Skip to main content
Kermit Lynch Wine Merchant
Toggle Navigation Kermit Lynch Wine Merchant Your Cart

2011 Charmes-Chambertin Grand Cru

Domaine Maume
Discount Eligible $175.00
SOLD OUT
My heart skips a beat every time I contemplate the fact that this is the last vintage of Maume that will resemble what we know as Maume. Indeed, I believe it is the last vintage even labeled with the Maume name. Maume’s collection of ancient vines with their diverse budwood, his rustic and moldy cellars, and his mad-scientist-like personality that came alive between the walls of his Gevrey-Chambertin cave all combined to give us here at KLWM many great memories of some of the most unique Pinot Noir ever made. We stockpiled library vintages in addition to the 2011, Bertrand Maume’s final vintage, but precious little is left. Buy a bottle of Burgundian history that you can drink with pheasant. –Dixon Brooke

Technical Information
Wine Type: red
Vintage: 2011
Bottle Size: 750mL
Blend: Pinot Noir
Appellation: Mazis-Chambertin Grand Cru
Country: France
Region: Burgundy
Producer: Domaine Maume
Winemaker: Bertrand Maume
Vineyard: 40 years, 0.16 ha
Soil: Clay, Limestone
Aging: Aged 18-20 months in mostly older barrels
Farming: Traditional
Alcohol: 13.5%

More from this Producer or Region

About The Region

Burgundy

map of Burgundy

In eastern central France, Burgundy is nestled between the wine regions of Champagne to the north, the Jura to the east, the Loire to the west, and the Rhône to the south. This is the terroir par excellence for producing world-class Pinot Noir and Chardonnay.

The southeast-facing hillside between Dijon in the north and Maranges in the south is known as the Côte d’Or or “golden slope.” The Côte d’Or comprises two main sections, both composed of limestone and clay soils: the Côte de Nuits in the northern sector, and the Côte de Beaune in the south. Both areas produce magnificent whites and reds, although the Côte de Beaune produces more white wine and the Côte de Nuits more red.

Chablis is Burgundy’s northern outpost, known for its flinty and age-worthy Chardonnays planted in Kimmeridgian limestone on an ancient seabed. Vézelay is a smaller area south of Chablis with similar qualities, although the limestone there is not Kimmeridgian.

To the south of the Côte de Beaune, the Côte Chalonnaise extends from Chagny on its northern end, down past Chalon-sur-Saône and encompasses the appellations of Bouzeron in the north, followed by Rully, Mercurey, Givry, and Montagny.

Directly south of the Chalonnaise begins the Côte Mâconnais, which extends south past Mâcon to the hamlets of Fuissé, Vinzelles, Chaintré, and Saint-Véran. The Mâconnais is prime Chardonnay country and contains an incredible diversity of soils.

More from Burgundy or France

Discount Eligible $48.00
AT CART MAX
Discount Eligible $60.00
AT CART MAX
Discount Eligible $39.00
AT CART MAX
Discount Eligible $44.00
AT CART MAX
Discount Eligible $38.00
AT CART MAX
Discount Eligible $52.00
AT CART MAX
Discount Eligible $649.00
AT CART MAX
Discount Eligible $37.00
AT CART MAX
Discount Eligible $345.00
AT CART MAX
Vintage Chart

Trust the great winemakers, trust the great vineyards. Your wine merchant might even be trustworthy. In the long run, that vintage strip may be the least important guide to quality on your bottle of wine.—Kermit Lynch