Cheap Burgundy. I can see you shuddering from here.
A lovely orange-red Pinot colour, not especially dense. The nose is really appealing and quite youthful considering the wine’s age and modest status. Prickly mushroom and fresh red fruits, some sap and minerality as well. The whole is laid back, a comforting blanket of nougat oak underlining the fundamentally quiet, almost cuddly aroma profile.
The palate is similarly constructed: light, nimble, pleasing flavours and a distinct lack of aggression. Entry is brightly acidic, flavours starting at red fruit and moving through to a more complex mix on the middle palate, then turning quite savoury through the after palate and finish. It’s a lean flavour profile, focusing on astringency and savouriness rather than fullness of fruit. I like it, but can see that it would puzzle some. Certainly, it would be misleading to call this wine generous in any way, but in a sense that is its strength and charm. It caresses the palate so easily, with such little effort, that its relative lack of stuffing matters very little. Its pleasures are to be found in its ephemeral presence on the tongue, the clarity of its components and the way it never forces any of its points.
A delicious, refreshing Pinot for not a lot of money. I think it has a few years left in it too.
Domaine du Meix Foulot
Price: $A42
Closure: Cork
Source: Retail
Retasting this with more fruitful results. That is, the fruit has stepped forward and is a greater influence in the mouth. The wine remains light and fresh and able to take more age. Some bottle age flavours just starting to assert themselves.