2019 Domaine Faiveley Corton "Clos des Cortons" Monopole Grand Cru

De specificaties zoals vermeld bij de wijn (o.a. wijnjaar) en in de titel zijn leidend en er kunnen geen rechten worden ontleend aan de afbeelding die wordt getoond. Lees meer in onze Frequenty asked questions
Wijnsoort | Rood |
---|---|
Land | |
Regio | |
Appellatie | Corton-Charlemagne |
Wijnhuis | |
Jaar | 2019 |
Druif | Pinot Noir |
Inhoud (Alc) | 0.75 ltr (14%) |
Drink venster | 2026 - 2040 |
Log in om een offerte aan te vragen.
Op voorraad
6 items beschikbaar
Omschrijving
Clos des Cortons Faiveley, de enige rode Grand Cru aan de Côte de Beaune en het vlaggenschip van het landgoed, is een Monopole die sinds 1874 in het bezit is van de familie en die majestueus 2,76ha beslaat. De unieke naam is afkomstig van een controverse die ontstond in de jaren 30, toen de familienaam werd toegevoegd aan de originele 'Clos des Cortons' om verwarring te voorkomen. Clos des Cortons Faiveley is doordrenkt van een rijke geschiedenis, die zijn uitzonderlijke en complexe terroir weerspiegelt. Gedomineerd door kalksteen, mergel en klei, is de bodem bezaaid met ijzerhoudende oöliet, wat rode wijnen van ongeëvenaarde kwaliteit oplevert. De wijnstokken zijn geplant in 1932, 1956, 1965, 1971, 1976, 1977, 1981, 1987, 2002 en 2019. Het boeket is intens en onthult heerlijk rijp, sappig en kruidig rood fruit. Perfect in balans tussen zachtheid en stevigheid in de mond, blijft het prachtig hangen. Deze wijn biedt een uitstekend verouderingspotentieel.
WEETJE: De wijn ligt in ons geconditioneerde Wine Warehouse en als u de wijn komt afhalen ontvangt u vaak ook nog een mooie korting. U ziet de mogelijke korting direct als u kiest voor Afhalen in de Afreken-pagina. We zitten bijna naast de Rijksweg met volop parkeergelegenheid. Klik hier voor adres.
Specificaties
Block Bundle Options | Nee |
---|---|
Wijnsoort | Rood |
Land | Frankrijk |
Regio | Bourgogne |
Appellatie | Corton-Charlemagne |
Wijnhuis | Faiveley |
Druif | Pinot Noir |
Biologisch gecertificeerd | Nee |
Natural wijn | Nee |
Vegan | Nee |
Jaar | 2019 |
Drinken vanaf | 2026 |
Drinken tot | 2040 |
Alcohol % | 14 |
Alcoholvrij/arm | Nee |
Inhoud | 0.75 ltr |
Houtrijping | Ja |
Bubbels | Nee |
Dessert wijn | Nee |
Afsluiting | Kurk |
Parker rating | 95 |
James Suckling rating | 98 |
Vinous rating | 95 |
Professionele Recensies
Parker
The Wine Advocate
RP (93-95)
Reviewed by: William Kelley
The 2019 Corton Grand Cru Clos des Cortons Faiveley opens in the glass with notes of cassis, wild berries, warm spices, orange rind, rose petals, espresso roast and sweet soil tones. Medium to full-bodied, deep and layered, it's vibrant and lively, marrying notable concentration with fine-boned structure. Long and mineral, it's more ethereal than its rich, muscular 2018 counterpart.
Jérôme Flous told me that Faiveley began picking on September 9, finishing by the 20th, and that yields averaged out at around 35 hectoliters per hectare in white and a little less in red. Comparing the 2019 vintage to "a more concentrated version of 2010," he admires—as I do—its vibrant fruit tones and refined tannins, finding it more elegant than 2018. The quality of the red wines chez Faiveley is old news, and for more information on this firm's evolution I direct readers to my report published in the August 2020 Week 1 issue of The Wine Advocate. It's worth underlining, however, how good the whites are these days: Flous tells me that he now includes fûts from Damy and Chassin in the white wine barrel program, and in the last few vintages, I've found the wines' new oak component better and better integrated.
Published: Jan 14, 2021
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
James Suckling
Domaine Faiveley Corton Grand Cru Clos des Cortons Faiveley 2019
Thursday, February 3, 2022
Country : France
Region : Burgundy
Vintage : 2019
Score : 98
A truly amazing Corton, thanks to the laser beam of sour-cherry aroma that shoots right through this sleek and vibrant wine. Great concentration, but remains light on its feet. The mineral finish extends and extends as you struggle to take it all in. Still very young with enormous aging potential. Drink or hold.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
Vinous
(93-95)
Drinking Window
2024 - 2048
From: La Lumière Noire: 2019 Burgundy - Côte de Nuits (Dec 2020)
The 2019 Corton Clos des Cortons Faiveley Grand Cru comes from the 2.77-hectare monopole. This was actually quite closed on the nose compared with Faiveley’s Gevrey Grand Crus, coming across earthy and rather sullen at first, and opening with earthy/woodland aromas. The palate is medium-bodied with supple tannins and harmonious on the entry. The fine, lightly spiced finish reveals clove and touches of graphite. Nice persistence here. This holds a lot of promise.
- By Neal Martin on October 2020
It has been two or three years since I last visited Faiveley, whose considerable diaspora of vineyards covers the length and breadth of Burgundy. Once I had worked out how to approach their impressive new winery in Nuits Saint-Georges through the maze of road works, I met Erwan Faiveley and winemaker Jérôme Flous. “The spring saw two cold weeks of weather, just above the temperature for frost and this stopped the vines growing during May," Flous explained. “Then between June and August it was very dry and hot with two heatwaves at the end of June and end of July. There was not much water...but just enough if you compare to 2020. We picked on 9 September and the Grand Crus in the middle of the month, the same as in 2009. We cropped the reds at just 30hl/ha. The skins were not too thick, so the wines are not too tannic. There was less stuck fermentation than in 2018 when we had to re-inoculate some of the vats. I decided to add more oxygen during fermentation, so did more remontage and thanks to this I think the yeast became more competitive. We learned that from some of the mistakes in 2018. Therefore, I find that the reds are concentrated and elegant compared to 2015 and 2016. Finally, it is becoming quite a classic vintage. Whilst 2018 is more rich and concentrated, 2019 is more delicate and Burgundy in style. You might compare 2019 to the 2010 vintage.”
Tasting Faiveley’s entire range would take about as long as inventing a vaccine to cure a global pandemic given the numerous négociant cuvées, so I focused on a selection from Domaine Faiveley. Certainly I find the wines continuing a trend to more finesse and approachability. Gone are the days when the wines were notoriously tannic and austere, sometimes never fully resolving to the frustration of those that had cellared them long-term. Faiveley oversaw a wonderful Les Saint-Georges, as you would hope, given they are one of the most prominent campaigners for promotion (although things have gone quiet on that front recently.) It must be a mighty challenge in terms of the logistics picking this vast array of vineyards at the optimal time in growing seasons where timing is becoming a vital determinant of quality and sometimes I feel that one or two cuvées maybe just missed that. Stylistically, they retain a sense of solidity, Pinot with a backbone. My pick of the reds were a superb Corton Clos des Corton Faiveley and a wonderful Chambertin Clos de Bèze. Actually, the most eye-catching cuvée turned out to be a splendid Bâtard-Montrachet that is frankly leaps and bounds above the Bienvenue Bâtard-Montrachet and an underwhelming Corton-Charlemagne. At the entry-level, I have always enjoyed their wines from the Côte Chalonnaise, where they own large chunks of vineyards in Mercurey.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
Exclusieve Inhoud
Log in om professionele wijnrecensies van wereldberoemde critici te ontgrendelen
Wijnhuis
De geschiedenis van Domaine Faiveley gaat terug tot 1825. Het domein is al 7 generaties lang familiebezit en is gelegen in Nuits-Saint-Georges, in het hart van de Bourgogne. 127 ha Wijngaarden, verspreid over Côte de Nuits, Côte de Beaune en Côte Chalonnaise, waarvan 12 wijngaarden met Grand Cru classificatie, 25 met Premier Cru classificatie en 6 wijngaarden met een classificatie “Monopole”. Het domein wordt geleid door Erwan Faiveley, die het werk in de wijngaarden in eigen beheer houdt om zelf controle te hebben over de kwaliteit van de druiven. De handgeplukte oogst wordt met zorg naar gewelfde kelders uit de 19e eeuw gebracht, gelegen in Nuits-Saint-Georges. Om geweldige Bourgognes te maken, combineert Erwan Faiveley de principes van moderne oenologie met traditionele rijping in Frans eiken vaten. Dit alles draagt ertoe bij dat Faiveleywijnen een hoog aanzien hebben.
Clos des Cortons Faiveley, de enige rode Grand Cru aan de Côte de Beaune en het vlaggenschip van het landgoed, is een Monopole die sinds 1874 in het bezit is van de familie en die majestueus 2,76ha beslaat. De unieke naam is afkomstig van een controverse die ontstond in de jaren 30, toen de familienaam werd toegevoegd aan de originele 'Clos des Cortons' om verwarring te voorkomen. Clos des Cortons Faiveley is doordrenkt van een rijke geschiedenis, die zijn uitzonderlijke en complexe terroir weerspiegelt. Gedomineerd door kalksteen, mergel en klei, is de bodem bezaaid met ijzerhoudende oöliet, wat rode wijnen van ongeëvenaarde kwaliteit oplevert. De wijnstokken zijn geplant in 1932, 1956, 1965, 1971, 1976, 1977, 1981, 1987, 2002 en 2019. Het boeket is intens en onthult heerlijk rijp, sappig en kruidig rood fruit. Perfect in balans tussen zachtheid en stevigheid in de mond, blijft het prachtig hangen. Deze wijn biedt een uitstekend verouderingspotentieel.
WEETJE: De wijn ligt in ons geconditioneerde Wine Warehouse en als u de wijn komt afhalen ontvangt u vaak ook nog een mooie korting. U ziet de mogelijke korting direct als u kiest voor Afhalen in de Afreken-pagina. We zitten bijna naast de Rijksweg met volop parkeergelegenheid. Klik hier voor adres.
Block Bundle Options | Nee |
---|---|
Wijnsoort | Rood |
Land | Frankrijk |
Regio | Bourgogne |
Appellatie | Corton-Charlemagne |
Wijnhuis | Faiveley |
Druif | Pinot Noir |
Biologisch gecertificeerd | Nee |
Natural wijn | Nee |
Vegan | Nee |
Jaar | 2019 |
Drinken vanaf | 2026 |
Drinken tot | 2040 |
Alcohol % | 14 |
Alcoholvrij/arm | Nee |
Inhoud | 0.75 ltr |
Houtrijping | Ja |
Bubbels | Nee |
Dessert wijn | Nee |
Afsluiting | Kurk |
Parker rating | 95 |
James Suckling rating | 98 |
Vinous rating | 95 |
Parker
The Wine Advocate
RP (93-95)
Reviewed by: William Kelley
The 2019 Corton Grand Cru Clos des Cortons Faiveley opens in the glass with notes of cassis, wild berries, warm spices, orange rind, rose petals, espresso roast and sweet soil tones. Medium to full-bodied, deep and layered, it's vibrant and lively, marrying notable concentration with fine-boned structure. Long and mineral, it's more ethereal than its rich, muscular 2018 counterpart.
Jérôme Flous told me that Faiveley began picking on September 9, finishing by the 20th, and that yields averaged out at around 35 hectoliters per hectare in white and a little less in red. Comparing the 2019 vintage to "a more concentrated version of 2010," he admires—as I do—its vibrant fruit tones and refined tannins, finding it more elegant than 2018. The quality of the red wines chez Faiveley is old news, and for more information on this firm's evolution I direct readers to my report published in the August 2020 Week 1 issue of The Wine Advocate. It's worth underlining, however, how good the whites are these days: Flous tells me that he now includes fûts from Damy and Chassin in the white wine barrel program, and in the last few vintages, I've found the wines' new oak component better and better integrated.
Published: Jan 14, 2021
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
James Suckling
Domaine Faiveley Corton Grand Cru Clos des Cortons Faiveley 2019
Thursday, February 3, 2022
Country : France
Region : Burgundy
Vintage : 2019
Score : 98
A truly amazing Corton, thanks to the laser beam of sour-cherry aroma that shoots right through this sleek and vibrant wine. Great concentration, but remains light on its feet. The mineral finish extends and extends as you struggle to take it all in. Still very young with enormous aging potential. Drink or hold.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
Vinous
(93-95)
Drinking Window
2024 - 2048
From: La Lumière Noire: 2019 Burgundy - Côte de Nuits (Dec 2020)
The 2019 Corton Clos des Cortons Faiveley Grand Cru comes from the 2.77-hectare monopole. This was actually quite closed on the nose compared with Faiveley’s Gevrey Grand Crus, coming across earthy and rather sullen at first, and opening with earthy/woodland aromas. The palate is medium-bodied with supple tannins and harmonious on the entry. The fine, lightly spiced finish reveals clove and touches of graphite. Nice persistence here. This holds a lot of promise.
- By Neal Martin on October 2020
It has been two or three years since I last visited Faiveley, whose considerable diaspora of vineyards covers the length and breadth of Burgundy. Once I had worked out how to approach their impressive new winery in Nuits Saint-Georges through the maze of road works, I met Erwan Faiveley and winemaker Jérôme Flous. “The spring saw two cold weeks of weather, just above the temperature for frost and this stopped the vines growing during May," Flous explained. “Then between June and August it was very dry and hot with two heatwaves at the end of June and end of July. There was not much water...but just enough if you compare to 2020. We picked on 9 September and the Grand Crus in the middle of the month, the same as in 2009. We cropped the reds at just 30hl/ha. The skins were not too thick, so the wines are not too tannic. There was less stuck fermentation than in 2018 when we had to re-inoculate some of the vats. I decided to add more oxygen during fermentation, so did more remontage and thanks to this I think the yeast became more competitive. We learned that from some of the mistakes in 2018. Therefore, I find that the reds are concentrated and elegant compared to 2015 and 2016. Finally, it is becoming quite a classic vintage. Whilst 2018 is more rich and concentrated, 2019 is more delicate and Burgundy in style. You might compare 2019 to the 2010 vintage.”
Tasting Faiveley’s entire range would take about as long as inventing a vaccine to cure a global pandemic given the numerous négociant cuvées, so I focused on a selection from Domaine Faiveley. Certainly I find the wines continuing a trend to more finesse and approachability. Gone are the days when the wines were notoriously tannic and austere, sometimes never fully resolving to the frustration of those that had cellared them long-term. Faiveley oversaw a wonderful Les Saint-Georges, as you would hope, given they are one of the most prominent campaigners for promotion (although things have gone quiet on that front recently.) It must be a mighty challenge in terms of the logistics picking this vast array of vineyards at the optimal time in growing seasons where timing is becoming a vital determinant of quality and sometimes I feel that one or two cuvées maybe just missed that. Stylistically, they retain a sense of solidity, Pinot with a backbone. My pick of the reds were a superb Corton Clos des Corton Faiveley and a wonderful Chambertin Clos de Bèze. Actually, the most eye-catching cuvée turned out to be a splendid Bâtard-Montrachet that is frankly leaps and bounds above the Bienvenue Bâtard-Montrachet and an underwhelming Corton-Charlemagne. At the entry-level, I have always enjoyed their wines from the Côte Chalonnaise, where they own large chunks of vineyards in Mercurey.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
Exclusieve Inhoud
Log in om professionele wijnrecensies van wereldberoemde critici te ontgrendelen
De geschiedenis van Domaine Faiveley gaat terug tot 1825. Het domein is al 7 generaties lang familiebezit en is gelegen in Nuits-Saint-Georges, in het hart van de Bourgogne. 127 ha Wijngaarden, verspreid over Côte de Nuits, Côte de Beaune en Côte Chalonnaise, waarvan 12 wijngaarden met Grand Cru classificatie, 25 met Premier Cru classificatie en 6 wijngaarden met een classificatie “Monopole”. Het domein wordt geleid door Erwan Faiveley, die het werk in de wijngaarden in eigen beheer houdt om zelf controle te hebben over de kwaliteit van de druiven. De handgeplukte oogst wordt met zorg naar gewelfde kelders uit de 19e eeuw gebracht, gelegen in Nuits-Saint-Georges. Om geweldige Bourgognes te maken, combineert Erwan Faiveley de principes van moderne oenologie met traditionele rijping in Frans eiken vaten. Dit alles draagt ertoe bij dat Faiveleywijnen een hoog aanzien hebben.