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Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Cédric Bouchard and Roses de Jeanne: Pushing the edge of the Grower-Champagne envelope

And so I have come to the end of my examination of the Champagne producers identified as "Great Growers" by Robert Walters in his book Bursting Bubbles. And it is ironic that we are ending with one of the best among this elite group who is producing grapes and wines in the least-heralded of the Champagne sub-regions: Cédric Bouchard (Roses de Jeanne) of the Côte des Bar.

Source: cellartracker.com

The accolades for this producer flow endlessly:
  • "... some of the most spectacular wines being made anywhere in the world ..." -- Antonio Galloni
  • "The most coveted, and, arguably, the finest grower Champagnes are made by two producers -- Selosse and Bouchard" -- Renaissance Vintners
  • "Enthusiastic and talented young grower ... enigmatic and almost Byronic ..." -- BBR
  • "Bouchard is the most extreme of the great growers ... in that he pushes many of the agreed philosophies of quality and terroir as far as they will go -- and then a little further" -- Walters.
Like the majority of his fellow Great Growers, Cédric did not serve time with the family estate on a continuous basis. Rather, he went to Paris and got a job in a wine shop. While there he was exposed to wines from other regions and became especially enamored of the wines and practices of Burgundy. And it is this Burgundian wine ethic that colors his approach to winemaking.

Cédric eventually came back to Côte des Bar but his new views on winemaking did not sit well with his Champagne-traditional father and they butted heads constantly. In 2000 his father gave him access to the low-yielding Les Urseles parcel so that he could go off and experiment on his own. According to Cédric, his father thought that he was giving him the worst plot of the holdings but its low-yielding nature fit neatly into his burgeoning philosophy: sustainable farming, minimal yields, ripe fruit, and minimal intervention in the cellar.

Cédric named his new venture Roses de Jeanne in honor of his Polish grandmother Janika. His first vintage from Les Ursules was released in 2002. Subsequent to that release he has acquired a number of other plots as well as a label -- Inflorescence -- and its associated plot. Cédric gained full ownership of Inflorescence with the 2012 vintage and has since incorporated it under the Roses de Jeanne label.

Bouchard does no blending. Rather, he seeks to distill the essence of terroir through single-variety, single parcel, single-vintage wines. He follows biodynamic practices but is certified organic. Yields in his vineyards are vanishingly small -- 26 hl/ha -- making it easier for the vines to produce ripe, high-quality wine grapes. He does careful selection in the vineyard, selling off grapes and wine that do not live up to his exacting standards. With the low yields, Bouchard's wines easily attain 11% - 12% alcohol, unfamiliar territory (without chaptalization) for most other Champagne producers.

Bouchard's grapegrowing and winemaking practices can be encapsulated in the words "just say no":
  • No chemicals
  • No blending
  • No chaptalization
  • No selected yeasts (wild-yeast fermentation)
  • No fining
  • No filtering
  • No cold stabilization
  • No wood
  • No dosage.
Unlike Jacques Selosse, for example, Cédric does not use any oak in the aging of his wines. In his view, wood adds substances to the wine and, in so doing, detracts from the terroir effects. In addition, the use of oak promotes oxidation of the wine and he views oxidative notes in Champagne as a flaw. All of the Bouchard wines are fermented and aged in stainless steel tanks.

Bouchard adds 20 gm of sugar for the liqueur de tirage, well below the norm of 24 gm. This reduced level of sugar yields gas pressure of 4.5 atmospheres (versus an average of 6) after fermentation in the bottle and a "gentle, disappearing mousse."

As shown in the table below, Roses de Jeanne produces seven single-vineyard Champagnes. Due to plot sizes and low yields, production is very small (approximately 15,000 bottles across the entire line).

Table: Roses de Jeanne Wines
Label
Variety/Style
Vineyard Age
V’yd Size
Exposition
Soil
Aging
Côte de Val Vilaine*
Pinot Noir/Blanc de Noir
Planted 1974
1.41 ha
South
Clay and limestone
24 – 28 months on lees
Côte de Béchalin**
Pinot Noir/Blanc de Noir
1981 - 1982
1.5 ha lieu-dit/0.73 ha owned
Southwest
do.
7 years on lees
Les Ursules
Pinot Noir/Blanc de Noir
1974
0.97 ha

do.
3 years on lees
La Haute Lemblé
Chardonnay (5 different rootstocks)/Blanc de Blanc
2002
0.11 ha
South
do.
3 years on lees
Presle
Pinot Noir (10 different rootstocks)/Blanc de Noir
2007
15 rows


3 years on lees
La Bolorée
Pinot Blanc/Blanc de Blanc
1960
0.217 ha
South
Chalky marl and sand
3 years on lees
Le Creux d’Enfer
Pinot Noir/Rosé

0.7 ha lieu-dit/0.032 ha owned
West

3 years on lees
*Inflorescence Blanc de Noir until 2011; **Inflorescence La Parcelle until 2006; many sources to include Walters (Bursting Bubbles) and Liem (Champagne).

Walters describes the above wines thusly:
  • Côte de Val Vilaine -- fleshy texture, wonderful purity. and an intense smoky minerality
  • Côte de Bachelin -- flesh and texture; plenty of complexity from the time on lees
  • Les Urseles -- super concentrated; deep; ripe, dark fruit; smoky complexity
  • Le Haute Lemblé -- rich, creamy, nutty wine with great texture
  • La Bolorée -- yellow fruits with a saline freshness and hint of lanolin and beeswax
The Rosé (Le Creux d'Enfer) is made by the saignée method. In this case the grapes are foot-stomped and then macerated on the skins and stems for up to 4 days in order to produce the classic color. The wine is then bled off the solids. Walters describes the wine as "fabulously pure" and "silky and yet energetic with crystalline red fruits and subtle nettle and herbal notes."

©Wine -- Mise en abyme

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