The
wines of Le Grappin, Burgundy and Beaujolais
Super wines from micronegociant Andrew and Emma Nielson
Website:
www.legrappin.com

Lots of people, it seems, have vinous epiphanies. They drink a
special bottle of wine, and suddenly they are converted. Wine is no
longer just an alcoholic drink for them; it is something more
fundamental. For some, it becomes their life.
Andrew Nielsen (above), originally from Australia, was working in
advertising with publications such as The Economist and The Week.
Working around the world, he'd spent time in Singapore and Hong
Kong, but it was while he was based in Los Angeles that he had his
wine epiphany, in 2006, with a bottle of Dujac Clos de la Roche (he
can't remember which vintage, although he says he still has the
bottle at home).

Wine became his passion, and he did vintage that year with
Californian Pinot specialist Kosta Browne. Following this, Nielsen
worked harvests with Felton Road in New Zealand's Central Otago
region, and then Coldstream Hills in the Yarra Valley of Australia.
Connecting with James Halliday at Coldstream Hills proved
fortuitous, because Halliday was buddies with Patrick Bize at Simon
Bize in Savigny les Beaune, and this is how Nielsen found himself
working in Burgundy.
Simon Bize has 22 hectares in Savigny, which by Burgundian standards
is a big domaine. And when Andrew was working there, an idea popped
into his head. 'I saw all this amazing fruit come across the table,
and thought why don't we make 10 different Savignys?' he recalls.
But for a domaine like Simone Bize, the economics don't work. So
Nielsen had the idea of becoming a micronegociant telling the story
of Savigny by identifying special parcels and bottling them
separately. 'I'm looking to make wines from terroirs that people
overlook and working with growers who are prepared to take things
further and do things a bit differently,' he explains. 'What if we
don't cut all the weeds back all the time? What if we do the first
hedging a bit later?' His approach is to try to apply a bit of
modern knowledge, in partnership with the growers. 'Because I am
small we can go out and do things differently.'

As an example is his red Savigny parcel, which consists of 60 year
old vines in a lieu dit called Aux Fournaux (he doesn't put this
name on the label because there's a premier cru vineyard called Aux
Fourneaux, with possibility for confusion). This plot is high on the
slope and is subject to morning mists. As a result, growers tend to
pick it a bit early to avoid problems with rot. Nielsen will go in
and manage the canopies, and remove any rotten grapes, while the
others are harvesting. 'Hey Obelix' [his nickname in Burgundy, due
to his size and bearded appearance], they call to him. 'You are
harvesting at last!' He'll tell them that he's not, and will leave
the grapes on the vine for another week before picking. 'We do a
crazy amount of sorting,' he says.
Le Grappin is based in Beaune, and the wines are made in Fanny
Sabre's old winery opposite the mayor's office. In 2013 Nielsen made
18 barrels of Le Grappin; in 2014 there are 26 barrels. In addition
to the Le Grappin wines he makes less expensive vins de soif under
the Du Grappin label. These are sold in kegs, refillable bottles and
also 1.5 litre bags (he dubs them 'bagnums'), and the wines are
sourced from Beaujolais and Macon. Nielsen is passionate about the
wastage in wine packaging and for this reason, he doesn't use
capsules on his Le Grappin wines. The Du Grappin project allows him
to experiment a bit with his winemaking, and it also allows him to
keep Le Grappin small and focused.
As a negociant, his biggest cost input is buying the grapes. In
Burgundy, prices are getting a bit crazy: his fruit cost has doubled
over the last three years. As a result, he's had to put prices up.
Andrew and his wife Emma spilt their time between London and
Burgundy. Emma works for Barclays (she's not been able to give up
the day job), but managed to get three months' leave to work harvest
last year. She doesn't know how she's going to manage it this year.
Bottling is done by hand, using David Clark's specially designed
gravity bottling device. Nielsen has used a bottling line in the
past, but he says that even though it takes a long time, the hand
bottling is gentler and the result is no bottle shock.
The packaging of the Le Grappin wines is striking. The labels are
designed by Brooklyn-based artist Louise Despont
who uses drafting tools such as compasses to create intricate
(and beautiful) designs on old ledger paper. With the wine name on a
necktag in a lovely font, and lacking capsules, these are beautiful
bottles.
But what about the wines? I tried the 2013 releases and fell in love
with them. They're quite beautiful, with freshness and a
transparency that really allows the terroirs to speak. Nielsen is
very light on his extraction with the red wines, and the result is
real elegance. The 2015s, tried last week, are lovely, too.
THE WINES
All of these 2015s are bottled wines with the exception of the
Savigny rouge.
Le Grappin Savigny-lès-Beaune Rouge 2015 Burgundy, France
Lovely precision here with juicy raspberry and cherry fruit
with real elegance and finesse. There are cherries, some herbs and
good acidity. Very pure and expressive. 92-94/100
Le Grappin Beaune 1er Cru Boucherottes 2015 Burgundy, France
Very fresh and detailed with aromatic cherry and raspberry
fruit. Good structure with lovely fruity elegance, and detailed,
firm but fine structure. Lovely elegance here, and it has a savoury
side. 94/100
Le Grappin Savigny-lès-Beaune Blanc 2015 Burgundy, France
Crushed
by foot in the press and then pressed over 8 hours. Juice is allowed
to oxidise before going to barrel (older, bigger barrels used). Very
fresh and fine with nicely poised pear and citrus fruit. Dense and
nicely structured, with a bit of weight and lovely fruit. 93/100
Le Grappin Savigny Saint Aubin en L'Ebaupin Blanc 2015 Burgundy,
France Detailed and pretty with lovely citrus fruit, some pear
and a hint of green apple. Lovely freshness too. There's some weight
to the fruit. 93/100
Le Grappin Santenay 1er Cru Les Gravières Blanc 2015 Burgundy,
France This is pressed by the grower. Lovely pear, white peach
fruit with some generosity. Nice detail with lovely weight to the
fruit and some nutty hints. Nice purity and detail. 94/100
Le Grappin Beaune 1er Cru Grèves Blanc 2015 Burgundy, France
No
2016 of this will be made as it was lost to frost, and then what
survived was taken by mildew. Lovely weight with pear and citrus
fruit, as well as some mineral notes. Direct with nice weight. It's
still tightwound with good acidity and balance. 94/100
These are older notes from January 2015
Le Grappin Savigny-lès-Beaune Blanc 2013 Burgundy, France
Lovely tension here, with nice rich nutty notes alongside pear and
white peach, but also some fresh mineral quality, too. Real purity
to this wine. 93/100
Le Grappin Santenay 1er Cru Les Gravières Burgundy, France
This is from a parcel right next to Bouchard's Vigne de L'Enfant
Jesus plot, and it's 50 year old vines. So lovely and fine with
expressive lemony fruit. Fine, pure and textured with some mineral
notes, incredible precision and real elegance. Unsurprisingly, this
is sold out. Thrilling. 95/100
Le Grappin Savigny-lès-Beaune Rouge 2013 Burgundy, France
12.5% alcohol. From the Aux Fournaux lieux dit, right next to Aloxe
Corton and Pernand Vergelesses. Andrew Nielsen says, 'this is the
wine that defines Le Grappin.' So fine, fresh and pure with lovely
elegant red cherry and raspberry fruit. Lovely tension and purity
here. Super-elegant with real delicacy. 94/100
Le Grappin Beaune 1er Cru Boucherottes 2013 Burgundy, France
Andrew Nielsen describes this as a great little site that no one
knows aboiut. It’s tense, fine and bright with crisp, crunchy
raspberry and red cherry fruit with nice grippy structure. Lovely
savoury, spicy edge. Pure, fine and detailed. 94/100
See
also:
Visiting
Burgundy
Wines
tasted 01/17
and 01/15
Find these wines with wine-searcher.com
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