Classification | |
Type | Rouge |
Marque | Domaine Dujac |
Millésime | 2007 |
Pays | France |
Région | Burgundy, Cotes de Nuits |
Raisin | Pinot Noir |
Volume | |
État | Parfait |
Étiquette | Parfait |
Stock | 0 |
Black tea on the nose; a stony background on the palate; and palate inflections of ginger and rhubarb all offer counterpoint to an almost raspberry syrup-like sweetness of fruit as well as a vanillin overlay in the Dujac 2007 Clos St.-Denis. While this might sound like the recipe for yet another bifurcated wine of its vintage, somehow the whole Gestalt works. The combination of relative delicacy with intensity of flavor; tenderness of texture with a focused if elusive sense of minerality; and satisfying primary juiciness all suggest a wine as worth revisiting 4-5 years from now as it is a delight today. “It’s a quintessential Dujac wine,” says Seysses, more or less summarizing my impressions. It should be worth following for close to a decade.
Bright and quite pale though not nearly as majestic as the Ponsot version tasted immediately beforehand. Light and pretty but just a little bit spineless on the nose. Good juicy fruit impact on the palate. Easy to miss as it's relatively light for a grand cru. Perfectly ok but not desperately exciting. Was it picked just a little too early? Fresh...?