2021 Yvonne, 2015 Guillemot

Rahsaan

Rahsaan
It was a good wine weekend.

2021 Ch“teau Yvonne Saumur Blanc
This was great. It’s been years since I drank the Yvonne wines. In the 00s, I remember them being ripe pumped up and oaky. Since then, the ownership has changed, so it might as well be a different winery. This was modern and stylish, with ripe succulent fruit and suave layers of texture. But also a decent amount of refined crisp structure for its 13.5%, and I could detect the chenin cepage.

This limestone inflected wine was exactly what I wanted to drink, a great middle-ground between Touraine and Anjou, and a lovely match with monkfish, roasted potatoes and sautéed maitake and spinach.

Anyone have insight on aging this cuvee? Seems plausible, although I suppose Le Gory is the stacked bottling.

2015 Pierre Guillemot Savigny-lès-Beaune Aux Serpentières
Gorgeous. Juicy pinot berry fruit with silky mineral precision in the structure. This makes me wonder if I am a lower-rent Côte de Beaune palate at heart, because it hits deep in the brain, with more delicacy than those deeply-fruited obvious Côte de Nuits wines.

Obviously I exaggerate, but the point is that this gives me the pleasure I want in Burgundy. Strawberry jewels, some 2015 ripeness, some delicacy and depth to the texture. I suppose it will evolve further, but I had so much fun right now, I won’t hesitate to open the rest of my bottles. A lovely match with golden beet, maitake, kale and tomato pizza, plus roasted oyster mushrooms and red cabbage salad on the side. This has layers.
 
originally posted by Rahsaan:
This makes me wonder if I am a lower-rent Côte de Beaune palate at heart, because it hits deep in the brain, with more delicacy than those deeply-fruited obvious Côte de Nuits wines.
I also find many CdN wines try too hard, even if their ceiling is higher. CdB wines, overall, seem a happier lot.
 
I haven't had the 2021 Yvonne, but chef tried it and loved it. We'd put it on the list if we had a need for it.

I've had Yvonne with a bit of age. I had a 2016 Le Gory a little while back and it was the best Yvonne I've had. It seemed like it became more incisive and miner with a bit of age. I've noticed the same thing over a more compressed time period with the 2019 Blanc. Anyway, I think it's not at the level of Collier (but not much is, IMO), but quite good and seems like it improves in bottle.
 
originally posted by VLM:

I've had Yvonne with a bit of age. I had a 2016 Le Gory a little while back and it was the best Yvonne I've had. It seemed like it became more incisive and miner with a bit of age. I've noticed the same thing over a more compressed time period with the 2019 Blanc. Anyway, I think it's not at the level of Collier (but not much is, IMO), but quite good and seems like it improves in bottle.

Sounds about right. Probably worth getting more bottles for a few years of development, although maybe no need to wait 15-20.

I bought some 2020 Le Gory and there was a stray bottle of 2016 Blanc in the shop, but I didn't buy that.
 
originally posted by Rahsaan:
originally posted by VLM:

I've had Yvonne with a bit of age. I had a 2016 Le Gory a little while back and it was the best Yvonne I've had. It seemed like it became more incisive and miner with a bit of age. I've noticed the same thing over a more compressed time period with the 2019 Blanc. Anyway, I think it's not at the level of Collier (but not much is, IMO), but quite good and seems like it improves in bottle.

Sounds about right. Probably worth getting more bottles for a few years of development, although maybe no need to wait 15-20.

I bought some 2020 Le Gory and there was a stray bottle of 2016 Blanc in the shop, but I didn't buy that.

I'd grab the 2016 and see where it's at. I've found that to be really strong for Saumur Blanc, in my limited experience.
 
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