2021 Marchand-Tawse Nuits Saint Georges La Petite Charmotte

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Description

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Pascal Marchand, Canadian by birth and from Quebec, became known as a 'flying winemaker' in Australia and Chile, but because of his passion for Bougogne and the advice of the legendary Henri Jayer, he came to France in 1983 to actually become a winemaker in his favorite region. . He was directly inspired by the young generation of pioneers who started using organic and biodynamic methods.

The Pascal Marchand-Tawse Nuits Saint Georges La Petite Charmotte is of course a 100% Pinot Noir. On the Premeaux side, the soil consists mainly of pebbles and sand. 70% of the hand-harvested grapes are destemmed and 30% whole bunch receive a cold maceration for five days with two "pigeages" per day at the start of the alcoholic fermentation, then pumping over during the maceration for a gentle extraction for approx. 18 to dawn. The wine then matures for 20 months in French oak. The wine is not clarified or filtered.

The Pascal Marchand-Tawse La Petite Charmotte shows a hint of reduction on the nose, but there seems to be sufficient fruit concentration. The palate is medium-bodied with supple tannins, white pepper and cloves, and builds slowly to the finely proportioned, fairly firm finish.

FACT: In the Tab: Appendix you will find the official fact sheet of this wine. We will send it to you automatically when you order this wine

Specifications

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Block Bundle Options No
Type of Wine Red
Country France
Region Bourgogne
Appellation Nuits-Saint-Georges
Winery Marchand-Tawse
Grape Pinot Noir
Biological certified No
Natural wine No
Vegan No
Vintage 2021
Drinking as of 2028
Drinking till 2042
Alcohol % 14
Alcohol free/low No
Content 0.75 ltr
Oak aging Yes
Sparkling No
Dessert wine No
Closure Cork
Vinous rating 92
Tasting Profiles Earthy, Rustic, Complex, Dry, Fruity, Aged on wood, Mineral, Red fruit, Flexible
Drink moments Cadeau!, Lekker luxe, Met vrienden, Open haard, Romantisch

Professional Reviews

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Vinous

92

Wijnhuis

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Pascal Marchand, Canadian by birth and from Quebec, became known as a 'flying winemaker' in Australia and Chile, but because of his passion for Bougogne and the advice of the legendary Henri Jayer  he came to France in 1983 to actually become a winemaker in his favorite region . He was directly inspired by the young generation of pioneers, who started using organic and biodynamic methods.

More information about Merchand-Tawse

The story of the Maison Marchand-Tawse in Burgundy begins with the extraordinary story of Pascal Marchand, the French-Canadian boy prodigy, who took over the reins of the Clos des Epeneaux in Pommard in 1985 at the age of 22. He became an overnight sensation, and is certainly one of the founders of modern Burgundy. But the Clos des Epeneaux is small. And for a young, talented and ambitious winemaker, 15 years was enough. He needed a new challenge. And he found one!

Merchand-Tawce's Approach

Pascal was approached by Jean-Charles Boisset, scion of the family that controls the third largest French wine group, who wanted to create a domain that would be the showcase for the family's other companies. So with the 1999 vintage, the Domaine de la Vougeraie was launched, giving Pascal the management of more than 90 hectares of Burgundy vineyards, from simple regional appellations to Grand Crus. It was the largest creation of a single estate in Burgundy since the end of World War II. And it quickly became a reference for modern Burgundian production. Pascal took the entire domain into organic farming, with a biodynamic approach. It was revolutionary. During the seven years he was there, Pascal also participated in the development of several other projects in the Boisset group outside Burgundy and abroad. At the same time, he worked as a consultant for wineries around the world, becoming one of the most famous "flying winemakers".

Marchand  developed his own wine estate and established himself with his financial partner Moray Tawse as a micro-negociant under the name Marchand-Tawse. In addition, in 2011 this partnership acquired the former and important Domaine Maume, now labeled as Maume-Marchand-Tawse and since then positive reforms have been implemented. Despite the expansions, Marchand deliberately wants to keep it small-scale on the domain. His wines offer great drinking pleasure at a young age, but are vinified in such a way that they can ripen beautifully with confidence and appear to develop well. Each produced wine is approached individually in order to optimally show its own character and terroir origin. The use of wood is therefore highly differentiated and biodynamic methods are becoming increasingly noticeable.

Attachments

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