Burgundy Passport: Meursault

Meursault FB.jpeg
Meursault FB.jpeg
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Burgundy Passport: Meursault

NZ$165.00

**date changed from 26th September due to the sudden announcement of a public holiday

Properly rested after Wellington on a Plate, with Spring well underway, we resume Burgundy Passport for 2022 with the continued rise of Meursault as a top source of great white Burgundy. Across the decades, the dominant style of the village has evolved from buttery, rich and nutty to something more restrained and much flintier. The reductive style has become such a signature of its top producers that it has spread across the world of Chardonnay and also changed the collector’s view of what Meursault tastes like.

Denied Grand Cru status for any of its vineyards, Meursault has stratified into several tiers along market lines. The undisputed trio at the pinnacle of the village, Perrieres, Genevrières and Charmes sit apart from the rest; who in turn inhabit a different strata than the lieux-dits of Meursault. Perhaps more so than any other village along the Côte, Meursault has a clear heirarchy of lieu-dit sites which are regarded in a class of their own (the late Clive Coates MW denoted them as “dieuxèmes crus” - Narvaux, Tillets, Tessons, Luchets being four of the best known.

Join us on Monday 3rd October as we dust off the cobwebs and explore Meursault’s evolution through both traditional and modern producers; quintessential village wines, special lieu-dit sites and four wines representing the top three 1er Crus. We will be comparing and examining 9 wines including Domaine des Comtes Lafon, Domaine Roulot, Domaine de Montille, Laurent Ponsot, Pierre-Yves Colin-Morey, Pierre Morey, Remí Jobard and Château de Citeaux (P. Bouzereau).

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