The Lignier-Michelot 2007 Clos St.-Denis smells of smoky black tea, iris, distilled pit fruits and their pits. Seductively tender in texture – in striking contrast with its 2008 counterpart – this favors metaphorically dark flavors of plum, cherry, salted meat stock, game, black tea, peat, and humus. A slight catch of tannin does not significantly mar its long finish, and I feel confident that this can be savored anytime over the next 6-8 years, perhaps longer.
”I love the purity of fruit in the 2008s, which is for me is a big part of the definition of Pinot Noir,” declares Virgile Lignier, after admitting that he shared the doubts of many growers about these wines in their earliest stages, doubts that lead him to de-acidify a few small lots. Natural alcohol levels here in 2008 hovered around 13% although Lignier reports having chaptalized around half a degree for the sake of extending fermentations. He was very cautious in fermentative extraction – “mostly we just took a little juice and poured it back over the cap,” he relates – and in nearly all instances retained around on-third of the stems. Lignier also racked his young 2008s earlier and then two and three times because of what he reported were their stubborn CO2 retention and reductive tendencies, an approach diametrically opposed to that of other growers, but the results here this vintage serve as yet another demonstration that many roads can lead to success. I tasted all but the Bourgogne assembled from tank. “You could do a bit more extraction,” says Lignier of 2007, from which time unfortunately precluded my sampling more than a few examples. (For some details on the sites Lignier farms, consult in particular my notes on his 2006s in issue 186.)
Becky Wasserman Selection (various importers), Le Serbet; fax 011-333-80-24-29-70