Buying options

Tasting notes

Tasting notes
Score 93+/100 · Drink 2024-2036, Stephen Tanzer, Vinous, Mar 2015

Bright, dark red. Distinctly blacker and wilder on the nose than the Echézeaux, with dark berry and floral aromas complicated by notes of sous-bois , coffee, mocha and menthol. Rather tight, even musclebound, today but boasts terrific energy to its blackberry, menthol and violet flavors. Finishes adamantly dry, broad and soil-inflected, with considerable power and outstanding length. Like the Echézeaux, this is painfully backward today. The fruit was picked at 11.8% and chaptalized to 13.2%.

Critic scores

Critic scores
95
95/100

Average Score

97
96-98/100

Neal Martin

94
93-95/100

Stephen Tanzer, Vinous

More reviews and scores

96 - 98 points
Neal Martin, Wine Advocate
Score 96-98/100 · Neal Martin, Wine Advocate, Feb 2014

There are four barrels of the 2012 Vosne-Romanee 1er Cru Cros Parantoux, the famous premier cru shared with Meo-Camuzet. It has a deeper and a relatively broody bouquet when compared to the Echezeaux, and here it refuses to open up. But one can detect real mineralite, a roiling intensity below. The palate is very harmonious, with a cashmere opening. The acidity is nicely judged and cuts through the swathe of rounded, corpulent red fruit. The finish is longer than the Echezeaux, with a spicy note loitering at the tip of the tongue. I first came across Emmanuel Rouget’s wines in the late 1990s, a very respected name, albeit one that lay under the long shadow of the late great Henri Jayer. How could his nephew possibly follow in his footsteps? The general consensus was that Emmanuel’s wines could be great, but they lacked that Jayer “magic.” Speculation as to how much Uncle Jayer remained involved in the winemaking following his official retirement in 1996 and until his passing in 2006 fostered the notion it was Henri who kept one hand on the tiller. Personally, like many others, I found Emmanuel Rouget’s wines very good and occasionally brilliant, but more erratic and missing the flair that distinguished Jayer’s wines of the 1980s and 1990s. I first visited the domaine in the picturesque town of Gilly in Flagey-Echezeux back in 2006. The reclusive Emmanuel had a reputation of being difficult at times, though I found him amiable, the perfect gentleman, in fact. Returning in January 2013, the first thing that I noticed was I would be received not by Emmanuel, but his 22-year old son Guillaume. Did this constitute a changing of the guard? Guillaume’s first vintage was in 2009, his brother Nicolas joining one year later. I conjectured how much input they have had upon the wines vis-a-vis their father? As we descended into the cellar, Guillaume seemed wary and laconic, but he soon eased up as we commenced tasting through their 2012s from barrel, the wines due for racking just before bottling, probably in June. Quantities have always been small here, and in 2012 the domaine lost 50% of volume, mostly due to coulure during flowering. The harvest commenced around September 25 and finishing just over a week later, the fruit this year completely de-stemmed. I was bowled over by the quality of these wines. I was taken aback by their quality. They surpassed all expectations. Like always, I was hoping for some of that old “magic sparkle” and perhaps for the very first time upon visiting this address, I found it. Their 2012s are imbued with breath-taking precision, elegance and mineralite, and thankfully the label does not have to say “Cros Parantoux” to experience those attributes. Right down to the Bourgogne Rouge, their wines seemed totally harmonious, weightless and focused, each expressing their terroir with style and panache. They surpassed my expectations, and upon departing, I felt excited about their future. Is this a new chapter opening for Domaine Rouget? Maybe. In the meantime, bravo Nicolas and Guillaume. I think Henri himself would have been proud of these wines. Importer: Martine’s Wines, Novato, CA; tel. (415) 883-0400 and through Berry Brothers & Rudd in UK.

93 - 95 points
Stephen Tanzer, Vinous
Score 93-95/100 · Stephen Tanzer, Vinous, Jan 2014

(from a crop level of 18 hectoliters per hectare; 11.8% potential alcohol, chaptalized to 12.8%): Deep, bright red, the darkest 2012 in the cellar. Compelling floral lift to the pure dark berry and sexy oak aromas. The dense, seamless flavors of crushed berries and flowers are wonderfully sweet and urgent. The spreading, extremely long finish saturates the palate with blueberry, violet and minerals and leaves the taste buds quivering. Despite this superb wine's extremely suave tannins, it will be better for seven or eight years of cellaring.

92 - 95 points
Allen Meadows, Burghound
Score 92-95/100 · Drink 2027, Allen Meadows, Burghound, Jan 2014

About the producer

Domaine Emmanuel Rouget
View Producer

Product details

Grape Blend

Pinot Noir

Colour

Red

Taste

Dry

Alcohol ABV%

13.5%

Classification

Premier Cru

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