The origins of Domaine Christian Clerget date back to the beginning of the 20th Century, when the great-grandparents of Christian Clerget, the present owner - together with his wife Isabelle - assembled various parcels of vines in the villages of Chambolle, Vougeot and Morey St-Denis. The 5-hectare family estate was known in the 1980s and 1990s as Domaine Georges Clerget, named for Christian’s father. Christian took over in 1996 and built a new winery in 1998 as a first step to taking the domaine to its present level of quality; all of the production is now sold under Christian’s name. Christian Clerget’s vision is to produce the purest, most natural wines possible. The land is worked by hand and no herbicides or insecticides are used. Clerget believes that balance in the vineyard will help lead to balanced wines. He plows all of his vines at the end of winter and lightly tills during the growing season so as to allow the grass to grow naturally between the rows. The vines are pruned severely to limit yields. Clerget strips leaves and green harvests before veraison to aerate the bunches and enhance maturity. Christian Clerget places great confidence in his long-standing team of harvesters who know the vines and ensure that only perfectly ripe fruit is picked by hand. The team sorts the grapes in the vineyard and places the grapes in small plastic crates for transport to the winery without damage. A second sorting is done at the winery on a sorting table before the grapes are de-stalked and placed in tanks where fermentation starts slowly with native yeasts. Clerget takes care to prevent the fermentation to advance too rapidly by maintaining a maximum temperature of 32 degrees centigrade. He circulates the liquid over the cap to aerate the must and does a pigeage (or punching down of the cap) daily towards the end of the 3 week fermentation period. After pressing, the wines settle in tank to separate out the gross lees and are then moved into barrels by gravity flow. Clerget ages his wines in barrels for 12 months and then racks them off the lees by hand. The wines are then redistributed in barrels to complete the last 4-6 months of their elevage. Malolactic fermentation takes places naturally in the spring as the cellar warms up. Clerget’s barrel regimen follows the intensity of the cuvées, and no casks are older than two years: 20% new with the balance one and two year old barrels for the Morey Rouge and Chambolle AC; 25% new barrels for the Vosne; 33% new for the Vougeot and Chambolle 1er Cru; and 50% new oak for the Echezeaux. The wines are bottled after a second racking, without fining or filtration, and with the natural CO2. Farming practices: Organic, not certified. |
Christian Clerget Website |
Morey-Saint-Denis blanc - Les Crais |
In Morey-Saint-Denis, Clerget owns just under half of one hectare of vines in the Les Crais lieu dit at the bottom of the slope. He has divided it equally between red and white grapes. 90% Chardonnay and 5% each Pinot Blanc and Pinot Meunier, from vines planted in 1983. Prior to 2002, this part of the parcel was also planted with Pinot Noir, but it never produced satisfactory results. After analyzing the soil, it became clear to Clerget that half of the parcel had a whiter soil and so was more suited to mainly Chardonnay. So he uprooted those Pinot Noir vines in February 2002, allowed the soil to rest for a year, and planted Chardonnay, Pinot Blanc and Pinot Meunier vines in April 2003. Christian chose to plant the two minor varieties (in the limit authorized by the AOC) for the added richness and complexity they provide. The first vintage was 2005. Clerget harvests all of the white grapes at one time and ferments them together. The fruit is quickly pressed without destemming and the must is cleared. Fermentation starts in tank with indigenous yeasts. After 15 days, at the conclusion of the alcoholic fermentation, the young wine is transferred to barrels which are 20% each new and 1-4 years of age for 12 months of élevage. Malolactic fermentation occurs in the Spring after the harvest. Clerget does not stir the lees, in order to preserve the wine’s vivacity. After 12 months, he assembles the barrels into tank where the wine spends the following six months. |
Morey-Saint-Denis rouge |
In Morey-Saint-Denis, Clerget owns just under half of one hectare of vines in the Les Crais lieu dit at the bottom of the slope. He has divided it equally between red and white grapes. 100% Pinot Noir from a small parcel planted in 1984. The soil is a mix of limestone and clay. At harvest, the Pinot Noir grapes are sorted in the vineyard and then again at the winery. They are moved to the winery in small plastic crates to avoid damage and are totally de-stemmed on arrival. Clerget ensures that the fermentation proceeds slowly by keeping the vats at a maximum temperature of about 32 degrees C. The cap of grape skins is punched down once per day to obtain a controlled extraction of color and flavor. After pressing, Clerget allows the liquid to separate from the solids in tank for 3 days. He then moves the cleared young wine into casks by gravity flow. The maturation period is 18 months in barrels that are 20% new and 40% each one and two years old, in Clerget’s cool cellar. The casks are then assembled in tank and the wine is bottled without filtration. Clerget’s Morey-Saint-Denis Rouge is a soft and fragrant expression of Pinot Noir. It mixes red and dark fruits –cherries, cassis and dark plums – with a touch of earth and spice, and has a round, open and inviting texture. |
Chambolle-Musigny |
The Chambolle-Musigny AOC is a blend of fruit from two hectares of 35 year old estate vines, divided in many small parcels. It offers delicious, bright and supple raspberry-cherry fruit. |
Chambolle-Musigny - 1er Cru Les Charmes |
The Chambolle-Musigny 1er Cru Les Charmes comes from an east-facing one hectare block of 43 year old vines at 270 meters altitude. There is a thin layer of soil of primary limestone rock; the vines’ roots descend in the fissures of the rock. It is at once powerful, complex, structured and elegant, packed with dark fruit and mineral notes. |
Vosne-Romanée - Les Violettes |
Clerget cultivates just over one-third of a hectare of the rarely seen Vosne-Romanee "Les Violettes" located just below Echezeaux, next to the wall of the Clos de Vougeot, on the Vosne side. The Vosne vineyard next to Violettes is Baisses Maizieres. The vines here were planted in 1945-46. |
Vougeot 1er Cru - Les Petits Vougeots |
The Clergets own just under one-half a hectare of rarely seen Vougeot 1er Cru Les Petits Vougeots. The vines face east, next to the upper part of the Clos and below Les Musigny in the Chambolle AOC, next to the road leading to the Château du Clos de Vougeot. The soil is a mix of red-brown limestone and the Petits Vougeot vines are 34 years of age. The wine is Vosne-like in its supple, silky flavor and texture, and has more finesse than is often the case with wines from inside the famed Clos itself. |
Echézeaux - Grand Cru |
Clerget owns a one hectare block in the Grand Cru Echézeaux, on the Combe d’Orveau slope bordering Chambolle, on well-drained, stony soil. The vines were planted in 1945/1946. This 60-year-old parcel produces a wine of remarkable density and richness, with deeply ripe dark fruit and supple tannins that lend structure and complexity. |
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