Liger-Belair’s 2008 Clos Vougeot – in tank awaiting bottling when I tasted it in March – betrays toasty oak in the nose, along with predictable dark fruits (plum, black raspberry) and roasted meats. With more weight and girth than the other wines in this collection, and with attractive richness of cocoa powder emerging in a sustained, sappy finish, it nevertheless lacks the distinctiveness or complexity that characterizes so many of its siblings, including those from ostensibly more modest appellations. I strongly suspect this is suffering a bit from its recent racking.
Thibault Liger-Belair was bullish on his 2008s – and for good reason, pointing out that for him, the challenge of rot was significantly greater in 2007. That said, his collection from the latter vintage is impressive of its kind, too, and I concur with his assessment (a far more conservative one than I heard from many growers) that the best 2007s should be worth following for a decade, but probably not much longer. He felt confident in both 2007 and 2008 to utilize stems and whole clusters extensively in fermentation, as is his wont whenever he deems it possible. Most of the Thibault Liger-Belair 2008s had been bottled a month before I tasted them – a late start on bottling by the standards he has thus far set. Liger-Belair says he has now settled into a biodynamic regimen for all of his vineyards, after having first tried out certain methods on property he acquired in the Hautes-Cotes in 2004. He opines that among other things these methods have rendered the vine wood more supple, which permits elevating and expanding the canopy without shading the fruit or risking wind-snapped branches, and he believes this expansion was critical to the measure of ripeness he was able to achieve in the prolonged, breezy late innings of 2008.
Importer: Vineyard Brands, Birmingham, AL; tel. (205) 980-8802