Showing posts with label Bué. Show all posts

Dates for your diaries: this weekend – 5th-7th August


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Portes Ouvertes in Menetou-Salon
Samedi 6 et Dimanche 7 août les vignerons de l'appellation Menetou-Salon vous accueillent dans leurs caves pour une présentation de leur métier et de leurs vins.

Contact : Union viticole de Menetou-Salon au 02 48 64 87 26 ou par mail menetousalon-vins@wanadoo.fr


Nuit des Sorciers à Bué

Samedi 6 août venez à la rencontre des Birettes à Bué. Vous aurez également l'occasion de croiser le Malin au Creux de Marloup. Au programme de cette soirée : animations folkloriques, dîner et bal champêtre nocturne sur le thème des Diables et autres Lucifers.


Fête de Saint Clair 
Le dimanche 7 août 2011
Dans le village vigneron de Saint Andelain, venez à la découverte des produits du terroir, de l'art et l'artisanat du Centre-Loire et de France. 




Vineyards and Saint-Andelain


Portes Ouvertes in Bourgueil:
Domaine du Cèdre: Friday, Saturday and Sunday
Domaine du Cèdre. Eric Bailif, 4 Grande Rue, Restigné

Mid June 2009: some archive photos from a trip to Bué, Chavignol etc.


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A palette of wine from Lucien Crochet being loaded in the centre of Bué

Some empties: Sancerre and a Champagne bottle

Part of the centre of Bué


Eau non potable (not drinking water)
Statue

Jean-Christophe Bourgeois (Henri Bourgeois, Chavignol)

Bertrand Minchin, La Tour Saint Martin – Menetou-Salon and Valençay

François Crochet: Portes Ouvertes Le Lundi 29 Novembre


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François Crochet

Carine & François Crochet ont le plaisir de vous inviter à une grande dégustation
le lundi 29 novembre 2010
dans leur nouvelle cave à Bué
de 10 heures à 17 heures

avec:

Domaine Pierre-Luneau Papin: Muscadet Sèvre et Maine
Pierre-Marie Luneau et Marie Chartier  

Domaine Grosbois: Chinon
Nicolas Grosbois

Domaine Horiot: Champagne 
Olivier Horiot

Domaine Ogier Côte Rotie
Stéphane Ogier

Domaine de la Graveirette: Châteauneuf-du-Pape et Côtes du Rhône
Julien Mas

Tel: 02.48.54.21.77 email: francoiscrochet@wanadoo.fr

CRM captures Bué


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From a vineyard above Bué looking over the village and to vineyards on the west side

Series of photos taken by CRM on Monday 4th October during a brief clearance in that day's poor weather. Hence the vibrant, almost unreal light. They were taken from vineyards just above Bué on its eastern side looking over the village nestling in the folds of the valley and looking across to the vineyards that lead to Champtin.




Picker's white vans in the distance

Some Sancerre photos from Sunday 3rd October


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Ladybird on some Pinot Noir@Montigny
Vines@Montigny
Road near Montigny with picking machine
Pickers on the lower slopes of the Clos de la Poussie (more detail below)

Clos de la Poussie – the jewel of Sancerre?!


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 Clos de la Poussie: dramatic erosion

On Sunday took another walk along the middle of the Clos de la Poussie to see whether this famous vineyard is on the way to recovery. The sad answer is that much of it remains a scene of desolation.

See the report on Les 5 du Vin.

Bué on 28 September 2009


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The centre of Bué with its church

Am very busy putting together the December issue of Circle Update, the newsletter of the Circle of Wine Writers, so time only for the moment to post some shots taken in the vineyards just to the west of Bué which, along with Chavignol and Amigny, is one of the quintessential wine villages of the Sancerre appellation. Memories of a magical September harvest!

Bué is built in a steep thin valley with vineyards on three sides

Bué with the dominating and steep Clos de la Poussie to the left

Picking

Steep vineyards leading down to Bué with a procession of tractor, trailer and vans moving to a new parcel of vines


See reports on 2009 vintage in Sancerre here, here and here.

Sancerre: the woeful Le Clos de la Poussie (Ladoucette) + other photos


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Looking down from le Clos de la Poussie, owned since 1993 exclusively by Domaines Ladoucette, at the village of Bué


Sweep of the Clos de la Poussie with many patches of bare earth in the steepest part where there are a substantial number of missing vines: taken September 2007


Devastation in the central part of Le Clos: October 2008

Last early October I walked round Le Clos de la Poussie and was horrified by what I saw – I have never seen a famous French vineyard in such a parlous state. You'll find my posting following this visit here.

If you visit the section of the de Ladoucette website that covers La Poussie, you will find a rather different view: 'La Poussie, joyau du Sancerrois, vin de Sancerre voluptueux et parfumé. Parmi tous les crus qui assurent la séculaire renommée des vignobles qui dominent la Loire royale, la réputation de La Poussie a gardé toute son intégrité originelle.'

La Poussie is described as the 'jewel' of Sancerre which, of course, is what it ought to be but regrettably it is currently but a badly chipped piece of paste.

Domaines Ladoucette has recently appointed a new agent in the UK and I have asked them if they can find out what action, if any, Ladoucette is taking to try to reverse the serious erosion in Le Clos de la Poussie. I look forward to posting the measures that Baron Patrick de Ladoucette and his company are taking.

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View across the roofs of Chavignol and looking down the valley to Saint-Satur


The little village of Amigny, part of the commune of Sancerre – Chavignol is just over the other side of the finger of hill in the middle ground with the slopes of Les Monts Damnés in the distance

From the top of the Maison des Sancerres looking due south over the roofs to the vines – part of the silex section of the Sancerre vineyard

Looking south, south east up the Loire down at Ménétréol with the Loire in the distance on the left. In the middle ground is one of the bridges that carried the old railway

A few minutes to spare in Bué


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Lane leading up into the vines

We arrived in Bué a good 20 minutes in advance of our 10 am appointment with Gilles Crochet (Lucien Crochet), so plenty of time to grab a quick coffee in the café in the square in the centre of Bué close to the church. We soon noticed that Gilles was busy loading a lorry parked in the middle of the square – time to take a few photos before starting to taste.

Side road in Bué

Gilles Crochet busy loading lorry



One lorry nearly loaded, while another waits up the road. Similarly we saw plenty of lorries in Chavignol – not too much sign of a crisis here, even though sales are down

Lucien Crochet's offices and cellar

Eau non potable – Bué's water may not be drinkable but its wine is!

Figurine clutching chicks with hen at her feet

Producer's sign

Once the lorry was loaded our tasting with Gilles confirmed my recent very favourable impression of his wines. To be covered in separate post along with details from the other visits we made to Henri Bourgeois in Chavignol and Albane and Bertrand Minchin (Menetou-Salon, Touraine and Valençay).

Crochets overwhelm the Ballands


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Bué from Le Clos de la Poussie

In the previous post I wondered, somewhat idly, whether there were more Ballands than Crochets in the picturesque village of Bué close to Sancerre. Having a spare moment I checked France Telecom's Pages Blanches (telephone directory). The result?


Ballands: 14
Crochets: 28


So no contest!

Jean-Max Roger: long-time fine exponent of red Sancerre


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(27th December 2008)

2006 Sancerre Rouge Jean-Max Roger

It can be easy to overlook the length of time that Jean-Max Roger has been making good red Sancerre. Long before Alphonse Mellot jnr joined Alphonse snr in 1993 and then proceeded to produce transform the Mellot reds, Jean-Max was producing fine, age-worthy reds. I remember with pleasure the 1989 and 1990 vintages. These have never been blockbusting Pinots. Instead medium weight with good concentration of ripe fruit and well balanced. The 2006 Vieliles Vignes is in this same line with an attractively bright colour, soft raspberry fruit but with enough structure to allow it to age well, although it is delicious and seductive now.

Jean-Max Roger, 11 Place de Carrou, 18300 Bué
Tel: 02.48.54.32.20
Email: jean-max.roger@wanadoo.fr
Web: www.jean-max-roger.fr

François Crochet, Bué (Sancerre)


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The wine village of Bué on a better day.

(Trip to Sancerre and Pouilly – continued: 12 August 2008)
Overnight the rain poured down incessantly and it was still raining steadily when we set off to Bué and our early appointment with François Crochet. François is already established as one of Sancerre’s brightest young vignerons. I first visited him in June 2006 when researching my Sincerely Sancerre article for Decanter (www.decanter.com/archive/109889.html). The purity of expression and the precise minerality of François’ wines impressed me then and they still do.

François has vines in Bué, Crézancy, Sancerre and Thauvenay – often in small parcels. There is just under 11 ha in total – one third Pinot Noir and two thirds Sauvignon Blanc. 70% of the vines are on the caillottes (often pure limestone), 20% on terres blanches (clay-limestone) and 10% silex (flint). François picks by hand and with his fragmented vineyards this presents problems. The customary quality option is to pick into cageots (small crates) but having lots of small parcels this is logistically nightmarish. Instead he uses small vibrating bins, which he is very pleased with as they keep the fruit whole with very little juice in the bottom of the bin.


François lamented the poor state of the Clos de la Poussie, Bué’s famous amphitheatre-shaped vineyard just to the north of the village. “It was cleared of scrub during the Second World War and replanted.” (* I assume that it was planted with vines before phylloxera and then abandoned afterwards. Les Monts Damnés at Chavignol were largely abandoned after phylloxera.) “The Clos was split between a number of owners until during the 1990s it was bought by Ladoucette.” (The Baron is Pouilly’s largest individual grower). Unfortunately the use of tractors on the steeply sloping vineyards has apparently caused some severe erosion as the ground has become compacted thus accelerating water run off. Parts of the vineyard are now so badly affected that the tractors can no longer be used. Next time I’m in Sancerre I’ll have to make a point of having a look at the Clos de la Poussie – certainly in September 2007 parts were badly affected by mildew – but then so were many vineyards as 2007 was the ‘best year’ for mildew for a long time.
Le Clos de la Poussie

However, it is disappointing if part of the area’s patrimoine hasn’t been looked after properly. François was clearly angry at what he saw as neglect – probably doesn’t help that the Baron L is from over the water (La Loire) so is un étranger in these parts. (Although Sancerre and Pouilly are near neighbours – around 16 km distance by road – they are separated by both the Loire and administratively – Sancerre is part of the Loire, while Pouilly is part of Burgundy. It can be a tense relationship – of which more later.)

Mildew affected vines and grapes in the Clos de la Poussie: Sept 2007

Where the vineyards are on steep slopes François uses grass to limit erosion, on the more gentle slopes the ground is tilled. “As a paysan you have to observe what works,” François explained, “and adapt accordingly. If you get very heavy storms you can’t avoid erosion but you can take steps to limit the damage as far as you can.”

We started our tasting with 2006 Sancerre Rouge ‘Tradition’, which comes from vines that average 25 years old grown on the terres blanches. François uses a cold soak for four or five days before fermentation begins. He doesn’t use pigeage (plunging). “It extracts rustic tannins that I don’t want.” The rich, concentrated and black fruited Maricigoué 2006 Sancerre Rouge is from limestone vineyards. It spends 12 months in 500 litre barrels with a total élévage of 18 to 20 months. This year the 2008 Tradition will be aged in conical wooden vats of 40 hls, with the barrels reserved for the Maricigoué.

The Maricigoué 2006 is another example of the red revolution that is gathering pace in Sancerre as an ever-increasing number of producers look to make more ‘serious’ red Sancerre rather than a light, easy quaffer. There ought, however, to be a place for the more traditional style – ready young and enjoyable chilled on warm, sunny days – as well as the ‘serious’ stuff.

As expected the whites were wonderfully pure and mineral. Once again the 2007s showed here what wonderfully razor-sharp flavours this vintage has in the dry whites.

“I’m looking for purity and precision,” explained François. “I’m sometimes reproached for not weight and volume in my wine. The Chêne Marchand vineyardon caillottes has a tendency to get over-ripe. The maturation is slow but then there is only a very short window to pick at the optimum moment before the grapes become too ripe. I think the Chêne Marchand 2007 is better than 2005 when the grapes were a little too mature, while in 2006 they lacked acidity.” I really liked both the grapefruit and saline 2007 Les Amoureuses (argile-calcere) and the 2007 Chêne-Marchand but the latter edged it with its concentration and extra racy minerality.

Before leaving we admired the foundations of François’ new winery that he is having built behind his house. To be ready for the 2009 vintage.

François Crochet, Marcigoué, 18300 Bué-en-Sancerre. Tel: 02.48.58.21.77

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