Lac Dujac

Braeburn
Tasted Thursday, January 14, 2010 by Keith Levenberg with 717 views

Flight 1 (1 Note)

  • 1976 Domaine Dujac Gevrey-Chambertin 1er Cru Aux Combottes 92 Points

    France, Burgundy, Côte de Nuits, Gevrey-Chambertin 1er Cru

    Wow—there's more life and vibrancy to this than any '76 I can remember, with an impressive amount of gloss and ripe berry flavor that would have led me to guess it to be much younger than this at first. But there's an underlying savoriness to it that speaks to its aging in bottle, and it finishes with serious length of I-don't-know-what but it sure isn't something fruity. With air it gets more leathery and begins to show its age, as well as turning somewhat inelegantly boxy as you might expect from a '76. But on the basis of its performance when first poured it was certainly one of the highlights of the lineup.

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Flight 2 (2 Notes)

  • 1990 Domaine Dujac Clos de la Roche 97 Points

    France, Burgundy, Côte de Nuits, Clos de la Roche Grand Cru

    An instant WOW nose, not just in its intensity but it's sooooo enticing, as if you took all the ingredients to the scent of a Grand Cru Burgundy and baked them into a cake. It features a silky and weightless palate presence with the grace of a ballerina—then just as you're tossing it around in your mouth remarking on the lightness of its touch it gives you a spicy tingle on the back, letting you know this ballerina has a serious spine. The finish is all dark sweet fruit even suggesting some figgy sur-maturité, but it pulls that off without the slightest bit of fat. I think this was the unanimous favorite of the evening.

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  • 1988 Domaine Dujac Clos de la Roche 93 Points

    France, Burgundy, Côte de Nuits, Clos de la Roche Grand Cru

    A very educational contrast with the 1990; neither one broadcasts the vintage stereotypes standing alone, but the differences between them illustrate the differences in vintage personality very clearly. This smells immediately more austere, almost gravelly instead of the sweet and savory scents in the 1990. But on the palate it's just as vibrant and almost as sophisticated. Maybe the tannins are slightly more pronounced and drying but they are still silken in finesse and don't obscure the rest or give it an austere presentation. It's almost like a two-track wine, with the tannin quietly whispering on top of a fuller lead vocal. There's a gamey animale taste on the entry and then some sweeter graham cracker flavors come out. The material is just as intense as the 1990 but there it still expressed itself as fruit, and here it's other stuff.

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Flight 3 (3 Notes)

  • 2001 Domaine Dujac Echezeaux 87 Points

    France, Burgundy, Côte de Nuits, Echezeaux Grand Cru

    I'm not as in love with the 2001 vintage as many people are and this wine sort of demonstrates why. It has an almost smoky character, both an actual smoky flavor that may be an artifact of the barrel toast as well as a downcast ashen sensation in the tannins. Towards the end of the glass it began to pick up a stalky/lima bean scent not altogether unlike a 2004 suffering from the greenie disease. Were the stems in this less than ripe? My main issue with the wine, though, was that it came across a little hollow—it carves out a big space for itself, which seems to stretch the material too thin, so the result is material that feels a little diluted and a little lean relative to its frame. Still a nice wine, but in this lineup I thought it the weakest.

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  • 1999 Domaine Dujac Echezeaux 91 Points

    France, Burgundy, Côte de Nuits, Echezeaux Grand Cru

    Here is a wine that nobody will accuse of being too lean in the center. There is so much fruit here that the wine seems to be constantly wringing more juice out of the grapes as you drink it. And it's extremely concentrated, coming across almost gelatinous in density. But there's not only more material here than the '01, there's also more detail, and a light cinnamon dusting on the finish seems to be hinting at some of the aromatic development to come (and which is already strong in the 1996). The almost overwhelming intensity of midpalate fruit in this wine smothering the structure, combined with the conspicuously thin midpalate of the 2001 drawing attention to its structure, gave me an idea... and an impromptu blend of the 1999 and 2001 turned out to be more balanced than either wine on its own.

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  • 1996 Domaine Dujac Echezeaux 95 Points

    France, Burgundy, Côte de Nuits, Echezeaux Grand Cru

    I had opened a bottle from the stash last year and was surprised by the tertiary development and accessibility that I would have expected to need more time to come around. It was definitely one of the best Echezeaux I've ever had so I was looking forward to another go with it. It didn't disappoint, with a pungent aroma right out of the gate that had me coming back to sniff the bottle neck all night until we got around to pouring—equal parts animale and spice bazaar, like hanging game rolled in five-spice. The fruit here was more intense and primary than I remember from the last bottle, which seemed to have a slightly more faded patina, so while the spiciness made this more distinguished than the '99 and '01, it didn't come across vastly more advanced, which I suppose is how it should be, and I sure wish I had more than one more lonely bottle of this to follow over the longer term.

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Flight 4 (2 Notes)

  • 2005 Domaine Dujac Charmes-Chambertin 92 Points

    France, Burgundy, Côte de Nuits, Charmes-Chambertin Grand Cru

    Sampled a taste right after uncorking, at which point one could fairly call it the fruit bomb of the lineup, it was so amazingly inky. But by the time we get to drinking it, its fierce structure kicks in, not just with serious tannic muscle but with almost razor-sharp acidity. I was surprised how bracing it was, and it made the wine exceptionally lip-smacking drinkable even though it wasn't showing a hell of a lot of personality—I drained my glass before I knew it. The bracing acidity and almost peppery bite made for the perfect contrast with the intense fruit; this kind of concentration can often make a wine syrupy, but this one cut like a samurai.

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  • 1999 Domaine Dujac Charmes-Chambertin 91 Points

    France, Burgundy, Côte de Nuits, Charmes-Chambertin Grand Cru

    Exactly what you'd expect—sharing characteristics with both the 2005 Charmes Chambertin and the 1999 Echezeaux, another example of a wine with an almost overwhelming amount of fat fruit in the center. Here the emphasis was on the fruit more than the frame and it seemed a good comparison with the 2005 because it tasted different without actually tasting any older—but as it sat in the glass it began to reveal a structure almost as bracing as the 2005. They may very well end up in a similar place.

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Flight 5 (2 Notes)

  • 1998 Domaine Dujac Clos St. Denis 89 Points

    France, Burgundy, Côte de Nuits, Clos St. Denis Grand Cru

    This wine still feels very taut and tensile with a slightly wincing tingle on the back end, although the intensity of the fruit is obvious. Not quite jammy but definitely rich; the contrast to the '01 Clos St. Denis is obvious, almost in the same way the '99 contrasted to the '01 in the Echezeaux flight. For the '98 vintage, this is pretty primary stuff, and certainly deeper and denser in its fruit than any other '98 in my recent memory. Density is definitely the theme here but it will need more time before it offers any transparency.

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  • 2001 Domaine Dujac Clos St. Denis 88 Points

    France, Burgundy, Côte de Nuits, Clos St. Denis Grand Cru

    Without a doubt leaner than the '98 in both the intensity and the sweetness of the fruit; in terms of fruit, this seems to show as much skin as flesh. And the word "bony" again seems apropos—here's another '01 that seems to stretch the material too thin over the frame. It gets better with air, and I liked it better than the Echezeaux, since even though it seems a little hollow it still conveys a sense of dimension; maybe bottle age will manage to color in the rest.

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Flight 6 (2 Notes)

  • 2000 Domaine Dujac Bonnes Mares

    France, Burgundy, Côte de Nuits, Bonnes Mares Grand Cru

    Palate fatigue forecloses detailed notes from me on the Bonnes Mares flight, but I have to confess to a slight disappointment in that I was hoping the geographic shift towards Chambolle terroir would result in more seductive and perfumed wines, and that wasn't the case. This one turned somewhat more charming on the finish but my first impression of the taste was that it was a little too sharp for its own good, kind of severe in style. Definitely not as sexy as Bonnes Mares can be.

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  • 1995 Domaine Dujac Bonnes Mares

    France, Burgundy, Côte de Nuits, Bonnes Mares Grand Cru

    Certainly more supple than the 2000, although showing more tannin as well and not revealing much more personality. This was also a disappiontment if you were hoping for Bonnes Mares character, but the material is still quality stuff so maybe you just need to wait on it. I got more aromatics sniffing the decanter at the beginning of dinner than I did from my glass when we got to drinking it.

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