2015 Domaine Jean Luc Mouillard Chateau Chalon
6 in stock
$162.50
Description
Domaine Jean-Luc Mouillard was created in 1991 with the interest in sustainable farming and family. Their vineyards (11 hectares) are located in the heart of the Jura region in France. Producing traditional and modern styles of wine to show the best of what the Jura has to offer. Vin Jaune is a transformation from white wine to golden wine that is produced by aging a minimum of six years in an airy cellar. At the end of this period the wine will have lost its initial volume and a liter of Savagnin will give on average 62cl of Vin Jaune. This loss is called “angels share” and explains the capacity (62cl) of the bottle called Clavelin.
A beautiful golden color. With brilliant aromas of nuts, hazelnuts, and curry. A complex palate with medium body and a touch of acidity to bring freshness in the finish. This is a very unique style of wine the should be shared!
Jean-Luc Mouillard was born in Nevy-sur-Seille at the foot of the oft-photographed Château-Chalon. The château has morphed into a village as well as into Jura’s most respected appellation for vin jaune, and it occupies the top of a huge limestone outcropping. Nevy-sur-Seille, as the name suggests, sits far below on the valley floor along side of the small Seille River. An old stone bridge crosses the Seille at Nevy, and it’s this bridge that graces the labels of Jean-Luc’s wines. Jean-Luc grew up on the family’s dairy farm, which happened to have a few vineyard parcels on the side whose harvest was sold to the local co-op. After enology school, he established Domaine Jean-Luc Mouillard in 1991, renting several parcels and planting several others. Today he farms twenty-five acres of vines in three appellations: Côtes du Jura, L’Etoile, and Château-Chalon. The bulk of the vines are in the AOC of Côtes du Jura for Chardonnay, Pinot Noir, Poulsard and Trousseau, and all of his vines grow right around 1,000 feet in elevation. The farming ethic is one of lutte raisonnée, or pragmatically sustainable. The use of herbicides, pesticides and chemical fertilizers was abandoned many years ago. More recently, the domaine has embarked on a three-year transition into organic viticulture, and it’s looking forward to being certified in time for the 2023 harvest. In 1997 Jean-Luc moved north from Nevy-sur-Seille to the village of Mantry upon buying a sixteenth-century house that originally served as a stagecoach stop. The motivation was the building’s stone cellar, an arched underground affair that became a place of beauty once Jean-Luc stripped off all of the stucco that had been applied to the stone at a later date. Here is where he ages wine in barrel. In 2005 he constructed a one-story building across the street for his fermentations, and in 2014 he built a facility to house a bottling line and to store bottled wine.