Joseph Colin Chassagne-Montrachet 2019

SKU
JCCM201910 UCAU
  • The palate is well balanced with crisp acidity, quite saline and surprisingly malic given the growing season.
  • Apple, pear and peach on the nose.
  • Goes great with Seafood and Light Poultry.
  • 1 or more bottles
    $160.00
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  • Robert Parker's
    90 points
  • Jasper Morris M
    90 points
  • Vinous
    90 points

Editors notes

The Colin family is revered throughout Burgundy's Côte de Beaune, with a storied history and penchant for crafting exceptional wines of distinction.

Another cuvée that mandates a comparatively early harvest is the 2019 Chassagne-Montrachet Village, a medium to full-bodied, satiny and fleshy wine that’s bright and saline, with good cut to balance its generosity of fruit. This is already showing very well.

- William Kelley

The palate is well balanced with crisp acidity, quite saline and surprisingly malic given the growing season. Fine tension and energy on the finish, this is classy Chassagne not a million miles away from Sébastien Caillat’s in style.

- Vinous

Details

Tasting Profile

  • Light (Light)
    Full (Full)
  • Low Tannin (Low Tannin)
    Tannic (Tannic)
  • Sweet (Sweet)
    Dry (Dry)
  • Low Acidity (Low Acidity)
    High Acidity (High Acidity)
  • Aroma
    • Apple
    • Lemon
    • Nectarine
  • Palate
    • Apple
    • Cream
    • Peach

Food Pairings

  • Cheese
  • Fish
  • Poultry

Critic Scores & reviews

  • Robert Parker's Wine Advocate

    90
    "Another cuvée that mandates a comparatively early harvest is the 2019 Chassagne-Montrachet Village, a medium to full-bodied, satiny and fleshy wine that’s bright and saline, with good cut to balance its generosity of fruit. This is already showing very well."
  • Jasper Morris MW

    90
    "From Meix Godard, Blanchots Dessous, En Journoblot. Slightly fuller yellow and a little more reductive. Very good tension, 30 hl/ha this year, so really good concentration too, this stands up well after the 1er cru St-Aubins. Joseph thinks that many people pick too late. This wine is certainly a good argument in favour of his choice of harvest date."
  • Vinous

    90
    "The 2019 Chassagne-Montrachet Village has a light, slightly chalky bouquet, more Puligny than Chassagne in style. The palate is well balanced with crisp acidity, quite saline and surprisingly malic given the growing season. Fine tension and energy on the finish, this is classy Chassagne not a million miles away from Sébastien Caillat’s in style."

Other vintages

Love this wine? Here's a list of other vintages we have in stock if you'd like to try them as well.

Current auction

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Locations

France

Wine is being produced throughout France and has been done for over 2,500 years with certain Châteaux dating their history back to Roman times, around 6th Century BC. Ranking second in the world in per-capita consumption and first in total production quantity. More so than the overall quantity of wine is the quantity of truly great wines coming out of France makes the nation the envy of wine-making nations worldwide.

Two concepts pivotal to the higher end French wines, in particular, are the idea of 'terroir' and the Appellation d'Origine Contrôlée (AOC) system. Terroir refers to the way the geography, geology and climate find their way into the glass, telling a story of the origin of the wine. The AOC was set up in 1935 and has the primary goal of protecting the authenticity of the wines and the livelihoods of the producers. Appellation rules strictly define which varieties of grapes and winemaking practices are approved for classification in each of France's several hundred geographically defined appellations, which can cover entire regions, individual villages or in some cases, like in Burgundy even specific vineyards.

Classic wine regions in France include Champagne (home of Champagne), Burgundy (Pinot Noir and Chardonnay), Bordeaux (Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot, Malbec, Petit Verdot), Alsace (Aromatic varietals), Loire Valley (Chenin Blanc, Crémant) and the Rhône Valley (Syrah, Grenache Mourvedre)

The Bordeaux classification of 1855 is still in use, as is the Sauternes and Barsac Classification of the same year. Wines from certain regions can be bought En Primeur, which is when the wine is sold prior to it being bottled.

Burgundy

Burgundy is undoubtedly the home of the finest Pinot Noir and Chardonnays in the world, where vineyards, or Domaines have been producing wines for over 2000 years. Burgundy is located in the North-east of France, an hours drive from Lyon and 2 hours from Paris. With over 100 appellations, or sub-regions (more than any other wine region) Burgundy is known for being the most terroir-oriented region in the World. The finest red wines of Burgundy are found in the Côte d'Or, a string of villages including Côte de Nuits, Gevrey-Chambertin, Morey St Denis, Chambolle-Musigny, Vougeot, Vosne-Romanée and Nuits-St Georges.

There are flavours present in great Burgundys that are the envy of Pinot Noir producers worldwide. The elusive peacocks tail finish that goes on and on, and the pretty-elegance backed by Burgundy muscle is the goal of winemakers around the globe. The main levels in the Burgundy classifications, in descending order of quality, are: Grand crus, Premier crus, village appellations, and finally regional appellations. For the Chablis wines, a similar hierarchy of Grand Cru, Premier Cru and Village wines is used, plus Petit Chablis as a level below Village Chablis.

Chassagne-Montrachet

Chassagne-Montrachet is an appellation Village in the southern part of the Côte de Beaune region of Burgundy, France. It’s know for the classic Burgundy grapes, Chardonnay and Pinot Noir. With the Chardonnays, expect aromas of mayflower, acacia, and honeysuckle alongside verbena, hazelnut, and sometimes toast or buttery notes. Likewise, expect flinty minerality. Notes of honey or ripe pear emerge with age. The palate is fleshy yet mellow. With the Pinot Noir wines, you’ll likely find aromas of morello cherry, cherry pit, strawberry, gooseberry, and raspberry. On the palate, a delicious fleshiness somewhat mutes tannins that, though somewhat austere in the young wines, give way with age to a concentrated, complex, and flavoursome structure.

About the brand Joseph Colin

Joseph Colin is the son of Marc Colin and younger brother of Pierre-Yves Colin. After Pierre-Yves left in 2003 to start his now famous PYCM, Joseph took over Domaine Marc Colin with his two younger siblings, having worked with his father since 1993 at the age of 19. In 2017 Joseph followed in his older brother’s footsteps, by peeling 6+ hectares from the original family property to begin his own story. This process of bestowing the oldest children with some of the most beautiful vines in the world to make their own way in the wine world is a Burgundian tradition.

In the case of the Colin family, the parcels they were given include some of the choicest nuggets of Chardonnay soil on the planet, with the mother lode centered in and around St. Aubin, Puligny and Chassagne. Having started working with his father full-time at such a young age, Joseph knows the rocks and vines in this white Burgundy mecca like few others, meticulously caring for each parcel like his own personal garden. He has a hands-off approach in the cellar, fermenting with indigenous yeast and aging all of the wines in 350L barrels on their fine lees until bottling. The wines are all top examples of this most sacred of Chardonnay terroirs, with an electricity and verve that is so sought yet so rarely found.

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