Charmes-Chambertin Grand cru  2016

THIBAULT LIGER-BELAIR

Charmes-Chambertin Grand cru
2016

  • Organic
  • Biodynamic
Country
France
Regulated designation
Appellation origine controlée (AOC)
Region
Burgundy
Subregion
Côte de Nuits
Appellation
Charmes-Chambertin
Classification
Grand cru
Varietal(s)
Pinot Noir 100 %
Colour
Red
Sugar
Dry
Producer's website

About this winery

Thibault Liger-Belair comes from a great winemaking family that has deep roots in Burgundy: he is a direct descendant of the Napoleonic General Louis Liger-Belair, who acquired the Chateau de Vosne in 1815 when he married Ludovie Marey, whose family had been Burgundy negociants since 1720. Youthful, passionate and always full of ideas, Thibault trained as an oenologist, but had his start in the wine industry as a wine buyer. He is also a former rugby player with a genuine 'down to earth'...

See the THIBAULT LIGER-BELAIR detail page for more information on this brand

Product notes

This vineyard is 0.30 ha (0.75 acres) and was planted in 1946. The vineyard is exactly in front of the border between Latricières Chambertin and the famous Chambertin. Up-slope, the rocks are of Bathonien origin, lower down the marls and limestones belong to the Jurassic (Bajocian), and numerous marine fossils can be found on the surface, recalling the sea which covered this area some 150 million years ago.

Production notes

The grapes are harvested by hand and they are using 70% whole cluster fermentation. There is a 3 week fermentation period with very moderate intervention. They are aging the wine in 80% new French oak barrels for 20 months. The wines are unfiltered and unfined.

Tasting notes

This wine expresses purity of flavour and elegance. On the nose you experience, layers of red cherries, black truffles and raspberry jam. The palate is medium bodied, with firm dense tannins, bright acidity and a long finish.

Press reviews

Tim Atkin MW

- 97 points -

March 2018

“My aim,” says Thibault Liger-Belair, “is to make a Charmes with some tension.” This comes from the highest part of the Grand Cru, which helps, and is fermented with 70% stems. It’s a very fine, polished wine, with lacy tannins, perfume and chalky freshness and more weight than you think at first.

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Decanter

- 95 points -

October 2023 (Vintage 2019)

Purchased fruit from 0.3ha of 70-year-old vines in the best part of Charmes. 70% whole clusters in the ferment, but the thickest part of the stem was removed. The result has bright blackberry fruit, with a brambly edge, a silky texture and impressive density. This nicely balances the approachable nature of the climat with old-vine density.

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Tim Atkin MW

- 94 points -

January 2016 (Vintage 2014)

Fermented with 40% whole bunches but no pigeage, so as not to extract too much tannin, this is made with purchased grapes, but reflects the quality of Thibault Liger-Belair’s line up in 2014. Elegant, floral and deceptively easy to drink, this doesn’t show its 70% new oak. 

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Vinous

- 92 points -

Stephen Tanzer, March 2016

aged in 100% new oak; bottled in July): Good medium red. Extroverted nose combines raspberry, dried rose, leather and some animal funkiness. Wonderfully sweet, fat and saline; this silky, concentrated, highly nuanced wine is all about earth and dried flowers. Perhaps atypically pliant and accessible for young Charmes. Tannins are dusty but sweet and fine.

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Burghound.com

- 91 points -

January 2016 (Vintage 2013)

(from Charmes proper; 30% whole clusters but only the tiny stems rather than the stalks). A surprisingly high-toned nose of pomegranate, herbal tea, red flowers and essence of red pinot fruit displays only hints of earth and underbrush. The generous and mouth coating medium weight flavors possess solid intensity before terminating in a lingering and naturally sweet finish that evidences a touch of stems though only a trace of austerity. This is a relatively fine version of the appellation and should be approachable after only 7 to 8 years of bottle age.

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Burghound.com

- 90 points -

January 2020 (Vintage 2018)

Reduction overshadows the fruit but it does seem ripe. Otherwise there is very good intensity to the lavishly rich larger-scaled flavors that possess reasonable length though the supporting tannins are rigid and slightly tough. I suspect that this will soften somewhat before it's bottled but it's not likely to ever be seductive.

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Burghound.com

(90-93) Points

January 2016

(from Charmes proper; 40% whole clusters). An exceptionally fresh, pure and surprisingly expressive nose features plenty of floral character on the red cherry, pomegranate, earth and soft sauvage elements. The fleshy and velvet-textured medium-bodied flavors possess a notably round mid-palate before tightening up considerably on the saline and mildly austere finish that really coats the mouth with dry extract.

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Vinous

(91-93) Points

Stephen Tanzer, January 2016

(40% vendange entier, but Liger-Belair removes the main stalk of each cluster; 60% new oak, with the barrels selected "for freshness"):Moderately saturated medium red; Liger-Belair did no punchdowns here because he wanted to avoid excessive "roundness and largeness."Captivating perfumed aromas of raspberry, dried flowers and smoked meat. Very concentrated and intense, showing surprising saline energy to the sappy red berry and subtle floral flavors. Finishes spicy, perfumed and long and not overly tannic. This wine boasts very good body but shows no sign of heavy extraction. Liger-Belair purchases grapes from true Charmes and also takes care of the vineyards.

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Burghound.com

(90-93) POINTS

2018 (Vintage 2016)

(from Charmes proper; 70% whole cluster but without the central stem). This too is moderately reduced though hints of floral character can be discerned and they can also be found on the medium weight, detailed and chiseled flavors that display fine length on the overtly austere finale. 

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Vinous

(90-92) POINTS

Stephen Tanzer, January 2018 (Vintage 2016)

(vinified with 70% whole clusters, the highest of the range, but Liger-Belair removed the main trunk of the stems by hand; aging in 50% new oak): Bright ruby-red. A bit deeper-pitched and less showy on the nose than the Vosne-Romanée Aux Réas, with aromas of plum, black cherry, cassis and licorice sweetened by the oak element. Mouthfilling, supple, sweet wine with savory soil tones and a solid mineral underpinning but on the soft, plump side for grand cru. Finishes with firm but sweet tannins and sneaky length. These vines are planted on a north-south axis, and Liger-Belair began noting "Aux Charmes" on the label with the 2014 bottling.

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Vinous

(92-94) POINTS

Stephen Tanzer, January 2017 (Vintage 2015)

(70% vendange entier; 80% new oak; Liger-Belair's parcel of small-berried 60-year-old vines on very shallow soil is ideally located close to Latricières-Chambertin and Chambertin): Bright dark red. Captivating perfume of raspberry, rose petal and spices offer superb finesse. Like liquid silk on the palate, conveying terrific depth to its flavors of raspberry, warm spices and smoked meat; more spicy than floral in the mouth. Finishes with lovely purity and thrust, not to mention firm structure and length. Liger-Belair did only pumpovers here, as he wanted "to stretch the wine, not enlarge it."

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Burghound.com

(90-93) POINTS

2016 (Vintage 2015)

A super-fresh and attractively elegant nose displays notes of red currant, newly turned earth and violet that are trimmed in just enough wood to notice. The cool, pure and focused medium-bodied flavors possess good volume and muscularity along with excellent length on the well-balanced finale. This should amply repay mid to even longer-term cellaring.

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Vinous

(92-95) Points

Antonio Galloni, January 2014

Unctuous and explosive on the palate, the 2012 Charmes-Chambertin is laced with the essence of raspberry jam, wild flowers, spices and cloves. The impression is one of total silk as the Charmes opens up in the glass. Thibault Liger-Belair added that the 2012 came in at about 17% potential alcohol. Liger-Belair opted for pump overs exclusively during Vinification and is aging the wine in 100% new French oak. The 2012 is a bit extreme in style but it is also compelling.

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