2022 Chablis Les Clos

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Tasting Notes
Long-Depaquit’s 2022 Grand Cru Les Clos is a serious, crisp and mineral wine, with fresh gunflint aromas. There’s enjoyable, chalky limestone purity to the palate, the nerve of acidity running through the linear mid-palate, cutting through the pinpoint white fruit. The 35% new oak is now well-integrated and offers the right roundness to the wine, giving a nice bitterness to the suave finish which lasts forever. Leave this for a few years to settle and for everything to come together, and you will be enjoying probably the best-value Les Clos on the market.
Critic Scores
Average Score
Neal Martin, Vinous
Allen Meadows, Burghound
More reviews and scores
Bright full lemon colour with greener notes behind. Floral though with more latent power than that suggests. There is no doubting the intensity of white fruit across the palate, lemons and apples joining the white fruit at the finish, then a more headily perfumed note at the very end, muscat and passion fruit, which suggests that it was time to pick these grapes. Drink from 2028-2035.
Quite subtle and restrained on both nose and palate. Plenty of warmth of fruit, but as yet quite restrained. Lovely, salty, zesty notes promise a lot in the future. Ripe peach fruit characters develop with a few minutes in the glass. This will be a great example of Les Clos once in bottle. Tank sample.
(From a 1.5 ha parcel; ~35% new wood.) Generous wood and vanilla nuances wood frame cool and exuberantly fresh aromas of citrus, apple and ocean brine. There is borderline painful intensity to the imposing and tautly muscular larger-scaled flavors that retain a lovely sense of refinement on the powerful, balanced, bone-dry and built-to-age finale. As is usually the case with this wine, it's going to require at least a few years of patience to develop better depth and better integrate what at this point is a borderline annoying level of wood. Drink from 2032.
About the producer

Domaine Long-Depaquit is one of the largest in Chablis, with 62 hectares under vine. It is owned by the Beaune-based négociant Albert Bichot who has managed the property since 1967