2023 Puligny Montrachet La Rue aux Vaches
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Tasting Notes
From a village parcel just below Les Pucelles and Clos des Meix, this is always so different to Clos des Noyers Brets – with fleshier fruit, and this year it is so much more expressive on the nose. Ripe green apple leads to a light-textured palate, again with lovely acidity – enjoyable with its fine balance of fruit and freshness. Aged in one-year-old wood, only one barrel was produced and it will be bottled exclusively in magnum.
Critic Scores
Average Score
Jasper Morris MW, Inside Burgundy
Neal Martin, Vinous
More reviews and scores
From vines located just below Les Pucelles, the 2023 Puligny-Montrachet La Rue Aux Vaches has a taut and fresh bouquet, quite precise rather than powerful, more malic in style than Pernot's other cuvées. The palate is clean, focused and creamier than other cuvées, counterbalanced by acidity with peach skin and caramelized pear toward the finish. Fine. Just one barrel produced and bottled only en magnum. It was an unseasonably warmer late October morning when I made my solitary Saturday visit to Puligny-Montrachet to Philippe Abadie, husband of Alvina Pernot. This is a rare instance of a smooth transition between generations as piece by piece, Alvina taking over the vineyards that belonged to her father, Domaine Paul Pernot. Abadie told me that Pernot is in his mid-60s, too young to retire completely, and so will keep some of the holdings, like Philippe Colin in Chassagne. But vintage by vintage, there will be an expansion of Alvina's portfolio concurrent with some cuvées borne from exchanges in must being phased out, hence small differences between the wines in this report and those of 2022. "There were a few episodes of rain at good moments," Abadie tells me. "The season was generally quite easy. Flowering was OK. It was the inverse of 2024 - very hot in the summer. We began picking on August 26 to maintain acidity. It takes us only three or four days to pick and we only did that in the mornings. We used a vertical press for our own parcels [Paul Pernot uses a horizontal press). It was a little complicated in the cellar as the malolactic sometimes started before the alcoholic fermentation and that can risk some volatile acidity. We don't add SO2 until after the malo. The wines are well balanced because of the good volumes. The whites were bottled just before harvest and there are no reds this year [there was just a solitary Santenay in '22]." Alvina Pernot is going from strength to strength with a strong portfolio built around seven Puligny Premier Crus. These are precise and characterful, each respectful to their terroir. The apex is their brilliant Bätard-Montrachet that eclipses even their Chevalier-Montrachet, with an enthralling Corton-Charlemagne hot on its heels. But there is plenty to savor at all price points and I would refer readers to the pair of excellent Bourgogne Côte d'Or Blancs in this respect.
In magnum only, as usual. Pale in colour, with an almost herbal vivacity on the nose, then blossoms on the second half of the palate, the fruit well supported by oak. Not massively concentrated, since elegance is what they are after.
About the producer
Alvina Pernot is one of the most exciting producers of white Burgundy today. Based in Puligny-Montrachet with some incredible vineyards, this is a name to watch – creating taut and mineral styles of white Burgundy.