2022 Jean-Claude Ramonet Bourgogne Aligoté
| Type of Wine | White |
|---|---|
| Country | France |
| Region | |
| Winery | |
| Vintage | 2022 |
| Grape | |
| Content (Alc) | 0.75 ltr (12.5%) |
| Drink window | 2024 - 2028 |
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Description
When you enter the small medieval village of Péronne in the Mâconnaise region of Burgundy, you would never know that it was a battlefield under German occupation for almost all of World War I. Fortunately, the war ended, the people rebuilt the village and the vineyards were replanted. Today Péronne is a small village with fewer than 600 inhabitants. It is allowed to add its name to the Mâcon appellation, where wine has been produced for centuries, so the wines from this village may carry the name: Mâcon-Péronne. The wines from the Mâcon-Péronne are extremely interesting and famous wineries such as Ramonet are currently making beautiful wines that do not yet have the sometimes ridiculous prices for the wines from, for example, the Chassagne-Montrachet, but we fear that this is also a matter of time
The Aligoté is an absolute must. In terms of price, this is still very friendly for a Burgundy. Aligote is a cousin of Chardonnay, but typically more neutral. Aligoté is a white grape variety that results from a crossing of Pinot Blanc and Gouais Blanc. The Aligoté is, next to the Chardonnay, the 'other' white variety of Burgundy. Lots of freshness, white flowers, a little bit of citrus and a very light piece of brioche in the aftertaste
ABOUT JEAN-CLAUDE RAMONET
Noël and Jean-Claude Ramonet are the third generation to manage the grand Ramonet wine estate, with the task of maintaining the wonderful reputation it has built up. It is said that grandfather Pierre arrived in Burgundy in the late 1920s with nothing more than his knapsack. After years of purchasing grapes and making wine from them, he was gradually able to purchase wine plots in his chosen village of Chassagne. Today they own 17 hectares. In the Chassagne the very beautiful premiers crus Ruchottes, Morgeots, Caillerets, Clos-de-la-Boudriotte, Clos-Saint-Jean, Chaumées and Vergers, but also Bâtard and Bienvenues. Recently, Ramonet has been able to expand in Saint-Aubin (Les Charmois) and Puligny-Montrachet (Champ-Canet and very beautiful villages). The average age of the vines is 60 years and the yields per hectare are extremely low. Depending on the quality, the wines are aged for between 12 and 15 months in a mix of new and used oak barrels (generally 30% new oak). Long maturation on the yeast spores, light filtering and only occasional batonnage. The Ramonet brothers, like their grandfather, have remained true winegrowers, but the distribution of their wines is being fought over worldwide. In theory, Noël is responsible for the wine cellars and Jean Claude for the vineyards.
Specifications
| Block Bundle Options | No |
|---|---|
| Type of Wine | White |
| Country | France |
| Region | Bourgogne |
| Winery | Jean Claude Ramonet |
| Grape | Aligote |
| Biological certified | No |
| Natural wine | No |
| Vegan | No |
| Vintage | 2022 |
| Drinking as of | 2024 |
| Drinking till | 2028 |
| Alcohol % | 12.5 |
| Alcohol free/low | No |
| Content | 0.75 ltr |
| Oak aging | Yes |
| Sparkling | No |
| Dessert wine | No |
| Closure | Cork |
| Parker rating | 90 |
| Tasting Profiles | Complex, Dry, Fruity, Aged on wood, Powerful, Mineral, Round, Full, White fruit |
| Drink moments | Cadeau!, Lekker luxe, Met vrienden, Open haard, Romantisch |
Professional Reviews
Parker
Rating
90
Release Price
NA
Drink Date
2021 - 2026
Reviewed by
William Kelley
Issue Date
30th Sep 2021
Source
End of September 2021, The Wine Advocate
A new cuvée chez Ramonet, the 2018 Mâcon-Péronne is one of the sleepers of the portfolio, offering up aromas of pear, mint, citrus oil and pastry cream, followed by a medium to full-bodied, fleshy and enveloping palate that's textural but lively, girdled by succulent acids and framed by a classy patina from its maturation in barrel. I
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
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Wijnhuis
Noël and Jean-Claude Ramonet are the third generation to manage the grand winery of Ramonet, with the mission of maintaining its wonderfully built reputation. Grandfather Pierre is said to have arrived in Burgundy in the late 1920s with nothing more than his knapsack. After years of buying grapes and making wine from them, he was gradually able to buy vineyards in his chosen village of Chassagne. The ultimate highlight in 1978 was the purchase of a plot of land from Le Montrachet, and paid in cash too!
Pierre Ramonet died in 1994 at the age of 88. But its echo lives in the wines, in the capable hands of his grandsons Noël and Jean-Claude who have continued its reputation since 1984 (under the strict command of the grandfather). The original Ramonets came from Bresse on the other side of the Saône from Chalon. In the 19th century, a branch settled in Beaune, where they were millers. The mill went bankrupt and one of them, Claude, moved to Chassagne, where he became a Tacheron, a vineyard worker who is paid by the amount of land he farms. Claude had three children; a daughter who married Georges Bachelet (hence the current domain Bachelet-Ramonet) and two sons, Pierre, born in 1906 and Claude (1914). Pierre married Lucie Prudhon (for a time the wine was sold as Domaine Ramonet-Prudhon). They had only one son, André (1934), father of Noël and Jean-Claude.
Today they own 17 hectares. In the Chassagne the very beautiful premiers crus Ruchottes, Morgeots, Caillerets, Clos-de-la-Boudriotte, Clos-Saint-Jean, Chaumées and Vergers, but also Bâtard and Bienvenues. Recently, Ramonet has been able to expand in Saint-Aubin (Les Charmois) and Puligny-Montrachet (Champ-Canet and a very beautiful villages). The average age of the vines is 60 years and the yields per hectare are very low. Depending on the quality, the wines are aged between 12 and 15 months in a mix of new and used oak barrels (generally 30% new oak). Long maturation on the yeast tracks, light filtering and only occasional batonnage. The Ramonet brothers have remained true winegrowers, just like their grandfather, but the distribution of their wines is being fought over the world. In theory, Noël is responsible for the wine cellars and Jean Claude for the vineyards.
When you enter the small medieval village of Péronne in the Mâconnaise region of Burgundy, you would never know that it was a battlefield under German occupation for almost all of World War I. Fortunately, the war ended, the people rebuilt the village and the vineyards were replanted. Today Péronne is a small village with fewer than 600 inhabitants. It is allowed to add its name to the Mâcon appellation, where wine has been produced for centuries, so the wines from this village may carry the name: Mâcon-Péronne. The wines from the Mâcon-Péronne are extremely interesting and famous wineries such as Ramonet are currently making beautiful wines that do not yet have the sometimes ridiculous prices for the wines from, for example, the Chassagne-Montrachet, but we fear that this is also a matter of time
The Aligoté is an absolute must. In terms of price, this is still very friendly for a Burgundy. Aligote is a cousin of Chardonnay, but typically more neutral. Aligoté is a white grape variety that results from a crossing of Pinot Blanc and Gouais Blanc. The Aligoté is, next to the Chardonnay, the 'other' white variety of Burgundy. Lots of freshness, white flowers, a little bit of citrus and a very light piece of brioche in the aftertaste
ABOUT JEAN-CLAUDE RAMONET
Noël and Jean-Claude Ramonet are the third generation to manage the grand Ramonet wine estate, with the task of maintaining the wonderful reputation it has built up. It is said that grandfather Pierre arrived in Burgundy in the late 1920s with nothing more than his knapsack. After years of purchasing grapes and making wine from them, he was gradually able to purchase wine plots in his chosen village of Chassagne. Today they own 17 hectares. In the Chassagne the very beautiful premiers crus Ruchottes, Morgeots, Caillerets, Clos-de-la-Boudriotte, Clos-Saint-Jean, Chaumées and Vergers, but also Bâtard and Bienvenues. Recently, Ramonet has been able to expand in Saint-Aubin (Les Charmois) and Puligny-Montrachet (Champ-Canet and very beautiful villages). The average age of the vines is 60 years and the yields per hectare are extremely low. Depending on the quality, the wines are aged for between 12 and 15 months in a mix of new and used oak barrels (generally 30% new oak). Long maturation on the yeast spores, light filtering and only occasional batonnage. The Ramonet brothers, like their grandfather, have remained true winegrowers, but the distribution of their wines is being fought over worldwide. In theory, Noël is responsible for the wine cellars and Jean Claude for the vineyards.
| Block Bundle Options | No |
|---|---|
| Type of Wine | White |
| Country | France |
| Region | Bourgogne |
| Winery | Jean Claude Ramonet |
| Grape | Aligote |
| Biological certified | No |
| Natural wine | No |
| Vegan | No |
| Vintage | 2022 |
| Drinking as of | 2024 |
| Drinking till | 2028 |
| Alcohol % | 12.5 |
| Alcohol free/low | No |
| Content | 0.75 ltr |
| Oak aging | Yes |
| Sparkling | No |
| Dessert wine | No |
| Closure | Cork |
| Parker rating | 90 |
| Tasting Profiles | Complex, Dry, Fruity, Aged on wood, Powerful, Mineral, Round, Full, White fruit |
| Drink moments | Cadeau!, Lekker luxe, Met vrienden, Open haard, Romantisch |
Parker
Rating
90
Release Price
NA
Drink Date
2021 - 2026
Reviewed by
William Kelley
Issue Date
30th Sep 2021
Source
End of September 2021, The Wine Advocate
A new cuvée chez Ramonet, the 2018 Mâcon-Péronne is one of the sleepers of the portfolio, offering up aromas of pear, mint, citrus oil and pastry cream, followed by a medium to full-bodied, fleshy and enveloping palate that's textural but lively, girdled by succulent acids and framed by a classy patina from its maturation in barrel. I
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua...
Exclusive Content
Sign in to unlock professional wine reviews from world-renowned critics
Noël and Jean-Claude Ramonet are the third generation to manage the grand winery of Ramonet, with the mission of maintaining its wonderfully built reputation. Grandfather Pierre is said to have arrived in Burgundy in the late 1920s with nothing more than his knapsack. After years of buying grapes and making wine from them, he was gradually able to buy vineyards in his chosen village of Chassagne. The ultimate highlight in 1978 was the purchase of a plot of land from Le Montrachet, and paid in cash too!
Pierre Ramonet died in 1994 at the age of 88. But its echo lives in the wines, in the capable hands of his grandsons Noël and Jean-Claude who have continued its reputation since 1984 (under the strict command of the grandfather). The original Ramonets came from Bresse on the other side of the Saône from Chalon. In the 19th century, a branch settled in Beaune, where they were millers. The mill went bankrupt and one of them, Claude, moved to Chassagne, where he became a Tacheron, a vineyard worker who is paid by the amount of land he farms. Claude had three children; a daughter who married Georges Bachelet (hence the current domain Bachelet-Ramonet) and two sons, Pierre, born in 1906 and Claude (1914). Pierre married Lucie Prudhon (for a time the wine was sold as Domaine Ramonet-Prudhon). They had only one son, André (1934), father of Noël and Jean-Claude.
Today they own 17 hectares. In the Chassagne the very beautiful premiers crus Ruchottes, Morgeots, Caillerets, Clos-de-la-Boudriotte, Clos-Saint-Jean, Chaumées and Vergers, but also Bâtard and Bienvenues. Recently, Ramonet has been able to expand in Saint-Aubin (Les Charmois) and Puligny-Montrachet (Champ-Canet and a very beautiful villages). The average age of the vines is 60 years and the yields per hectare are very low. Depending on the quality, the wines are aged between 12 and 15 months in a mix of new and used oak barrels (generally 30% new oak). Long maturation on the yeast tracks, light filtering and only occasional batonnage. The Ramonet brothers have remained true winegrowers, just like their grandfather, but the distribution of their wines is being fought over the world. In theory, Noël is responsible for the wine cellars and Jean Claude for the vineyards.