Samuel Billaud’s wines have a distinct style in which the
wines have both a creamy, leesy weight while retaining a contrasting, linear,
focused, mineral brightness. To create this, his fermentations are perhaps
slightly warmer than more high-production Chablis – the warmer fermentation
temperatures and wild yeasts bringing an added weight to the palate. The
freshness comes from both the right picking date and additional quality control
through hand-harvesting. The flavour complexity and texture are thanks to much
longer lees-ageing than is typical for Chablis (a minimum of 12 months for his
village wines and up to 18 months for his Premiers and Grands Crus). This
longer ageing on the lees not only retains a freshness in the wines (due to the
reductive properties of the lees), but also add flavour complexity through this
extended contact.
Another key element to his winemaking is his settling
technique. Prior to fermentation, the must is clarified; typically with the
lees separated from the clear juice which is then fermented. Samuel, however,
takes a riskier approach, adding a proportion of the fine lees (solids) to the
fermentation tank too. For Samuel this is key to gaining the complexity he is
looking for in his wines.