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Pierre Guillemot, Savigny-les Beaune Blanc “Dessus Les Gollardes”, 2019

$50.99
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This Savigny-les-Beaune blanc is a rare bird indeed.  The vineyard was planted in 1957.  It is 30% Chardonnay and 70% Pinot Gouges, a rare strain of albino Pinot Noir discovered by the great Henri Gouges.  In the 1930's some of his Pinot Noir vines mutated from red to white grapes. Monsieur Gouges propagated these cuttings and distributed some to various vigneron friends.

This wine has no new oak; no small barrels. 

Jasper Morris M.W. "Fresh lemon with the lightest of green touches. Yet again I adore the nose of this cuvee, which has the lightest of licorice inflections, mixing in really well with the full yellow plum, but not peachy aromas. Soft rich finish, now more white fruit, and a faint mandarin tingle. Higher alcohol 13.8."

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We love "the Edges of Burgundy" for delicious, exciting wines at great prices. And no village is a better example than Savigny-lès-Beaune. It may be the ultimate under-appreciated Burgundy.

Long maligned for light red wines (sometimes even lightened with white wine varieties, a practice long-since stopped), it has great terroir, top producers and, for generations, has made delicious wines of depth and complexity. And the prices haven't moved up nearly as much as in the more famous villages.

Sure, you might say Savigny-lès-Beaune is great for tasty red-fruited Pinot that you can drink young, but that it just isn't serious. Wrong! Savigny is great to drink young—that's one of its virtues! But good examples also age beautifully. When we had the pleasure of visiting Domaine Pierre Guillemot, the family generously shared a 1978 Serpentières. It was the greatest red Burgundy we tasted on that trip, complete with the peacock finish you normally associate with something like a Richebourg.

Guillemot's Savigny-lès-Beaunes seem particularly ageworthy. Kermit Lynch, who imports the wines, even issues this challenge on his web site: "We challenge anyone to find a better deal on Burgundies that are built to last like these!" We spend a lot of time trying to find just that, and we haven't called Kermit yet. Guillemot's wines are just too good.

In addition to beautiful drinkability in youth and supreme complexity and elegance with age, the best Savigny-lès-Beaunes are precise expressions of unique terroirs, with the subtle distinctions between crus that make Burgundy so endlessly riveting.

What importer Kermit Lynch Wine Merchant has to say about this wine...

Blend: 70% Pinot Blanc, 30% Chardonnay
Appellation: Savigny-lès-Beaune
Country: France
Region: Burgundy
Producer: Domaine Pierre Guillemot
Winemaker: Jean-Pierre Guillemot
Vineyard: 55 years, 1.3 ha
Soil: Limestone, Gravel
Aging: Wine is aged in barrel for 18 months and in bottle for 6 months before release
Farming: Lutte Raisonnée
Alcohol: 13%

Details

  • Grape Variety

    Chardonnay

  • Vintage

    2019

  • Size

    750ml

  • Farming Practice

    Sustainable

  • Sweetness

    Dry

  • Body

    Light Bodied

Focus On: Burgundy

Burgundy has long been the world's most famous wine region. But, underneath all the prestige, this region can be hard to get to know.

While Burgundy offers many great trophies from top producers in well-known villages like Vosne Romanee and Puligny Montrachet, it also offers excellent values to anyone willing to explore beyond the famous names. Our collection– one of the largest in the U.S. – has plenty of both!

From the very basics of Burgundy's regions and wines to the specific terroirs of individual single vineyards--
everything you need to know about Bourgogne is just a click away! 

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Customer Reviews

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W
William Polkinghorn
Excellent White Burgundy Blend

I learned of this wine in Eric Asimov's recent Wine School article in the New York Times. I was unfamiliar blended Burgundy whites, this one 70-percent Pinot Gris and 30-perdent Chardonnay, although a previous Wine School article about Bordeaux whites led me to the excellent Chateau de France. I am not a sophisticated wine taster but I found the Dessus Les Gollardes to be a Burgundy version of the Chateau de France, lighter and dryer than Chardonnay, crisp and refreshing. I shared it with a discerning friend who agreed. One amusing note is that the Dessus Les Gollardes is imported by Kermit Lynch in California so in my case it journeyed from Burgundy to Berkeley, then to Flat Iron in New York, and the back to me in Santa Monica, a long trip.