France’s 50 best winemakers: Bruno Borie of Château Ducru-Beaucaillou

Owner and winemaker of his renowned family estate in Saint-Julien: “Our work is closer to rugby than to any other sport”.

The 24th interview in Le Figaro Vin’s series brings us back to Bordeaux to meet Bruno Borie, #27. As owner and team captain of Château Ducru-Beaucaillou, Deuxième Grand Cru Classé de Saint-Julien, he has been picking up exceptional critics’ scores for the past 20 years.

The history of this iconic Saint-Julien property goes back to the 17th century. In 1795, one Bernard Ducru set his heart on the estate, and it was he who added his family name to that of Beaucaillou, which derives its name from its terroir; a terroir made up of gravel dating from the Quaternary ice age, washed up by the rivers that flow into the Gironde estuary. Ranked as a second growth by the official Napoleonic classification of 1855, Ducru-Beaucaillou was acquired by the Borie family in 1941. Today, with a range of five different wines, the Château, led by Bruno Borie, enjoys a global following and a strong position in the rankings of the best 100 wines in the world. Next year Ducru-Beaucaillou is due to open a new cellar of 8,000 square metres.

Le Figaro Vin: How does it feel to be crowned a winemaking champion?

Bruno Borie: It’s a pleasant surprise for me but also for our team here at Ducru-Beaucaillou. It means something for our vineyards. I have a whole team around me, and they are kind enough to follow me, to support me in my dreams, or rather our dreams, since we live them together. It is a motivation to carry on, to push even further.  

Have you been training for long?

I believe that estates like Château Ducru-Beaucaillou were conceived from the outset with the notion of creating the best wines in the world. “Everything has to change for everything to stay the same,” as Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa wrote in The Leopard. For our part, we can trace our winemaking roots back to 1720. These origins are evidenced by a marriage contract, but if there was a marriage contract that included the vineyard and the house as dowry, then it must follow that they were already in existence. So we believe that our roots go back at least as far as the end of the 17th century. And there has always been this desire to do things correctly, to excel. 1720 takes us back to the time of Montesquieu, who went off to sell his wine in England.

So that makes three centuries of training?

I am the beneficiary of the training of all my predecessors, and we continue to run along the same lines. What has really astonished me, in delving into our history, is that we have always been asking ourselves the same questions. To pick up on the sporting analogy, when we watched Toulouse and La Rochelle play that magnificent final, we could see that rugby has changed but also that it hasn’t changed. True, the players are more athletic, more muscular, and more powerful than ever but, at the same time, the spirit remains the same. There is a good case for saying that our work is closer to rugby than to any other sport.

Who has been your best mentor?

I am passionate about, captivated by the work and the achievements of Léa Vicens, who is the greatest female bullfighter of all time. She is a young woman who, purely through sheer hard work, purely through her will, her ambition, and her personal strength, has got to that level. She is an inspiration. Indeed, what do you do when you fall off your horse? You have to get back on it and back into the fight. There is another mentor that I have never had the chance to meet, namely the chef Guy Savoy, a former rugby player. When he lost a Michelin star, he took it on the chin and two days later he gathered his team around him and said: “We are going to go again. We are going to sort out what wasn’t working and rebuild our whole process from scratch. We are going to remotivate ourselves and search for the inner strength to win back what we have lost.” Those are great examples to follow since we are all, in a way, engaged in a form of sport.

Is wine a team sport?

I certainly think so.

And what is the key to making a good wine? The terroir or the human being?

The terroir, which we might also describe as an ecosystem. I, personally, favour the concept of the ecosystem because “terroir” is perhaps not always fully understood. The ecosystem is not only the geography, geology, climatology, and all the elements that we consider part of it…it is also the human being and his capacity to influence and enhance the ecosystem, his capacity to support nature. All that is encapsulated in a holistic approach. It is a comprehensive project in which man plays an integral part.

To what do you owe your success and the success of Chateau Ducru-Beaucaillou?

I owe it both to all those who have gone before me and to all those who support me now. But my predecessors count for a lot.

Who are your biggest supporters?

We do have some, but that’s possibly where I most need to focus. We have people who understand us, who support us, and who are very loyal. But supporters in the sense of sponsors are necessarily the people who distribute and promote our wine. Admittedly we were very flattered, just the other day, to host the world’s best sommelier along with other truly remarkable sommeliers. I think that my 20thanniversary here, together with the 21st vintage I will have overseen, gives us the opportunity to make a big splash and attract other sponsors.  

Your favourite colour? 

It has to be the imperial yellow of Beaucaillou. It is beautiful because it has so many stories to tell. The historian Michel Pastoureau takes a very dim view of yellow, because for him it evokes the yellow star and the yellow gown of Judas. But for me there are other yellows that spring to mind. Yellow is for the postal service; it represents communication with the world. Yellow is the colour of the Orient, the colour of the Chinese Emperor, and it carries you into the mysteries of China. Yellow is magnificent and it’s my favourite colour.  

And your favourite vintage?

It’s really hard to pick my favourite vintage because I am torn between my first and my latest, 2003 and 2022. That is fortuitous because they are both great vintages. 2003 was nevertheless a wine produced in tricky conditions, which heralded climate change. It provided a testing bed and the opportunity for me to assert my own ideas in respect of practices such as leaf stripping the vines. 20 years later I feel completely vindicated by the results, because the vines have stayed healthy and fresh. We have made a huge amount of progress since then. The 2003 is a lovely bottle of wine and, on top of that, it was the year that I met my wife. That makes two good reasons to choose it!  

If your wine was a person, who would it be?

It is matched to its time. The 2010 brings to mind the very academic beauty of Charlize Theron. Whereas the 2022 strikes me as glamorous with a classical touch. For me it evokes the image of a voluminous red dress descending a staircase.


France’s 50 best winemakers: Maison Drappier’s Hugo Drappier

Winemaker of his family-owned Champagne House in Urville: “At Drappier wine is a family sport”.

For the 23rd interview in Le Figaro Vin’s series we pay a fourth visit to Champagne to meet Hugo Drappier, #28. Son of Michel Drappier, and grandson of André Drappier, it is now his turn to create the family wines at their estate in Urville, which lies at the southernmost edge of the Champagne region. In that neck of the woods, despite their global success, they keep their feet firmly on the ground.  

Le Figaro Vin: How does it feel to be crowned a winemaking champion?

Hugo Drappier: I’ll just have to take it on the chin! I wasn’t expecting that at all! That’s really nice. The whole family has put in a lot of work over recent years. We can see the results in the desirability of our wines. It was hard to believe at first. We had to figure out why what we were doing worked. Hopefully we can sustain it over time, and our wines will continue to please the customer base of wine lovers that we have managed to build up over the past few decades. As for now, we still have work to do in terms of the quality of our wines, since we are not always 100% satisfied, so we will go all out to ensure that our wines continue to improve.

Have you been training for long?

Yes, and I think that the training is far from over. There is still a great deal of work to be done to get to where we would like to be every year. We have some challenges to deal with, like global warming and natural disasters. We plan to upgrade our cellars to help keep our wines over the long term. Getting to grips with global warming is one of the generational challenges that will affect us for the next twenty years. We are only seeing the start of it, and we know that it’s going to intensify. We are going to have to reinvent ourselves.    

Who is your favourite mentor?

I cannot give you just one name. I have, in the natural course of things, encountered quite a few people who have knowingly and unknowingly influenced my choices and provided guidance in tasting. We all have our favourite styles of wine in Champagne, in France, and even internationally. Every wine I have tasted that has resonated with me has subconsciously exerted some small influence over my technical choices and over the style of the wines that I make. It is difficult to answer this question, although obviously my father has a big influence on me now. Plenty of others have also brought a little something to the table.

If you had to name names?

There are, of course, wines that we really enjoy and that we drink as a family. I could name the Amoreau family in the Bordeaux region. And then there are good friends of mine, winemakers in Burgundy who also work with Pinot, even though we make different kinds of wine. I am very close to the Richoux family in Irancy. Despite the contrast in our winemaking approaches our terroirs are very similar and we have many shared values which inspires me.   

At Drappier, is wine a team sport or a family sport?

I would say that it’s a family sport, above all because the history that pervades the house was written by the family in the first place, and that continues to be the case. Transitions take place down through the generations, and today these work themselves out between brothers and sisters. It is truly the family that has written our story and ties of parentage and blood inevitably predominate. That remains a cornerstone of our story. The family is at the centre of our daily activity, in both professional and family spheres, and I hope that is the way things stay. Unfortunately this is becoming increasingly rare, but we are trying to maintain this vital family core.  

What is the key to making a good wine? The terroir or the winemaker?

This is something that has evolved through the way that Champagne winemakers have always contrived to plant their terroir in accordance with their chosen combinations of plots, grape varieties, and wines. The interesting thing about this region is that the terroir is read, perhaps more than elsewhere, through the lens of the winemaker. Every winemaker has their own way of interpreting their terroir. There are many aspects to the concept of terroir: the geological and climatic sides, and a human meaning…In Champagne, human meaning is more significant, carries more weight, than in other regions. The winemaker has a more leading role.

To what do you owe your success?

It’s all down to the family. I haven’t succeeded yet and I don’t know if I will ever get there. Either way, any success is shared. I would say, above all, that we share a love for the art of wine. I am proud to have learnt and to have travelled, values that my father and grandfather passed on to me. In terms of my winemaking education, my grandfather has played a major role, while my father has had more of a hand in my love of research and innovation. In terms of my personal fulfilment, I see it as a success to have fallen in love with this profession, to see different things every day, and never to be satisfied with what we have done.

Who is your biggest supporter?

The emotional support of fellow winemakers with whom I have been able to talk things over. I have had a few setbacks and to be able to discuss things with my winemaker friends, from Champagne and elsewhere, to appreciate that I am not the only one to have experienced technical problems, and to be able to come up with solutions together, this is a big moral support in these testing times.

Your favourite colour? 

It’s not so much a favourite colour as a colour that challenges me, especially in the world of Champagne, namely orange. That may not be terribly original, but I find it challenging.

Your favourite wine?

2018, because it strikes me as original and sums up very well what we are capable of and what we want to achieve in the years ahead.

 

Your favourite vintage?

2017 was really interesting, a real test. Also 2018 and 2022.

If your wine was a person, who would it be?

Perhaps the renowned monk, St Bernard of Clairvaux, in terms of personality. I don’t believe that you can make wines that everyone likes. But they should be relatively straightforward, forthright, and offer something relatively unembellished, assured and slightly sharp.

What are the best circumstances in which to taste your wine?

On a daily basis, with friends. And spontaneously.


France’s 50 best winemakers: Château de Pibarnon’s Éric de Saint-Victor

Owner and winemaker of his family estate in Bandol: “I was regarded as the ‘son of’ for a very long time”.

The 22nd interview in Le Figaro Vin’s series finds us once more in Provence, at Château de Pibarnon, a southern jewel which has been raising the profile of the Bandol wine region for nearly half a century. We are here to meet Éric de Saint-Victor, #29, a second-generation owner who, after many years in the shadow of his parents, has firmly established his place at the zenith of the appellation.

With a mere three hectares acquired in 1977, in an appellation which formerly struggled to get on the map, Château de Pibarnon began life as a genuine gamble. “My parents purchased what was within their means,” acknowledges Éric de Saint-Victor. “My father saw that you could do something extraordinary in Bandol. They created everything from scratch.” With its two red wines, two rosés, and one white, the estate now ranks among the most sought-after in France and plays a major part in the growing reputation of the Bandol wine region on both national and international stages.

Le Figaro Vin: How does it feel to be crowned a winemaking champion?

Éric de Saint-Victor: It reminds me of something my father used to say when he heard himself described as the best: “I am one of the two best, but we don’t know who the other one is!” We should bear in mind that in the 1980s and 1990s there was a competitive atmosphere between the estates, who were in a race to get results and win attention. A great wine had to be powerful and intense. That was the norm, especially in Bandol. When it comes to me, I am really fortunate to have had the time to develop my expertise and to benefit from well-established vines, so today, above all, the challenge is with myself, in the pursuit of craftsmanship rather than competition. It makes me very happy to be regarded as a champion, but just like with sailing, you have to put your own boat in order before taking on others.

Have you been training for long?

At the outset I learnt alongside my parents. My father taught me about winemaking, my mother about the business side of things. The training never stops, and you are always taking risks.

Who is your mentor?

Alain Brumont (of Château Montus and Château Bouscassé in the Southwest, ed.) who visited the estate in 1989. He was the first winemaker of note to treat me as an equal. I was regarded as the “son of” for a very long time, whereas he spoke to me as one winemaker to another, which boosted my confidence. I think that more than having a mentor, what is really valuable is to analyse the pathways taken by winemakers whose wines you love and to see how these can be understood through their wines. In this respect tasting is key to analysis. I always say that Pibarnon’s first customer is me!

Is wine a team sport?

Of course. We have a talented team here and the working atmosphere is pivotal. I don’t want a team of pruning shears; I want human beings. Everyone brings something to the table, and I favour consensus and collective decision-making.

What is the key to making a good wine? The terroir or the winemaker?

We are merely part of the terroir, it is our job to give it meaning, to interpret it, whereas the substrate is immutable.

To what do you owe your success?

First and foremost to the terroir. Here in Bandol we have a unique geological layer, a Triassic limestone soil which is exceptional, enjoys excellent hydromorphology, and produces grapes with quite intense tannins.

Is your family proud of you?

I think so, even though I have been an “orphan” since the ages of 49 and 50.

Your favourite colour? 

I like white, although it’s hard to choose. I roll with the seasons. My favourite style of wine is the one that takes me into its own world. I don’t look to be amazed, I go for depth and the experience of discovery.

Your favourite grape variety?

Mourvèdre, which has a fascinating, very romantic character. It’s a Don Quixote, untamed and freethinking. It’s a grape variety that requires freedom, it’s not a circus animal: you can’t put it in a box, you have to know how to guide it.

Your favourite wine?

Because of my genes it has to be Le Rouge du Château, which is Pibarnon’s standard bearer, combining all the attributes of the estate. In our southernmost environment we contrive to produce something fresh, which makes for an astonishing paradox on the palate. These are wines of light rather than wines of heat.

Your favourite vintage?

No vintage is exactly like another. I really liked 2019, for which we went out on a limb.

If your wine was a person, who would it be?

A character from fiction, but intellectually rich, a bit like Steve McQueen with a feline side. It’s a wine that sometimes shows its claws but has a smooth and solitary side.

What are the best circumstances in which to taste your wine?

When the wines are young, over a meal, when they have aged, in a more contemplative way, especially after 25 years of ageing. The latter are more meditative wines, producing more heightened states of intoxication, whereas the former make the conversation flow.

Who is your strongest competition?

Drought.

What is your greatest trophy?

My father won six gold medals at the Concours Général Agricole de Paris. He exuded a special charm and had built up some very strong relationships with sommeliers and winemakers. In 1993 I began to take over responsibility for winemaking, then, a few years after that, I entered a competition in England. I gave that a shot because in France I would have been afraid of only getting bronze! Neither Bandol wines nor Mourvèdre were specified on the entry form, so I competed in the “others” category and six weeks later I was awarded a prize. This story aside, the greatest trophy for me today is to share a tasting with a great sommelier and to see in his eyes a growing understanding which reveals a sense of experiencing something new.

Who would be your ideal successor on the podium?

Someone who could take my place while showing true independence through their own take on things. Someone who could build on their experience on the estate and find their own voice: they would be the ideal successor.


France’s 50 best winemakers: Domaine du Comte Armand’s Paul Zinetti

Winemaker of this revered estate in Pommard: “I’m a bit of a junkyard dog!”.

The 21st interview in Le Figaro Vin’s series finds us on our third visit to Burgundy to meet Paul Zinetti, #30. Burgundian by birth, he joined Domaine du Comte Armand, among the most iconic Côte-d’Or estates, in 2010, and took over the winemaking reins from Benjamin Leroux in 2014. Today he cultivates nine hectares of vines in Pommard, where the estate is based, together with vineyard plots in Volnay and Auxey-Duresses.

Paul Zinetti is forthright and unconcerned with social niceties. As a manager who is not an owner – a rarity in Burgundy – he laughingly admits to his lack of formal qualifications, being neither an oenologist nor even the holder of a technical diploma. “I’m a bit of a junkyard dog!”, declares the forty-year-old in a deliberately provocative manner. Yet, you can feel his extraordinary sensitivity, his capacity to observe and interpret a terroir whose nature changes with the passing years, which allows him to produce wines of exceptional finesse from every vintage.

Le Figaro Vin: How does it feel to be crowned a winemaking champion?

Paul Zinetti: It makes me happy, but I will be humble about it as I have never set much store by awards.

Have you been training for long?

Since I was 18. I spent five years in Languedoc, then I came back up to Mâconnais, before landing in Côte-d’Or.

Who is your mentor?

Dominique Lafon, in Mersault, and his brother Bruno in Languedoc. I have built up my know-how by learning from a number of winemakers, but those are the two who have really inspired me.

Is wine a team sport?

Yes, I’m a bit like the captain of the ship, and my team follows me.

What is the key to making a good wine? The terroir or the winemaker?

Both of them. I depend on the terroir, but I try to give it the best possible interpretation through my wines. Terroir and winemaker must go hand in hand. Great terroirs give you an advantage, but you have to know how to handle them, how to tame them. You will never be able to make great wines from poor terroir, although I appreciate that global warming means you can make good wines pretty much everywhere.

To what do you owe your success?

To myself.

Is your family proud of you?

A little bit, I think. They are happy rather than proud. These are things that remain unspoken.

Your favourite colour? 

Red for wine, otherwise green.

Your favourite grape variety?

Pinot Noir, which is sensitive and refined.

Your favourite wine?

Le Grand Rouge from Revelette, for sentimental reasons.

Your favourite vintage?

2015, which I believe will turn out to be a great vintage.

If your wine was a person, who would it be?

It would be a Scorpio, which is my astrological sign. With my wines it’s a case of “all or nothing”, as they say. They are full-on wines.

What are the best circumstances in which to taste your wine?

Among friends.

Have you ever thought about chemically enhancing yourself, or your wine? 

Personally never, but I did adulterate my wine when I was young. That said, red wine is an excellent stimulant. We should remember that they used to drink red wine on the Tour de France back in the 1920s.

Who is your strongest competition?

Myself, first and foremost.

Which competition do you dread the most?

The seasons of pruning and harvesting, namely spring and summer.

What is your greatest trophy?

My children.

What has been your most innovative strategy in the vineyard and in the cellar?

Constant observation and questioning everything. What was true five years ago is by no means necessarily true today.

Who would be your ideal successor on the podium?

Raphaële Tinoco, a young woman already on our estate team, who I hope will take over one day.


France’s 50 best winemakers: Château Beauséjour’s Joséphine Duffau-Lagarrosse

Co-owner and winemaker of Château Beauséjour Duffau-Lagarrosse: “I do not believe that the land belongs to us”.

The 20th interview in Le Figaro Vin’s series takes us back to Bordeaux, where Joséphine Duffau-Lagarrosse, #31, maintains her family legacy at Château Beauséjour, Premier Grand Cru Classé B de Saint-Émilion. With her impressive maturity and depth of insight, she ranks among the most talented winemakers of her generation.

Her seven-hectare estate, in the iconic Right Bank appellation of Saint-Émilion, boasts an exceptional limestone plateau terroir. The vineyard is planted with rows of Merlot and of Cabernet Franc, which produce wines of extraordinary vivacity.

Having been passed down the generations since 1847, Château Beauséjour underwent a tumultuous sale in 2021. It now belongs jointly to Joséphine Duffau-Lagarrosse, 33 – the last of the family remaining at the Château – and Prisca Courtin, 35, granddaughter of Jacques Courtin, founder of Clarins. Joséphine draws to good effect on her ten years’ experience on estates ranging from Burgundy to Mexico, by way of New Zealand, and finally to Bordeaux, notably with Bernard Magrez. Today she oversees the production of her estate’s wines with great panache, supported by two renowned consultant oenologists, Axel Marchal and Julien Viaud.

Le Figaro Vin: How does it feel to be crowned a winemaking champion?

Joséphine Duffau-Lagarrosse: If that is how you regard me, then I feel a degree of pride!

Have you been training for long?

Yes, for quite some time. My grandparents on both sides were great wine connoisseurs. They were a formative influence from my earliest years and had me tasting well before I came of age. I have deep aromatic memories that underpin my keen sense of smell and taste. My nose has been practising for a long time. As far as vinification is concerned, there is only one vintage per year, and each one is different. We always tell ourselves that we will do things differently next time. So every year involves further training.

Who is your mentor?

Axel Marchal and Julien Viaud (who embody the new generation of consultant-oenologists in Bordeaux, ed.) are part of my team. They challenge me but their job is not, strictly speaking, to mentor me. I would suggest, rather, that nature is our mentor. From one year to the next, we have to aim higher.

Is wine a team sport?

Yes, very clearly, because wine starts with the vines, and I am not on my own in the vineyard. Some members of my team have been at Beauséjour for 30 years, and without them – Izilda and Christophe – it would be difficult. They bring their own insights and their deep familiarity with the property. To give some context, Izilda’s parents were originally hired by my great-grandparents. As for the vinification, I have Axel Marchal, Julien Viaud, and Camille de Villenaut to support me. We challenge each other and move forward as a team!

What is the key to making a good wine? The terroir or the winemaker?

That’s a really tricky question. When you have a great terroir, if the winemaker makes a mistake, in terms, it is the terroir that can rectify the situation. On the other hand, a good winemaker might make something fantastic from a poor terroir. But, if I have to decide, the terroir comes out on top.

To what do you owe your success?

It’s partly a question of upbringing, which I owe to my family. They taught me the value of the land and of hard work. As for the success of Beauséjour, that is down to meeting Prisca (Courtin, President of the Clarins Group’s Oversight Committee, ed.) who believed in our project. My upbringing has enabled me to follow through on our acquisition, and to persevere in the face of stressful conditions.

Are your parents proud of you? And is your dog?

Yes, I think so. My dog Tokaj is too, and happy to spend every day here at Beauséjour.

Who is your biggest supporter?

Prisca Courtin.

Your favourite colour? 

Blue.

Your favourite grape variety?

Cabernet Franc.

Your favourite wine?

I love Domaine de Vaccelli’s Granit. It is the wine which, in a blind tasting, I always place in Burgundy, even though it’s from Corsica!

Your favourite vintage?

1990 (the Beauséjour vintage which has acquired legendary status and the year that Joséphine was born, ed.).

If your wine was a person, who would it be?

Someone with quiet strength who opens up over time.

What are the best circumstances in which to taste your wine?

Over a good meal, with a delicious piece of meat, and with friends.

Have you ever thought about chemically enhancing yourself, or your wine? 

Never.

For what price would you be prepared to sell your estate?

I do not believe that the land belongs to us. My grandfather used to say – and my father would repeat it – men pass through while the terroir remains. I cannot sell what isn’t mine. So I will never sell, not for any price.

Who is your strongest competition in Saint-Émilion?

That’s rather a loaded question. We are often told that we are the next Ausone. In terms of terroir, I believe that to be true.

Which competition do you dread the most?

I don’t feel as though we are in a competition with our neighbours. If all the Saint-Émilion Grands Crus perform, that has an international reach. I don’t have the competitive streak. Contrary to what people might think, we do not compete with each other in Saint-Émilion, we compete for our appellation’s international ranking. I check out the ratings of my neighbours’ wines, of course, but you have to behave in the right way. If our neighbours, like Bécot, Canon, Angélus etc., were to come to us tomorrow asking to borrow some equipment, then of course we would help them out.

What are you most proud of?

The revival of Beauséjour.

What has been your most innovative strategy in the vineyard and in the cellar?

There have been technical innovations, of course, but I feel there has been a return to common sense. My most innovative strategy has been to refocus on observation and intuition. We have gone through a phase which has brought in a mass of technology, like measuring probes, and infrared. We have also learnt that innovation is not the answer to everything. We need to get back to the basics.

Who would be your ideal successor on the podium?

It would be someone with common sense, humility, and an open mind.


France’s 50 best winemakers: Maison Ruinart’s Frédéric Panaïotis

Cellar Master of Champagne’s oldest house: “I see myself as a craftsman”.

For the 19th interview in Le Figaro Vin’s series, we pay our third visit to Champagne to meet Frédéric Panaïotis, #32, chef de caves of Maison Ruinart for the past 16 years. He is now, beyond question, one of the most influential figures in Champagne, fashioning wines of outstanding precision and purity from every vintage.

Though always at home in the world of wine – his grandparents owned a small winery – his original ambition was to be a vet. However, a seminal encounter with a great Burgundy set him on a different path: after graduating in agronomy he became an oenologist, cutting his teeth in California before working for 12 years at Veuve Cliquot. He then joined Maison Ruinart in 2007, going on to become one of the most inspiring chefs de caves of his generation.

Le Figaro Vin: How does it feel to be crowned a winemaking champion?

Frédéric Panaïotis: That’s something to celebrate, isn’t it? It calls for champagne! And a Blanc de Blancs would be perfect. More seriously, my congratulations go, first of all, to the entire team that works alongside me.

Have you been training for long?

For 39 harvests (make that 40 including one in New Zealand in 2001!).

Who is your mentor?

I would say there are two of them: on the one hand the natural elements, especially the climate which sets the tempo, and on the other, Frédéric Dufour, President of Ruinart, who keeps challenging me and is always driving us forward.

Is wine a team sport?

Completely. Wine is always the product of the collective effort of talented men and women, from the vine all the way through to its development and its launch. And we really do have a mixed team at Ruinart, with genuine parity, specifically in our winemaking team.

What is the key to making a good wine? The terroir or the winemaker?

If your definition of terroir includes the selection of grape varieties and the way the vines are trained, in addition to the climatic elements and the soil – and that is how I see it – then the terroir is indisputably the foundation for making great wines.

To what do you owe your success?

To a combination of passion for the world of vines and wine, a lot of hard work, and also the good fortune to have been in the right place at the right time…but as the saying goes, “God helps those who help themselves!”.

Is your family proud of you?

I hope so! Whether on earth or in heaven…In any case, as far as my nearest and dearest are concerned, they appear to enjoy our wines. And naturally, that allows them a touch of pride.

Your favourite colour? 

Sea blue.

Your favourite grape variety?

Chardonnay, of course!

Your favourite wine?

Dom Ruinart Blanc des Blancs.

Your favourite vintage?

2010, while awaiting 2019.

What are the best circumstances in which to taste your wine?

Always among friends, because I cannot imagine opening lovely bottles without sharing them. And sometimes it only needs two of you!

Have you ever thought about chemically enhancing yourself, or your wine? 

To be honest, I’m more the sort of person to implement anti-doping controls. So the answer is no, never.

For what price would you be prepared to sell your estate?

Maison Ruinart doesn’t belong to me, and in any case, I don’t believe it’s for sale.

Who is your strongest competition?

Rather than a competition, I prefer to think of it as a rivalry among those who are, in many cases, good friends. This means we are always looking to improve, aspiring to excellence. Nothing beats rivalry for making you test your limits and give it your all!

Which competition do you dread the most?

The next harvest, because you never know what it will bring. And in the longer term, climate change, which will affect us more and more profoundly. We are going to have to get to grips with it and reinvent ourselves, which is what we have started to do with our new wine, Blanc Singulier.

What is your greatest trophy?

The title of Supreme World Champion, awarded by the CSWWC (Champagne and Sparkling Wine World Championship) in 2022 for Dom Ruinart Blanc de Blancs 2010, because it represents the culmination of a project begun by my predecessors in 1998, which involved trialling tirage under cork. I was lucky enough to inherit this project and see it to fruition.

But the best reward comes through conversations and shared moments with our customers when they have enjoyed tasting one of our champagnes.

What has been your most innovative strategy in the vineyard and in the cellar?

I see myself more as a craftsman than an artist or a researcher. So my strategy is to try to evaluate and understand in minute detail every step from the vine to the wine. The aim is to replicate, and where possible enhance, what we already do. I am not sure that is a very innovative strategy, but it does help us improve!

Who would be your ideal successor on the podium?

Ask me the same question in six years’ time, in 2029, when we celebrate the 300th anniversary of Maison Ruinart!


France’s 50 best winemakers: Domaine Ganevat’s Jean-François Ganevat

Owner and winemaker of his family estate in Jura: “Thirty years ago no one believed in Jura wines”.

The 18th in Le Figaro Vin’s series brings us to the Jura, a growing force as a wine region, to meet Jean-François Ganevat, #33, who ranks among the most successful and respected natural winemakers in France. He creates his exquisite wines, which are increasingly prized and hard to get hold of, at Domaine Ganevat, in the hills of Rotalier.

Le Figaro Vin: How does it feel to be crowned a winemaking champion?

Jean-François Ganevat: That is always great news. It makes me blush, because I don’t make wine to win medals, but I am delighted by all the excitement around natural wine and by the fact that real aficionados are happy to drink ours. Thirty years ago no one believed in Jura as a wine region, and the great majority of our wines were sold in Franche-Comté. Today we sell wine in 63 countries!

Have you been training for long?

For 14 generations. I have been immersed in it since I was a little boy, and I don’t know how to do anything else.

Who is your mentor?

I have mentored myself. We were introduced to Pierre Overnoy’s wines as children, but when we tasted them, we didn’t understand them. I still remember his visit to our school, and we thought his wines tasted revolting! It was quite some time before I got it, and it was my encounter with Didier Barral, in Languedoc, that really opened my eyes.

Is wine a team sport?

Of course, because to get good grapes you have to work the land, and you need manpower to do that. The term “organic” is meaningless if everything is mechanised. You need an authentic terroir, a philosophy, and a know-how to impart.

What is the key to making a good wine? The terroir or the winemaker?

It’s a combination of things, but a winemaker must know how to get the best from his terroir.

To what do you owe your success?

To my ancestors, because we are lucky enough to come from a family that has always pampered its vines.

Is your family proud of you?

I hope so. My father died in 2018, and he had already taken in how much progress we had made with the estate, in relation to the vines as well as the wines. He would have been proud today. There is no standard instruction manual for the winemaker’s profession, you learn something new every day. After 40 years I still don’t know what I will be doing tomorrow.

Your favourite colour? 

I love the Jura reds. They have unbelievable drinkability and have really made a name for themselves.

Your favourite grape variety?

Savagnin for white wine and Poulsard for red.

Your favourite wine?

I really cannot answer that question because I am constantly being surprised.

Your favourite vintage?

2018, because the wines had real warmth, combined with high yields. Though when I tasted them as young wines, I found them thin and watery, with a sugary and not very aromatic aspect. A long period of maturation has produced an amazing patina and resonance.

If your wine was a person, who would it be?

The person who made it.

What are the best circumstances in which to taste your wine?

A wine should be tasted outside, and you should take your time over it. It should be drunk by people who are down-to-earth, because, as I always say, I want to make good wines, not grand wines.

Have you ever thought about chemically enhancing yourself, or your wine? 

The more time goes by, the better you get to know your vines. I don’t need anything else. You have to learn how to discover your wine, and the wine learns to discover itself.

Who is your strongest competition?

Fear of frost, that’s what makes us sweat every year, because we no longer have proper winters.

Which competition do you dread the most?

The month of April.

What is your greatest trophy?

Recognition, from those who didn’t necessarily believe in me when I started out. However, from the beginning, I have been making the wines that I want to drink myself.

What has been your most innovative strategy in the vineyard and in the cellar?

Trust. I pamper my wines, and then the less I interfere with them the better things turn out.

Who would be your ideal successor on the podium?

I pass the little I know on to young colleagues who are just becoming established, who represent the future. A good wine is a complex of overlapping details. I would love to pass on my passion to my son, but he is only ten!


France’s 50 best winemakers: Domaine Comte Abbatucci’s Jean-Charles Abbatucci

Owner of his family estate in Corsica and winemaker: “I was never any good as a conventional winemaker!”

The 17th interview in Le Figaro Vin’s series finds us in southern Corsica, where the luxuriant plots of Domaine Comte Abbatucci lie nestled in the heart of the Taravo Valley. We are here to meet Jean-Charles Abbatucci, #34, the island’s undisputed champion of biodynamic viticulture.

Domaine Comte Abbatucci is a living ampelographic museum of the Corsican wine region, with no fewer than 18 grape varieties grown alongside each other. With his hat firmly in place, and a pair of sunglasses hiding the twinkle in his eyes, the legendary winemaker that is Jean-Charles Abbatucci has acquired, over the course of many vintages, an encyclopaedic knowledge of all aspects of biodynamic viticulture. This knowledge extends from its history to its philosophy, with a dash of the esoteric.

While he describes himself as a pragmatist, he is constantly trying out new approaches, the most striking of which remains the treatment of vines with seawater. In the cellar, the wines range from those bearing the stamp of an outmoded nobility, from Ministre Impérial to Général de la Révolution, through to the cuvée named Faustine, after his daughter, available as a red, a white, and a rosé. Now a member of the Académie du vin de France, Jean-Charles Abbatucci embodies both the memory and the future of Corsican winegrowing.

Le Figaro Vin: How does it feel to be crowned a winemaking champion?

Jean-Charles Abbatucci: In my opinion being a champion is, above all, about giving expression to your terroir and to your grape varieties. It’s a particular vision of agriculture and the winemaker’s vocation.

Have you been training for long?

Yes, for 30 years now. When I started out, I was pretty conventional, doing what I could with the means at my disposal. But I was never any good as a conventional winemaker! One day, after ten years, something just clicked. This brought about my transition to organic and biodynamic agriculture, and the results of that transformation are what have made me a champion.

Who is your mentor?

From the 2000s onwards my mentor has been nature. When you take a step in her direction, she takes ten towards you. She can be capricious, admittedly, but then we are too. You have to be able to deal with that, assess the situation, and challenge yourself.

Is wine a team sport?

Yes, of course. The more you are a champion, the more you need a strong support team. Ultimately it is the athlete or the winemaker that lifts the trophy, but, behind the scenes, the winemaker benefits from the different perspectives that can be provided by an oenologist, a vineyard manager, etc.

What is the key to making a good wine? The terroir or the winemaker?

It is all of them together. I believe that there is an alchemy between the terroir, the winemaker, and nature.

To what do you owe your success?

In my case, to my father who was responsible for the preservation of the historic Corsican grape varieties. If he hadn’t been inspired to collect them, I wouldn’t be where I am today. But I must also acknowledge that I am fortunate to enjoy an exceptional terroir and a wonderful island.

Is your family proud of you?

Yes, they are all very proud. I have a very close working relationship with my brothers, one of whom is a restaurateur, the other a farmer. We are always bouncing ideas around.

Who is your biggest supporter?

It has to be nature, yet again. She gives me everything, not least the traditional Corsican grape varieties.

Your favourite colour? 

Red.

Your favourite grape variety?

Sciaccerello. It’s a grape that provides unbelievable results when you know how to work with it, a kind of wild Pinot Noir, which displays finesse, elegance, and an aroma suggestive of myrtle and immortality. I also incline towards Carcajolo Nero, a variety that is highly characteristic of Corsica. I really struggle to choose between the two.

Your favourite wine?

For now, the one which truly stands the test of time remains Ministre Impérial, but the one which most fully expresses Carcajolo Nero would be my Cuvée Valle di Mare (vinified since 2019 and produced from vines treated with seawater, ed.).

Your favourite vintage?

2017 is a really lovely vintage. It was a temperate year which provided outstanding wines.

If your wine was a person, who would it be?

My wine personifies Corsica.

What are the best circumstances in which to taste your wine?

At any time, around a meal. It is a wine for epicures.

Have you ever thought about chemically enhancing yourself, or your wine? 

No. I did it in my early days before I realised that it doesn’t work.

For what price would you be prepared to sell your estate?

It is priceless.

Who is your strongest competition?

The weather. You can lose a bit at every stage, and you can never get it back. In the end, you count your losses, and then you have to let them go. But if it’s my enemy, it’s also my life. It is an alchemy of both these things.

Which competition do you dread the most?

The two most critical months are May and June. That’s when we have to be on a war footing, especially when, like me, you work without a safety net.

What is your greatest trophy?

Being appointed to the Académie du vin de France, that is very special. It is in recognition of my work, but also for Corsica, as I am the first member from our island. That has taken some time, when you consider that Corsica has been a winegrowing region for over 3,000 years!

What has been your most innovative strategy in the vineyard and in the cellar?

Treating vines with seawater. That is what has made me stand out from the crowd. I think we will hear more and more about these wines. In my opinion, they belong among the new wines of the 21st century. A number of winemakers are becoming interested in the concept, but the precise principle and formula are mine.

Who would be your ideal successor on the podium?

My daughter Faustine, who will take over the estate.


Part II of Wine Lister’s 2023 Bordeaux Study: what the future holds

Extract: Illustrative analysis of en primeur release prices

Amongst other findings, Part II of Wine Lister’s annual Bordeaux Study, ‘Reaching for the stars’, examines how en primeur pricing over recent vintages compares with quality levels and secondary market prices, to consider what success in Bordeaux’s 2022 campaign might look like.

Extracted from the report, the chart below provides an illustrative analysis of the 2022 en primeur release prices, based on the 110 wines1 covered in the study. As the bulk of releases are yet to enter the market, this is an entirely theoretical projection which, if applied on a case-by-case basis, could nevertheless be a useful benchmark.

An extract from Part II of Wine Lister’s 2023 Bordeaux Study, providing an illustrative analysis of the 2022 en primeur release prices

Wine Lister’s Quality score aggregates recently-published scores from our five Bordeaux partner critics – Antonio Galloni and Neal Martin for Vinous.com, Bettane+Desseauve, JancisRobinson.com, and Ella Lister for Le Figaro – plus a small weighting for their average drinking window. By comparing the Quality score of the 2022 vintage (the highest ever recorded – 927) with the average of the most similar vintages (2015, 2016, 2018, 2019 and 2020), we obtain a quality-price ratio (QPR) of 6.66.

By dividing the Quality score of the 2022 vintage by this same QPR, we obtain a theoretical future market price of €160 for the 2022 vintage. To this price, we apply a discount of between 10% and 25%, corresponding to the minimum saving that consumers would expect to make versus buying the physical product two years later. This gives us an average release price of between €120 and €144 per bottle. By subtracting the average importers’ margin, we arrive at an average ex-négociant release price of €103 to €123 per bottle, i.e. -5% to +26% compared to the ex-négociant release price of 2021.

Out of the 48 releases covered by Wine Lister at the time of publishing, the average release price of the 2022 vintage is €71.3, compared to €62.6 in 2021, representing an increase of 14%.

1Some wines have been excluded due to a lack of regular en primeur releases or unreasonable prices.

Head to Wine Lister’s analysis page here to purchase the full study in English and French, while Pro Subscribers can access their copy for free here.


France’s 50 best winemakers: Château de Beaucastel’s César Perrin

Fifth-generation winemaker of this renowned family estate: “My first internship supervisor was Aubert de Villaine, of Domaine Romanée-Conti”

For the 16th interview in Le Figaro Vin’s series we head south down the Rhône Valley to one of its finest appellations, Châteauneuf du Pape, where we meet César Perrin, #35. Vintage after vintage he and his family devote themselves to their labours with total commitment.

An Eden in the Rhône Valley, surrounded by hills, vines, and olive trees, Château de Beaucastel is widely recognised as one of the most inspiring estates in Châteauneuf du Pape. While its origins date back to the 16th century, it was in the early 1900s that Pierre Perrin took it over. His son Jacques proved to be a true master of the winemaking craft, capable of taming the wilfulness of Grenache, while his innovative spirit led to the estate’s early adoption of biodynamic viticulture at the start of the 1970s. Today César is part of the fifth generation to carry the torch, alongside eight other members of his family, made up of his parents, uncles, brothers, and cousins. Through each successive vintage we have found ourselves utterly enchanted by the supple grace of their reds, perfectly balanced between the intensity of the fruit, the smoothness of the tannins, and an aromatic complexity which just keeps on growing deeper.

Le Figaro Vin: How does it feel to be crowned a winemaking champion?

César Perrin: I don’t think of myself as a champion. We are, more than anything, champions for our generation, continuing the achievements of our parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents before us. We have to be champions in preserving and passing on our inheritance, for we are all just passing through. It is always gratifying to know that our wines are tasted all around the world.

Have you been training for long?

Winemaking is a vocation, so we all devote a great deal of time to it, much to the detriment of our families. We train every day from a very young age. Whether in the cellar, among all the smells, or playing Le Nez du Vin and trying to recognise the fragrances, it is a little like The Drops of God. Already with my daughters, aged three and two, we taste different fruits, such as unripe cherries.

Who is your mentor?

I would say my father, who initiated us. Apart from him it would have to be my first internship supervisor, Aubert de Villaine, in 2008. He told me something that has always stuck with me: “Here at Romanée-Conti, no matter what your task is, whether it takes you an hour, or a day, or a month, you have to do it perfectly.” Ever since, I have tried to do my best on a daily basis.

Is wine a team sport?

It is for me, but most importantly wine is made to be shared and is, in that respect, a team sport. Wine is, above all, a moment for sharing, a shared emotion. You can go fast on your own, but together you go further.

What is the key to making a good wine? The terroir or the winemaker?

A great wine requires four elements: the terroir, the vine selected for planting, the climate that supports it, and the man who tends that vine. It is a combination of the four.

To what do you owe your success?

To my grandfather Jacques and my grandmother Marguerite, who turned Beaucastel into a jewel. They were pioneers, going organic in the 1950s and biodynamic in the 1970s. In rejecting the incursions of chemistry they were true visionaries.

Is your family proud of you?

I hope so. In any case, that is the great benefit of working as a family: we are very candid with each other and there is a real honesty between us. That only adds to the pressure and makes it even more imperative that we ensure our family can be proud to represent our wines.

Who is your biggest supporter?

Château de Beaucastel Châteauneuf-du-Pape Hommage à Jacques Perrin, which is our finest wine.

Your favourite colour? 

Red.

Your favourite grape variety?

Mourvèdre. My grandfather was very fond of it. The grape variety was introduced to Beaucastel in the early 1930s. My grandfather went to school with Lucien Peyraud of Domaine Tempier, which is still, in my view, the greatest of the Bandols.  I have noticed that the great Bandol wines were always made in the northernmost part of that appellation, while here in Châteauneuf we are at the northern boundary of our appellation. That explains why we brought Mourvèdre, which is an archetypal Bandol grape variety, to our own terroirs.

Your favourite wine?

Our whites. We have relatively very few of them, only eight to ten per cent of our production. But our Roussanne Vieilles Vignes is my favourite.

Your favourite vintage?

My first, 2012.

If your wine was a person, who would it be?

It would be a countryman.

What are the best circumstances in which to taste your wine?

With friends.

Have you ever thought about chemically enhancing yourself, or your wine? 

No, quite the opposite, we have to preserve the distinctive quality of each vintage, and take what nature gives us. Nature is not always congenial, but it is what it is.

For what price would you be prepared to sell your estate?

Everything has a price, apart from family. So the question will never arise, since we want to pass it on forever.

Who is your strongest competition?

The weather.

Which competition do you dread the most?

Pruning the vines, which is such a key moment in their development.

What is your greatest trophy?

My grandmother’s pride. When she made family meals, she used to say to us: “When I am gone there is a case of wines with vintages made by me and your grandfather. I want you to open it together.” They were old magnums from 1950 and the family drank them together. It was a uniquely special experience.

What has been your most innovative strategy in the vineyard and in the cellar?

That goes back to my grandparents, with their decision to reject chemical products after the war. That has allowed us to maintain a unique ecosystem, with soils that have never been touched by chemicals.

Who would be your ideal successor on the podium?

A member of the Perrin family.