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David Schildknecht - Wine Advocate
The domaine’s 2005 Clos Vougeot – around
a third fermented with whole clusters – smells of beef jerky,
ripe blackberry, and pungent herbal distillate. Grainy and substantial
in the mouth, it stains the palate with salted beef and blackberry
while contra-bass notes of roasted meat, medicinal bitter herbs,
and wet stone lead into an impressively long, deep-massaging finish.
This remarkably intense, fascinating Clos Vougeot (which had just
been given its first racking when I tasted) will probably need a
decade to show its full potential, although I hasten to add that
the track record of this domaine is too short to support prognostications
of longevity.
In this his fourth vintage, and (like his cousin at Comte Liger-Belair
in Vosne-Romanee) young, ambitious in the pursuit of quality, well-traveled,
and in the process of taking back family property from rental and
negociant contracts, Thibault Liger-Belair is ensconced in deep,
ancient, and bitterly-cold cellars in the center of Nuits-St.-Georges.
He has begun pursuing a biodynamic regimen in his vineyards and
has inaugurated a rigorously-controlled negociant arm (its wines
labeled “Thibault Liger-Belair Successeurs” and designated
“S” in my listings). He says he approached 2005 with
great caution lest the wines lose polish and finesse to over-extraction
of tannins. Certainly the results have included some very powerful
and formidably structured wines. Low sulfur and a significant inclusion
of whole clusters (“depending on the circumstances and site,”
he says, “- I have no system”) are among other prominent
features of Liger-Belair’s approach in 2005. |