DOMAINE DE LA ROMANÉE-CONTI 2021 VINTAGE EN PRIMEUR EXCLUSIVE TO CORNEY & BARROW IN THE UNITED KINGDOM
2
INTRODUCTION If character is indeed tempered in the crucible of adversity then the Domaine’s 2021s are about as perfect an example of this as you will find. Born of unimaginably difficult conditions and offering, as a result, the lowest yields in over 50 years, there is, in inverse proportion, a brave and quite startling beauty to these wines that makes them utterly magical. 2021 does not have the solar sensuality of 2018/2019/2020, rather it offers an insinuating delicacy, purity and subtle but persuasive richness, redolent of those more classic vintages of the 70s and 80s or perhaps, of more recent memory, 1991. The wines dance beautifully. The winter of 2020/2021 was unremarkable, indeed quite mild, although February made up for this by being very cold which delayed the sap rising in the vines. Thereafter, beautiful dry weather set in and all the vital ploughing, pruning and tying down of the vines proceeded in a calm and orderly fashion. Budbreak began at the end of March and continued under atypically warm and bright conditions. This, of course, is when the vine is at its most vulnerable and fragile so that the nights of 6th-8th April with savage winter frosts and temperatures down to -6°C to -8°C inflicted large damage, made worse by a heavy, wet snowfall on the night of the 7th which wetted the nascent buds only for them to be frozen again on the 8th. The destruction was dreadful (see table), the anguish absolute, with losses in Vosne in the order of 50%, the hill of Corton up to 90% and Montrachet virtually the same. It was almost as if the candles lit in the vineyards to give the sanctuary of fractional warmth offered instead the darkness of a Requiem mass…
3
Thereafter the growing season might benevolently be described as capricious. Spring, although warm, was also very wet, allowing diseases – mildew and in particular oidium, and later botrytis, to threaten constantly, with the vineyard team struggling ceaselessly to keep pace with the wildly fluctuating conditions. Cooler conditions in April/May offered little comfort and it was only in June that warmer spells developed, with a short heatwave from the 15th-19th that boosted the flowering that was completed rapidly in around one week. July was frankly gloomy, often wet and it was only in the critical month of August, and even then around the second half, that the sun re-emerged along with welcome rises in temperature. September became progressively better although there was some rain, with the Domaine bringing in the harvest in fine conditions between 23rd September and 2nd October as each plot tripped into maturity with excellent potential alcohol levels of between 13.5% and 14%. Painstaking, ‘haute couture’ selection was required both in the vineyards and, berry by berry, on the sorting tables in the cuverie but it was the yield that was so depressing, from around 15hl/ha in Vosne-Romanée to 4.5hl/ha on the hill of Corton…
4
In the cellars, under the watchful eye of Maître de Chai, Alexandre Bernier, 100% whole clusters were used in the vinifications, with slightly shorter cuvaison than normal to promote gentle extraction. The wines were put to barrel in 100% new oak as is customary with malolactic (secondary) fermentation finishing slightly later than in 2020. Barrel aging was slightly shorter than normal before the wines were transferred to steel to ensure that they were not unduly marked by wood, with bottling slightly earlier than usual between December 2022 and April 2023. My tasting notes were taken from one cask tasting in January 2023 and one from bottle in November 2023. They try and convey the spirit and emotion of this most haunting of vintages. The allocation process (page 8) is there to help you and was, of course, put together with your help and guidance. Please do speak to your individual salesperson for further assistance or to our sales team on 020 7265 5430.
ADAM BRETT-SMITH February 2024
Perrine Fenal, Aubert de Villaine and Bertrand de Villaine at Corney & Barrow HQ
5
Alexandre Bernier (Chef de Cave)
VOSNE-ROMANÉE
Chambolle-Musigny N Dijon
N74
Les Grands Échézeaux
Vougeot
Échézeaux
Flagey-Echézeaux
6
Les Richebourgs
La Romanée
Romanée Saint-Vivant
La RomanéeConti
La Grande Rue
La Tâche
Vosne-Romanée
Nuits-St-Georges
Beanne
Grands Crus du Domaine de la Romanée-Conti
N74
CORTON & CORTON-CHARLEMAGNE
N
En Charlemagne
D115d
Bois de Corton
Le Charlemagne
Les Pougets
7
Le Corton
Les Languettes
ALOXE-CORTON Les Perrières
Le Clos du Roi
Les Renardes
Le Rognet-Corton Les Bressandes
Les Meix Les Fournières
Les Chaillots
Les Valozières Les Caillettes
Les Bruyères
D115d
Les Morais
Les Marèchaudes
Les Lolieres
THE ALLOCATION PROCESS We always aim to make our allocation process utterly transparent and fair. This is necessarily painstaking as each order is dealt with in minute detail – as it should be. We ask for your patience as we do this and, once again, thought it would be useful to set out the Domaine’s and, by extension, Corney & Barrow’s allocation criteria. • The Domaine’s focus is on the private customer and as a consumer rather than a speculator. • The Domaine’s wines are bought on the clear understanding that they will be stored and delivered in the UK only. Should you wish to sell the wines in the future, it is expected and understood that you
8
please offer Corney & Barrow first refusal as this will ensure the integrity of secondary market distribution. • Should customers wish to sell their allocation (or part of it) within three years of initial release, it can be fairly assumed that the wines were bought with speculation in mind rather than future drinking. This may very well impact the level of future allocations to those customers. • Priority will be given to the Domaine’s and Corney & Barrow’s longstanding and best customers. • We will do our best to accommodate newer customers. To help in this, we have a range of older vintages in stock to help begin a collection. • May we please have your order by Tuesday 20th February. • Allocations will be completed by Tuesday 27th February. • Confirmation of order will be through receipt of invoice and the wines will be delivered or put into your reserve upon payment and once the wines have arrived in the UK. All orders are conditional upon UK storage only. We keep for the Domaine’s benefit a record of bottle numberings to help you in this. • May we please request that invoices are paid in full by Thursday 28th March. In all fairness, we reserve the right to reallocate your order to other customers on the waiting list if payment is not received by this time. • Do please speak to our sales team, who will be delighted to help you further.
9
10
AN IMPORTANT NOTICE, DIRECT FROM THE DOMAINE In recent years, the media have regularly reported raids by the police services of several European countries including France, which revealed the existence of international networks of counterfeits concerning, in particular, Romanée-Conti from recent vintages. Numerous people have been arrested, but there are still operations underway, and these cases will surely see further developments. These events are certainly regrettable, but they show the will of national and European authorities to oppose firmly, and to put an end to actions which are very damaging to the image of great French wines. Let us be thankful for this. The victims of counterfeiters include professionals, but also collectors of great wines. This is why we would like to take this opportunity to insist again on an essential point which interests all wine lovers and customers of the Domaine, whether professional or private: it is very important that, unless there is complete certainty about the origin of the bottles which you have been offered, you only ever buy our wines through official channels, that is to say via our distributors and the wine merchants they have selected. These channels provide not only the guarantee of authenticity but also integrity – that is to say, proper storage of the wines.
11
12
TASTING NOTES VOSNE-ROMANÉE 1ER CRU CUVÉE DUVAULT-BLOCHET
ÉCHÉZEAUX
“Almost too good”, I scribbled in the margin and later, rather more ominously, “as if sucking the life out of the others!” and it was only at the end of the tasting that we were told that most of the wine in this rarely offered premier cru was actually… declassified La Tâche…
This wonderful vineyard is on a roll, noted before in the last three vintages but perhaps most typified in the ravaged 2021 where just 13.9 hl/ha was offered. Firm ruby colour. The nose is super refined for Échézeaux with racy, elegant, startlingly fresh, red, red fruit. The palate is subtly dry, with earthy, rooty dark fruit, profound even, more chiselled than rounded, less extrovert than normal until that final burst of slightly wild flavours on the finish which is pure, reassuringly d’Artagnan-like* in style.
Whatever, it is wonderful. Bright ruby colour with a darker, sterner nose of quite extraordinary purity, an insinuating perfume of bursting red and black fruits. The palate is juicy with delectable, plump, sensual flavours, medium weight perhaps, but with an intense, pointed concentration far above its pay grade, and super length. As I said, almost too good.
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5+ Recommended drinking from 2027 - 2037
This wine will be offered to the On-Trade in due course.
£1,605/Case of 3 bottles, in bond UK £535/Case of 1 bottle, in bond UK
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5+ - 18Recommended drinking from 2026 - 2035
* D’Artagnan, the fourth of the Three Musketeers as it were. I see Richebourg frequently as Porthos.
13
CORTON
GRANDS ÉCHÉZEAUX
This, the 13th vintage since the Domaine acquired an extended lease from the Prince de Mérode family of three tiny plots on the hill of Corton, proved as unlucky in volume as it is beautiful in quality. Les Renardes (0.5 hectares), Clos du Roi (0.57 hectares) and Bressandes (1.2 hectares) between them produced a pathetic 5 hectolitres per hectare – against a normal 20-30 hectolitres/hectare – and yet the beauty is startling from a firm ruby colour to a nose of purest red fruit, sweet and tender with an insinuating (that word again) perfume. The palate is… graceful (a word rarely associated with young Corton), beautifully extracted, quite rich, even sweet, with a delectable mid-weight firmness and lovely length. This is a delight, a “heart on sleeve” Corton that dances beautifully.
Intriguingly, the colour is slightly darker than Échezeaux – normally it is the other way round – and here the nose is more latent, brooding even, with a measured, refined, rather aristocratic perfume of stony red and black fruit, subtly mineral and earthy. The palate, by contrast, which possesses an upfront sweetness – unusual for Grands Échézeaux in youth – is richly and roundly extracted with fresh dark tannins and a burst of equally dark, sweet fruit on the finish – like a firework that settles slowly towards the earth I wrote, rather fancifully. Lovely wine.
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5+ Recommended drinking from 2027 - 2036 £1,305/Case of 3 bottles, in bond UK £435/Case of 1 bottle, in bond UK
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5 - 18 Recommended drinking from 2028 - 2038 £2,400/Case of 3 bottles, in bond UK £800/Case of 1 bottle, in bond UK
14
RICHEBOURG Limpid ruby colour. Atypically, the nose in 2021 is quite high-toned in its perfume, vibrant with leafy red fruit and shadows of that characteristic Richebourg sensuality and richness. The palate is more at ease with a chewy density, a more textbook broad-shouldered structure allied to a subtly butterscotched richness. There is a brave, rather defiant, quality to this Richebourg that manages to be half-terrestrial, half-atmospheric and wholly moving. My score may be conservative. Corney & Barrow Score 17++ Recommended drinking from 2030 - 2039 £3,840/Case of 3 bottles, in bond UK £1,280/Case of 1 bottle, in bond UK
15
ROMANÉE-SAINT-VIVANT Even in extreme youth, there is frequently something slightly extra-terrestrial, atmospheric about this, the most feline of the grands crus but in 2021, along with a deep ruby colour is a creamily plump perfume of ripe, red fruits, a sense of contented extraction, not simple just more terrestrial. The palate obediently follows the nose with firm, juicy flavours of charm, delectable freshness, medium concentration and purity and a finish that almost fizzes with intensity and energy. Corney & Barrow Score 17.5 Recommended drinking from 2029 - 2039 £3,900/Case of 3 bottles, in bond UK £1,300/Case of 1 bottle, in bond UK
LA TÂCHE
CORTON-CHARLEMAGNE
Deep, limpid ruby colour. There is simply no trace of the tumultuous nature of the growing season in this wine which possesses a calm, utterly delectable nose of supple, lithe, perfumed, plummy red fruit, almost casually profound. The palate is perfectly matched to the nose with an effortless grandeur to its layered density of fresh, sweet fruit and concentrated lush flavours. Perfect balance of structure and fine length. And as if all this majestic sang-froid is not enough, there is a rather magical flare of energy and tension on the finish that takes this wine away from earth and into the atmosphere. Really rather a beautiful La Tâche.
This, the third vintage of the Domaine’s CortonCharlemagne, is leased from Domaine Bonneau du Martray. These two finest plots (En Charlemagne and Le Charlemagne) suffered terribly from the 6th-8th April frosts, with a yield of an appallingly low 4.8 hectolitres/ hectare.
Corney & Barrow Score 18 Recommended drinking from 2029 - 2040 £4,410/Case of 3 bottles, in bond UK £1,470/Case of 1 bottle, in bond UK
Nevertheless, what remained on the vines has offered a beautiful wine with a nose that is both zesty and creamily lush, with layered fruit of quite startling complexity. The palate, as if by contrast to the growing season, has an almost casual, supple richness which is deceptive because it is swiftly followed by a burst of intense freshness, energy and absolute purity to the finish. “All the goodies in the shop window and then some”, I scribbled in the margin – or, more poetically, a heart-on-sleeve CortonCharlemagne of an almost poignant beauty.
Corney & Barrow Score 17.5 - 18 Recommended drinking from 2026 - 2036 £875/Case of 1 bottle, in bond UK
16
ROMANÉE-CONTI
MONTRACHET
As always, slightly paler in colour than La Tâche. The joy of 2021 Romanée-Conti at this very early stage at any rate is the majestically open, utterly lovely nose of old-vine red fruit, sweetly ripe, fresh and youthful and yet possessed of a perfume that is layered, elegant but with the merest touch of leafy freshness to lift the whole. Magical. The palate is absolutely true to the perfume, perfectly extracted with tannins of infinite grace and refinement but also strength to match the absolute precision of the fruit. Extended and insinuating flavour and with what appears to be a characteristic of the Domaine’s 2021s – that flare of freshness and energy that balloons across the palate to the finish. A very beautiful wine.
Four barrels of this mythical wine were made in 2021, at a yield of just 13.5 hl/ha… but here, in total contrast to the Corton-Charlemagne, is all tension. The nose is delectably taut, tightly wound, reductive, with flashes of gold and white fruit of an almost atmospheric quality. The palate is both seductive – in that rather majestic way that the Domaine is famous for – and supremely elegant, with a threaded, steely, “superleggera” structure that lifts the subliminal weight into a finish that is piercingly sustained and profound. This wine changed in the glass more than any Montrachet I have ever tasted. “Trying to score this wine at this stage is like trying to pin the tail on a donkey”, I wrote in the margin. Utterly beautiful.
Corney & Barrow Score 18 Recommended drinking from 2030 - 2040
Corney & Barrow Score 18 - 18++ Recommended drinking from 2028 - 2043+
£12,750/Case of 3 bottles, in bond UK £4,250/Case of 1 bottle, in bond UK
£2,460/Case of 1 bottle, in bond UK
THE 2021 VINTAGE IN NUMBERS AVERAGE AGE OF VINES (YEARS)
TOTAL PRODUCTION (DOZ)
YIELD (HECTOLITRES PER HECTARE)
HARVEST DATES
BOTTLING DATES
Vosne-Romanee 1er Cru Duvault Blochet
n/a
149
n/a
n/a
April 12th, 2023
Corton
55
105
5 hl/ha
September 26th and 27th
March 15th, 2023
Échézeaux
35
636
13.9 hl/ha
September 30th, October 1st and 2nd
March 15th, 2023
Richebourg
60
355
11.8 hl/ha
September 29th and October 1st
January 13th, 2023
Grands Échézeaux
30
742
21.6 hl/ha
September 23rd and 24th
March 17th, 2023
Romanée-St-Vivant
45
755
14.5 hl/ha
September 27th, 28th and 29th
January 12th, 2023
17
La Tâche
50
579
8.6 hl/ha
September 24th, 25th and 27th
April 12th, 2023
Romanée-Conti
60
403
20 hl/ha
September 25th
January 11th, 2023
Corton-Charlemagne
60
165
4.8 hl/ha
September 30th and October 1st
December 8th, 2022
Montrachet
60+
102
13.5 hl/ha
September 28th
December 8th, 2022
Tasting Guide Our tasting notes provide full details but, at your request, we have also introduced a clear and simple marking system. We hope these guidelines assist you in your selection. For the benefit of simplicity, wines are scored out of 20. We will often use a range of scores (e.g. 16.5 to 17) to indicate the potential to achieve a higher mark. When a ‘+’ is shown it adds further to that potential. Wines from lesser vintages will, inevitably, show a lower overall score.
Wines are judged, in a very broad sense, against their peers. Why? Well, you cannot easily compare a Ford with an Aston Martin, other than they are both cars and have wheels. It is not that different with wine. A score is a summary only. The devil is in the detail, so please focus on the tasting notes and, as always, speak to our sales team.
RECOMMENDED DRINKING DATES We are regularly asked for more specific drinking dates for Burgundies, in particular from the great domaines.
18
REVISED DRINKING DATES
Vosne–Romanée 1er Cru Cuvée Duvault Blochet
Corton
Échézeaux
Grands Échézeaux
1997
N/A
N/A
Now
Now
1998
N/A
N/A
Now
Now
1999
Now
N/A
Now
Now
2000
N/A
N/A
Now
Now
2001
N/A
N/A
Now
Now
2002
Now
N/A
Now
Now
2003
N/A
N/A
Now
Now
2004
N/A
N/A
See below
See below
2005
N/A
N/A
See below
See below
2006
Now
N/A
Now
Now
2007
N/A
N/A
Now
See below
2008
Now
N/A
See below
See below
2009
Now-2025
2018-2030
See below
See below
2010
N/A
2018-2032
See below
See below
2011
N/A
2018-2028
See below
See below
2012
N/A
2018-2029
See below
See below
2013
N/A
2019-2026
See below
See below
2014
N/A
2020-2029
See below
See below
2015
N/A
2026-2034
See below
See below
2016
N/A
2027-2034
See below
See below
2017
N/A
2028-2036
See below
See below
2018
N/A
2028-2037
See below
See below
2019
N/A
2027-2038
See below
See below
2020
See below
See below
See below
See below
ORIGINAL DRINKING DATES
Vosne–Romanée 1er Cru Cuvée Duvault Blochet
Corton
Échézeaux
Grands Échézeaux
1997
N/A
N/A
From 2002
From 2003
1998
N/A
N/A
From 2004
From 2005
1999
From 2003
N/A
From 2006
From 2008
2000
N/A
N/A
From 2004
From 2006
2001
N/A
N/A
From 2005
From 2006
2002
From 2006
N/A
From 2008
From 2009
2003
N/A
N/A
From 2008
From 2009
2004
N/A
N/A
From 2013
From 2015
2005
N/A
N/A
From 2015
From 2020
2006
2010-2015
N/A
From 2011
From 2012
2007
N/A
N/A
From 2012
From 2015
2008
2015-2020
N/A
From 2016
2018-2025+
2009
2015-2020
2018-2025
2018-2025+
2020-2030
2010
N/A
2018-2025
2019-2025+
2021-2030+
2011
N/A
2018-2024
2018-2024
2020-2028
2012
N/A
2018-2025
2020-2025
2020-2030+
2013
N/A
2019-2026
2019-2025+
2021-2030
2014
N/A
2020-2028
2020-2030
2022-2030+
2015
N/A
2026-2030
2022-2030+
2024-2035
2016
N/A
2027-2032
2028-2035+
2030-2040+
2017
N/A
2028-2038
2029-2035+
2030-2035+
2018
N/A
2028-2035
2024-2035
2026-2038+
2019
N/A
2027-2036
2025-2036
2028-2038
2020
2025-2033
2026-2035
2026-2036
2027-2037
2021
2026-2035
2027-2036
2027-2037
2028-2038
Here therefore, are specific recommendations of drinking dates for every recent vintage. Of course taste is an extremely personal thing but having tasted and analysed these wines extensively over the last few years, we absolutely believe that opening these wines at the dates indicated will ensure maximum enjoyment. For your interest and reference we have included our original recommendations made at the launch of the new vintages below.
Richebourg
Romanée–St–Vivant
La Tâche
Romanée–Conti
Montrachet
Now
Now
Now
Now
Now
Now
Now
Now
2015-2030+
Now
Now
Now
Now
2015-2030+
Now
Now
Now
Now
Now-2027+
Now
Now
Now
Now
Now-2029+
Now
Now
Now
Now
2015-2028+
Now
Now
Now
Now
Now-2025+
Now
See below
See below
See below
See below
Now
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
Now-2026
See below
See below
Now-2028
See below
Now-2027
See below
See below
Now-2029
Now-2028
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
Now-2025+
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
See below
Richebourg
Romanée–St–Vivant
La Tâche
Romanée–Conti
Montrachet
From 2005
From 2005
From 2005
From 2007
From 2004
From 2006
From 2005
From 2008
From 2008
From 2003
From 2010
From 2009
From 2012
From 2015
From 2006
From 2009
From 2007
From 2009
From 2009
From 2007
From 2007
From 2007
From 2008
From 2010
From 2008
From 2009
From 2009
From 2012
From 2015
From 2010
From 2011
From 2010
From 2011
From 2012
From 2009
From 2017
From 2016
From 2018
From 2020
From 2012
From 2020
From 2020
From 2020
From 2025
From 2014
From 2015
From 2013
2016-2022
2017-2025
From 2015
2016-2021
From 2016
2017-2022
2020-2025
From 2012
2016-2021
2017-2022
2018-2026+
2020-2030
From 2018
2022-2030
2020-2028
2025-2035
2025-2035
2015-2025
2023-2030+
2022-2029+
2025-2035
2026-2035+
2016-2025+
2022-2030
2021-2020
2020-2030
2025-2035
2017-2022
2025-2032+
2025-2032+
2026-2035+
2027-2035+
2017-2025+
2022-2032
2020-2030
2023-2030+
2024-2034+
2019-2025
2023-2033+
2021-2031+
2025-2035+
2025-2037+
2019-2029
2025-2035+
2023-2030+
2027-2035+
2030-2040+
2020-2035+
2029-2040+
2028-2035+
2030-2040+
2030-2040+
N/A
2031-2037+
2029-2036+
2031-2040+
2030-2040+
2022-2032
2028-2040+
2027-2040
2030-2040+
2032-2042+
2025-2030
2029-2039
2028-2040
2031-2040
2033-2043+
2026-2032
2027-2038
2027-2036
2028-2040+
2028-2045+
2026-2042+
2030-2039
2029-2039
2029-2040
2030-2040
2028-2043+
19
CONTACT US Our Locations LONDON 1 Thomas More Street London E1W 1YZ T +44 (0)20 7265 2400 sales@corneyandbarrow.com
EDINBURGH Oxenfoord Castle by Pathhead, Midlothian EH37 5UB T +44 (0)1875 321 921 edinburgh@corneyandbarrow.com
EAST ANGLIA Belvoir House, High Street Newmarket, Suffolk CB8 8DH T +44 (0)1638 600 000 newmarket@corneyandbarrow.com
NORTH OF ENGLAND 4 Park Square East Leeds LS1 2NE T +44 (0)1133 400 380 northofengland@corneyandbarrow.com
AYR 8 Academy Street, Ayr Ayrshire, Scotland KA7 1HT T +44 (0)1292 267 000 ayr@corneyandbarrow.com
Online
FACEBOOK @corneyandbarrow
X @corneyandbarrow
INSTAGRAM @corneyandbarrow
www.corneyandbarrow.com
The colours on the cover correspond to the soil types as mapped on the Geoportail website. © www.geoportail.gouv.fr Corney & Barrow are supporting The Woodland Trust and The World Land Trust in the production of this brochure. The cover material has created 2.35m2 of New Native Woodland within the UK and captured 0.094kg of Carbon Dioxide for The Woodland Trust. The text materials support The World Land Trust, creating the equivalent of 82kg of Carbon Dioxide which will enable them to protect 16m2 of critically threatened tropical forest.
www.corneyandbarrow.com