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Domaine de la Romanee Conti

Domaine de la Romanee Conti

Domaine de la Romanee Conti

Domaine de la Romanee Conti Wines that Allow Nature to Speak in Her Truest, Purest Voice


Domaine de la Romanée-Conti, based in Burgundy, is one of the most well-established and reputable wine producers in the whole world. It is famous for producing only a small amount of each brand (usually around 6,000-8,000 cases per year), and it takes a considerable investment to own even a single bottle. Every wine enthusiast worth their salt wishes to visit this legendary location, but only a few of them ever get the chance to do so, making it a prestigious achievement.

The winery belongs to Aubert de Villaine and Henri-Frédéric Roch families, who have managed it since 1942. To this day, their representatives nurture the noble soil of the winery and the vines themselves using old-fashioned, traditional methods – primarily by hand, using the horse and plow. There is no substitute for direct and loving care of your fruits, and the producers are aware of that. Every wine bottle contains a small taste of a time long gone, and the best producers in the world always strive to preserve some of that traditional value and the connection to our ancestry. Domaine de la Romanée-Conti use only natural yeasts, and they stay away from pesticides and anything that could ruin the sacred, pristine taste of their fresh, supple grapes.

As a result of this discipline, their wines are otherworldly in flavor, texture, and longevity. The 100% pure oak barrels used to ferment these wines paint a dreamy picture of how old monks used to live way before our time, with an earthy, almost arboreal baseline that brings to mind lush forests of fruit and flower, ripe for the picking. Every label commands respect among wine enthusiasts, and you have a wide selection of vintage bottles to aspire towards. Some of the best ones come from 1929, 1945, 1961, 1969, 1971, 1978, 1991, 1999, 2005, 2009, and 2010. If you are fortunate enough to obtain one of these, the divine flavor and texture may be mixed with a bittersweet feeling that comes with opening a bottle of this status.
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1993 drc la tache Burgundy Red
1993 DRC La Tache Burgundy Red

Light red. Beautiful nose, very youthful and pure. A vegetal note emerges with air. Packed with dense fruit and marked by a very firm structure of both acidity and dense tannins. The fruit is locked up right now in this massive, powerful La Tâche. Rather than open in the glass, this appears to close up, but have faith; this will be great.--La Tâche non-blind vertical. Best from 2010 through 2030. — BSWine Spectator | 95 WS(Domaine de la Romanée-Conti La Tâche Grand Cru Red) The nose evidences a slight floral quality, and a fascinating mix of earth, leather, tea and spice notes plus an interesting green bark component. The slightly austere, tannic, wonderfully rich flavors are dense, in fact extremely dense with excellent depth and terrific complexity and a finish that seems to go on forever. Though there are now hints of secondary aromas, this remains very young, structured and remarkably intense. When you get the right bottle, the ’93 can be a real stunner. Note: the inconsistency of this wine continues unabated as a bottle opened at the Domaine recently was almost aggressively vegetal and awkward. In short, when it’s good it’s very good but I’ve now had too many disappointing bottles not to be wary. (Drink starting 2018)Burghound | 95 BH

95
BH
As low as $7,225.00
2016 DRC La Tache, Burgundy Red
2016 DRC La Tache Burgundy Red

More reserved than the Richebourg and Romanée-St-Vivant, the 2016 La Tâche Grand Cru unwinds in the glass with aromas of wild berries, licorice, rose petal, smoked duck and love, framed by a touch of cedary new oak. On the palate, the wine is full-bodied, rich and velvety, with a deep, concentrated but tight-knit core, its firm chassis of fine-grained, structuring tannins cloaked in succulent fruit, underpinned by juicy acids. The finish is long and reverberative. This is a stunning La Tâche in the making, but it is also one of the more reticent wines in the range and will demand some bottle age.Robert Parker Wine Advocate | 98 RPThe 2016 La Tâche Grand Cru was picked on September 24–25 at 31hL/ha (the highest of the five crus). It has an utterly sublime bouquet of blackberry, briar, crushed limestone, a dash of cracked black pepper and a little oregano. This is extremely complex and displays exquisite focus, to the extent that you could just sit and nose it all day. The palate is beautifully balanced, the spicy red fruit framed by filigreed tannin that belies its backbone. There is a gentle crescendo from start to finish, though being La Tâche it retains complete control. The precision and detail in the final third are deeply impressive. Less fruit-forward than the 2015, and lightly spiced, with an insistent grip. There is a captivating sense of completeness that will ensure longevity through three or four decades. 1,814 cases produced. Tasted at Corney & Barrow’s annual in-bottle tasting in London.Vinous Media | 98 VM(Domaine de la Romanée-Conti La Tâche Grand Cru Red) As is often the case, the highly perfumed nose is the most floral-inflected of the range with its equally cool and restrained array of violet and rose petal scents that combine with an extraordinary group of spice elements on the essence of red currant aromas. The mouthfeel of the imposingly-scaled and powerful flavors is again robust yet refined with just as much minerality as the Richebourg adding even more lift to the almost painfully intense and extravagantly long finish that also just goes and goes. There is a hint of backend warmth but it’s not enough to materially detract from the overall sense of harmony though I underscore that the ’16 LT is one very firm effort that will require decades to full shed its tannic shell. With that said, this is genuinely brilliant. (Drink starting 2041).Burghound | 98 BHA touch paler ruby in colour, this has a broodingly seductive fragrance combining red berries, cedary spice and an undertone of stalky whole-bunch. You just want to keep on sniffing it, and diving in reveals an underlying berry sweetness which follows though to the plump, fleshy and rounded palate. It’s full of copious loganberry fruit, with a continuing splash of cedar and sandalwood-like oak in combination. The texture is sleek and supple, the tannins almost imperceptible and beautifully rounded - that is until they creep up on you gradually, in combination with the juicy acidity, lending satisfying structural finesse and length. Drinking Window 2030 - 2040.Decanter | 97 DEC

98
RP
As low as $6,795.00
2020 DRC Richebourg Grand Cru
As low as $2,999.00

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