and the wine’s acidity. Smoke, crushed rocks and mint are layered into the explosive, palate-staining finish. The Morgeot is fabulous, but it needs time. A recent bottle of the 2008 was compelling in its pure beauty. Anticipated maturity: 2014+.
Domaine Bernard Moreau is quite possibly the single finest under the radar grower in Burgundy today. There are many more famous names in the Cote de Beaune, some of them in Chassagne itself, but it is here, in this small, family run domaine where many of the most elegant and harmonious wines of the village are found. Bernard Moreau’s son, Alex, told me yields were down from 10% for the villages to as much as 50% for the Grand Ruchottes. Moreau brought in his fruit starting on September 20th and reported a high incidence of shot berries and berries with very little juice. The wines spent 12 months in oak, with no racking, and were then moved into oak with their fine lees for another six months. Reliance on natural yeasts and a cold cellar ensure a gradual elevage that is one of the reasons these wines remain so vibrant and full of life.
Importer: The Sorting Table, Napa, CA; tel. (707) 603-1461