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Domaine François Legros

François Legros - Morey-Saint-Denis 1st cru "Clos Sorbé" 2019

François Legros - Morey-Saint-Denis 1st cru "Clos Sorbé" 2019

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François Legros

Morey-Saint-Denis 1st cru

"Clos Sorbé"

2019

75cl

This wine has a color with purple shades. Its aromas are well balanced, with notes of red fruits such as raspberries, cherries, blackcurrants, but also floral notes such as violets. Perfectly round tannins. A perfect wine for aging.

Production area: 30 are 77
Ageing: 18 months
Grape variety: 100% Pinot Noir
Alcohol: 13.5%
Age of the vineyard: 35 and 65 years
Harvest: 100% artisanal
Production: 1800 bottles
Winemaking techniques: 35% new barriques

Vineyard: Two plots located below Clos des Lambrays.
Soil: Clayey-limestone from the Middle Jurassic
Location: “Clos Sorbè”.

Pairings: Feathered game, red meats, washed rind cheeses.

“The 2019 Morey-Saint-Denis Clos Sorbé 1er Cru, from just under Clos des Lambrays, has an attractive blackberry, quite marine-influenced bouquet. The palate is medium-bodied with black fruit laced with black pepper, touches of liquorice furnishing the finish. There is satisfying length here – excellent. Drinking window: 2023-2036. 91 points

Another name that's new to my report is Domaine François Legros, in Nuits Saint-Georges. Legros, who took over the domaine in 1988, is one of those “dirt under the fingernails” winemakers, a man who is happiest out working in the vines. “My ancestors worked at Château de la Tour and my parents still live in Vougeot,” he told me. “They lived in the chateau.” He has expanded the holdings to around eight hectares that, unusually, span both white and red in the Côte de Beaune and Côte de Nuits, this diaspora due partly to working parcels previously owned by his father-in-law. He is now assisted by his daughter Charlotte, who trained at the University of Beaune. Legros has converted all his vineyards to all raisonée, works some parcels by horse, and hand-picks and sorts his fruit in the vineyard and then on a vibrating table. For the reds, around 90% is de-stemmed, with manual pigeage. He keeps the wines on the lees with no racking, employing around 30% new oak for his Premier Crus. He told me that the whites were bottled the previous week and came in with 13.6–13.8% alcohol. Tasting through his 2020s, I preferred his reds to his whites, which displayed traits of over-maturity. By contrast, the reds were fresher and more terroir-driven and therefore come recommended. I look forward to returning to this address in the future.”

Neal Martin, Vinous (12/21)

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