Now this is a curious one. The bottle was labelled "Corton-Charlemagne," but what poured out of the bottle was red! It must have been a mislabelling at the domaine (not a fake as it came from the cellar of a well-known Burgundy winemaker whose father bought them on release). One can deduce that it must be a Corton, perhaps from Pouget since the family had a holding there, but I have written it down as 1955 Corton Grand Cru. The thing is--it was a blooming wonderful wine. The nose is fresh as a daisy, strict and linear with dark cherry fruit mixed with a little iodine. The palate is underpinned by crisp tannins, quite rigid in the mouth (à la Corton), but this was a great growing season and as a consequence there is genuine complexity and precision on the long finish that curiously with age, has semblances towards a light tawny port. Yes, a curiosity, but a delicious curiosity at that. Tasted December 2015.