Five Burgundy micro-négociants to know and wines to try
Names to have on your radar and 20 wines tasted...
The Napoleonic laws of equal inheritance mean that vineyard ownership has slowly been divided again and again through the generations.
These days, few Burgundy producers own more than a few rows in any one village.
Negociants, by contrast, buy grapes or wine from lots of different growers, allowing them to make wines in larger volumes.
To make matters more complex, some well-known growers will make wine from their own holdings as well as buying in grapes from elsewhere. Some domaines make both estate wines and negociant wines, under separate labels.
Names to have on your radar and 20 wines tasted...
Louis Latour’s Corton-Charlemagne shows the value of a top terroir and a dedicated producer
This family-owned and run estate is dedicated to single parcel expressions and produces some of the region's very best wines...
Opportunities to buy back historical family wine estates don't often come around...
Andy Howard MW explores the background of this relatively new Burgundy producer...
What lies behind these under-the-radar styles...
One of the largest and most dynamic producers in the region...
15 Domaine Arnoux-Lachaux wines from the 2018 vintage...
Top Burgundian wine names flock to New York...
Comparing two of Burgundy's most well-known négociants...
See the top rated wines...
And they're not all grand cru...
Andy Howard tastes more than 30 red wines from the 2003 and 2004 vintages...
Andy Howard MW reports...