Fresh lime, sweetly ripe cherry, white peach, grapefruit, lime, and chalk dust in the nose of the Droin 2008 Chablis Les Clos lead to a polished, richly-, almost lushly-textured palate impression, yet one with palpable underlying sense of mineral extract as well as infectious and uplifting brightness and elegance. The finish is at once enveloping and electric, with smoky, stony, peppery, and saline mineral aspects vibrantly shimmering through deep pools of fruit. Far and away the finest wine I have yet tasted from Droin, this should be worth following for a dozen or more years.
”I think 2007 displays a bit more finesse than 2008 and might have the edge in ten or fifteen years,” suggests Benoit Droin’s, but adds that he doesn’t perceive his more generous 2008s – which he compares with 2002 – as less impressive today. Nor, in the least, do I: in fact, they represent the most exciting collection I have so-far tasted here; in my opinion a significant advance on Droin’s 2007s. I hope his estimated time frame proves accurate, but this is admittedly another of those Chablis addresses where – even putting aside one’s general concerns about premature oxidation – the rise in quality and the influence of a new generation are too recent to really be able to treat results from the 1990s as predictive of today’s wines’ evolution. Droin bottled all of his 2008s already in September. Unfortunately due to a schedule change that put us both under time pressure, I was able to taste only around 70% of the entire collection.
Importer: Eric Solomon Selections, Charlotte, NC; tel. (704) 358-1565