No. 98841564

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2022 Bernard Bonin "Initiales B.B." - Bourgogne - 1 Bottle (0.75L)
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€ 221
4 weeks ago

2022 Bernard Bonin "Initiales B.B." - Bourgogne - 1 Bottle (0.75L)

Notes of orange oil, pear, white toast, dried white flowers and wild yeast introduce the 2022 Bourgogne Blanc Initiales B.B., a medium to full-bodied, lively wine that's open and expressive, with tangy acids and chalky structuring extract. No shipping outside EU Stored in underground cellar Wine Advocate: 2018 was my first visit to one of the Côte de Beaune's most talked-about addresses, and it was a pleasure tasting with Véronique Bonin and Nicolas Bernard. Beginning with six hectares, inherited by Véronique from the Michelot family of which she is a scion, it has today grown to fully nine hectares, augmented by further cessions from the same source. Practicing organic from the beginning, with Demeter certification due for 2021, treatments are biodynamic. Bernard and Bonin explained that they favor a press cycle of two and a half hours, with a rotation every 15 minutes, with a view to extracting from the skins. The resulting musts go to barrel the next day, without the addition of any sulfur dioxide, and the same barrels are always used for the same appellations ("the wood remembers the imprint of the wine," Véronique emphasizes). Fermentations are leisurely, with episodic bâtonnages determined by taste, and the wines spend 16-18 months on the lees. Sulfur is only added when the wines are racked to tank (strictly following the lunar calendar—readers will observe that the moon features prominently on the domaine's label) before bottling, with the domaine targeting some 30 parts per million free sulfur dioxide at bottling. All this has made the estate a darling of the natural wine movement—still something of an epiphenomenon along the Côte d'Or. And some of the cuvées we tasted did display what would, in some quarters, be described as mildly "natty" characteristics: that's to say, above average levels of volatile acidity and a touch of wild yeast-derived gently reductive funkiness. To reduce this interesting domaine to this small detail alone, however, would be a disservice to their thoughtfully sustainable viticulture and to a range of white Burgundies that actually display a very classical marriage of tangy acidity and chalky dry extract. I much enjoyed this visit—as well as the domaine's 2018s, cropped at on average 45 hectoliters per hectare, as opposed to the 30-32 that is the rolling average at this address—and look forward to following Domaine Bernard-Bonin over the years to come.

No. 98841564

Sold
2022 Bernard Bonin "Initiales B.B." - Bourgogne - 1 Bottle (0.75L)

2022 Bernard Bonin "Initiales B.B." - Bourgogne - 1 Bottle (0.75L)

Notes of orange oil, pear, white toast, dried white flowers and wild yeast introduce the 2022 Bourgogne Blanc Initiales B.B., a medium to full-bodied, lively wine that's open and expressive, with tangy acids and chalky structuring extract.

No shipping outside EU
Stored in underground cellar

Wine Advocate:
2018 was my first visit to one of the Côte de Beaune's most talked-about addresses, and it was a pleasure tasting with Véronique Bonin and Nicolas Bernard. Beginning with six hectares, inherited by Véronique from the Michelot family of which she is a scion, it has today grown to fully nine hectares, augmented by further cessions from the same source. Practicing organic from the beginning, with Demeter certification due for 2021, treatments are biodynamic. Bernard and Bonin explained that they favor a press cycle of two and a half hours, with a rotation every 15 minutes, with a view to extracting from the skins. The resulting musts go to barrel the next day, without the addition of any sulfur dioxide, and the same barrels are always used for the same appellations ("the wood remembers the imprint of the wine," Véronique emphasizes). Fermentations are leisurely, with episodic bâtonnages determined by taste, and the wines spend 16-18 months on the lees. Sulfur is only added when the wines are racked to tank (strictly following the lunar calendar—readers will observe that the moon features prominently on the domaine's label) before bottling, with the domaine targeting some 30 parts per million free sulfur dioxide at bottling. All this has made the estate a darling of the natural wine movement—still something of an epiphenomenon along the Côte d'Or. And some of the cuvées we tasted did display what would, in some quarters, be described as mildly "natty" characteristics: that's to say, above average levels of volatile acidity and a touch of wild yeast-derived gently reductive funkiness. To reduce this interesting domaine to this small detail alone, however, would be a disservice to their thoughtfully sustainable viticulture and to a range of white Burgundies that actually display a very classical marriage of tangy acidity and chalky dry extract. I much enjoyed this visit—as well as the domaine's 2018s, cropped at on average 45 hectoliters per hectare, as opposed to the 30-32 that is the rolling average at this address—and look forward to following Domaine Bernard-Bonin over the years to come.

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