Domaine Jacques Frederic Mugnier le Musigny Grand Cru

2006 Domaine Jacques Frederic Mugnier le Musigny Grand Cru

US label

Producer Name : Domaine Jacques Frederic Mugnier

Burgundy

6x75cl

Availability: HK

- only 1 case left

Critic ratings: NM 95, WA 95-96

HKD 135,000

( 6x75cl OWC )
HKD 22,500 per bottle

Tasted at the IMW horizontal at Vintners Hall. The Musigny is very tight and well defined on the nose. Dark cherries, dried orange peel, a hint of cassis and then some blueberry aromas developing. Well-defined and sophisticated. The palate is well-defined, beautiful minerally fruit, real tension here, very precise with a touch of smoke and cooked meats towards the finish. This is a wonderful Musigny, certainly one of the best wines of the vintage. Drink 2011-2025. Tasted March 2009. (Neal Martin, 95 Pts)

Cassis, blackberry, licorice, vanilla, smoky black tea, and lily perfume wafting from the glass of Chateau de Chambolle's 2006 Musigny seduce the senses. The sheer sappy, palate-staining bittersweet fruit concentration here is remarkable, with the wine's strong undertone of wet stone seemingly acting as a sounding board. This displays an uncanny combination of sheer density with reverberative, vibrant energy and buoyancy that are consistent with the best wines of this vintage, but that this wine displayed to a considerable extent in 2005, too. This is one to cherish for the next 15-20 years.

When asked what he had done differently in 2006 when compared with 2005, Frederic Mugnier replied, "Nothing. I want the character of the vintage to be reflected in the wine as much as the terroir, so I try to hold everything else as constant as possible." While that statement might reflect a bit of hyperbole, it's hard to argue with a collection like Mugnier's 2006s, its wines reflective of their vintage, yet the best of them not really dramatically different from their 2005 counterparts. Certainly they are no less profoundly delicious, and will give more pleasure sooner. (For some details on Mugnier methodology, consult my report in issue 170.) Picking began here ahead of the ban de vendange, "at absolutely the same levels of sugar as in 2005" – meaning at 12.75-14% potential alcohol – although Mugnier hastens to note that it was only well along in the evolution of this collection – and to his surprise – that its ability to hold its own qualitatively with some of the great vintages at his estate became evident. "There wasn't much hail," he relates, "and only in a few sectors did we have to perform serious triage," which chez Mugnier – as at Rousseau – means in the vineyard, not on sorting tables.  (David Schildknecht, The Wine advocate 22th Dec 2009, 95-96 Pts)