Perrot-Minot's 2006 Morey-St.-Denis La Riotte Vieilles Vignes once again showcases the virtues of this small, little-known premier cru, although it will scarcely cause one to forget the momentous wine made from these vines in 2005. Lightly-cooked mulberry and blackberry mingle with burley tobacco, cocoa powder, and espresso in the nose and on a palate of uncommonly thick richness for the vintage. This finishes with impressively bitter-sweet, low-toned length. It seems a reasonable candidate for half a dozen or more years of attention, but don't look for the lift or elegance - let alone brightness - that characterize so many of the best 2006s.
Christophe Perrot-Minot - for more on whose fanatic methodology and old vines sites, readers should consult my issue 170 report - says his 2006 crop came in at a mere 25-30 hectoliters per hectare before it hit the sorting tables, where each cluster was destemmed and picked-over by hand before making the final cut. The result was a collection much reduced in volume as well as in number of bottlings (of which I did not, sadly, taste nearly all). Results reflected a conscious diminution of active fermentative extraction (with most of that pumping-over, not punching-down), a tendency Perrot-Minot has followed in recent years even abstracting from the vicissitudes of vintage; and pressing was, he reports, as gentle as mechanically possible. When it comes to new wood, though, Perrot-Minot says he backed off only a little bit from the levels of 2005. All in all, the house style strikes me as better-suited to the inherent structure, clarity, and bridled power of 2005 than to what Perrot-Minot - like most growers - talks about as the "elegance and finesse" - even "airiness" of 2006. I think it entirely fair to say that this collection departs from its vintage, and perhaps the word "transcends" might be more appropriate - at least, with a decade's hindsight! Incidentally, suggested retail prices for these rare wines have taken a significant jump this vintage, although the market reality may be less dramatic. (I have not tried to distinguish in the description of these wines those that are bottled under the "Henri Perrot-Minot" name, since their labels are otherwise indistinguishable and the matter of solely legalistic significance.)
Importer: Martine's Wines, Novato, CA; tel. (415) 883-0400