WineThe Collection

Burgundy 2019: the best-value reds

Searching out value in Burgundy means seeking out the lesser-known, under-rated domaines, villages and cuvées. Sarah Marsh has done just that – here’s her pick of the under-the-radar, en primeur red wines from Burgundy 2019

Words by Sarah Marsh MW

Burgundy 2019
The Collection
Jean Tardy's Echézeaux is just one example of an under-rated wine from a top-end appellation. All photos by Jon Wyand

The famous reds of the great Burgundy domaines are beyond the reach of most of us. Not only because of their luxury price tag, but because the small 2019 vintage is insufficient to meet demand from enthusiasts and investors worldwide. But there is a world of Burgundy beyond… And the good news is that 2019 is a lovely and reliable vintage in which to go off-piste with this “alternative” Burgundy.

Here we’re talking the quiet, low-profile Burgundy of lesser-known producers, the peripheral villages, the micro negoces, the new generation and new faces. Over the past decade, helped by a run of good vintages (2013 aside), overall quality in Burgundy has become more reliable. 2019 was sunny and dry through the summer months, but the vines weren’t parched, and grapes largely escaped the sunburn of 2018. It’s a ripe vintage for sure, but the heat came in spikes and was not prolonged, which helped to preserve freshness.

I have picked out my favourite white wines here. The reds are opulent, with a smooth and ripe texture, notably so from sites with good exposition. In Pinot in particular, I feel vintage style comes before terroir, and the wines show a New World, fruity accessibility. Easier to approach than the 2018s, the concentration and balance in both colours should, nonetheless, make them decent keepers.

Volnay vineyard
The premier cru of Rugiens in Pommard

It’s a good vintage in which to discover the wines of minor villages – those not perfectly sited on the enviable east-facing flank of the Côte d‘Or. Auxey-Duresses lies around the hill from Meursault, where the slope turns towards the cool north. The colder exposition hinders ripening, but in the new normal of hot vintages, this can be a distinct advantage, providing little known domaines with much better fruit than in the recent past. From the warmer slopes, Auxey reds are spot on in 2019. Domaine Henri Latour et Fils has mastered the crunchy texture, the reds at Lafouge are exuberantly fruity, while Damien Piguet-Girardin is a young man on a mission. There is so much activity in this village – a few domaines have importers, but you can buy cellar door from all of them.

Fussiere Burgundy
La Fussière offers a good-value alternative to more famous red-wine premiers crus

Even in the A-list villages, it’s possible to find lesser-known domaines. At Domaine Jean Tardy, Guillaume, who gained useful experience working in Australia, is an ascending star. All his 2019s are satin-textured, but it’s really worth hunting out his powerful Echézeaux. It’s also often the case that well-known producers in the principal white villages have reds flying under the radar. Chassagne producers including Bruno Colin, Fernand et Laurent Pillot and René Lamy Pillot have reds not only in Chassagne, but in Santenay, Maranges and Volnay. Many a Meursault producer makes reds off grid, too – Patrick Javillier’s daughter Marion has really shaken up the reds at this white-wine domaine. And how about a Puligny red – from Clos du Cailleret, no less. I do admire Jean-Michel Chartron for upholding the family tradition of growing a little Pinot in this illustrious parcel, sufficient to make a barrel or two of the only 1er Cru red in Puligny-Montrachet – and you don’t get much more alternative than that.

Burgundy winemakers Patrick + Marion Javillier
Patrick Javillier and his daughter Marion, whose red wines offers a value alternative from a renowned domaine
Burgundy 2019 producer Laurent Pillot
Laurent Pillot is among those making red wine in Chassagne-Montrachet

Each autumn, pitching up to cellars to taste the new vintage, I’m excited when I find myself tasting with the next generation of winemakers. The patriarchal dominance is gradually disappearing, no doubt as the generation handing over are themselves more enlightened than their fathers, more able to acknowledge their offspring’s ability. So Laurent Pillot admires his son’s natural touch: “Adrian instinctively knows the perfect moment to press the reds,” he says.

Prices remain an issue in Burgundy. 2019 prices may nudge up a little on 2018 which, along with 2017, increased in the wake of the small 2016 vintage. But it’s questionable if any increase can be sustained this year. There’s great value to be found in Givry, where there are plenty of lesser-known domaines, such as Domaine des Moirots, which have made reds that are both ripe and fresh. Then there’s the Hautes Côtes, where Boris Champy, latterly of Domaine Clos des Lambray, is making engaging wines from different altitudes and soil types. Such growers illustrate the innovative spirit at work in Burgundy. They are not dependent upon grand vineyards, but channel their energy and talent into relatively lowly vines. In so doing, they elevate even the humblest of wines.

Below are Sarah Marsh’s best-value, under-the-radar red Burgundies from 2019. NB Not all wines have yet been released, hence some prices are not confirmed. We have, however, listed their expected stockists. Other wines are not available in the UK, but are available direct from the producer.

 

View the best-value 2019 white Burgundies here

2019’S BEST UNDER-THE-RADAR RED BURGUNDIES

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