
Éric Jeanneteau spent his childhood following his grandparents around their vineyard and cellar, just outside St-Émilion on the Right Bank of the Dordogne River in the Bordelais. School was of little interest to him; he says all he wanted to do was run free among the vines alongside his grandfather. His enchantment with the métier began at the age of six. By the time he turned eight, he was already assisting his grandfather in the vines and in the cellar. It was only natural, then, when he completed three degrees in viticulture—he was born to be a vigneron. In 1995, after managing various châteaux throughout the region, Éric returned home to take his place at the helm of the family domaine.
Tertre de la Mouleyre, or...


















Strangely enough, Kermit came upon the Meyer-Fonné wines for the
first time at his home down in Provence. He was tasting with Daniel Ravier, the
winemaker at Domaine Tempier, and the two were blown away at the first,
dazzling sip; now that we’ve all gotten to know the domaine, we understand why.
Félix Meyer is a rising star in Alsace and has an evident instinct for his
craft. He is the third generation in his family to be making wine since his
grandfather founded the domaine in the late 19th century. Since taking over in
1992, Félix has already left his own mark, modernizing equipment in the winery,
developing export sales, and now expanding the family’s holdings in many of
Alsace’s great vineyard sites, including several grand crus.
...


Growing up the son of famous “Gang of Four” Morgon
producer Jean-Paul Thévenet, Charly Thévenet was exposed quite early on to
traditional, more natural viticulture—a philosophy that his father and friends
helped to resurrect in Beaujolais in the early eighties. Though only in his
twenties, Charly has already started a dynamic career. A few years ago, with
extensive experience working for his father and in Marcel Lapierre’s winery
already under his belt, he purchased a parcel of eighty-year-old vines in
Régnié, west-southwest of his hometown of Villié-Morgon. Régnié is a terroir enjoying something of its own
renaissance in the hands of talented growers like Charly and his dad’s pal, Guy
Breton. In fact, Regnié has joined the short list of Grand Crus in the Beaujolais. Situated on a plateau of...



As
a young man, André Guillard wanted to become a vigneron, working the family domaine in the southern end of the
Beaujolais, in the village of Pouilly-le-Monial. Since production was small,
there were only enough resources for André’s father and brother to farm it.
Accepting the situation as it stood, he became a baker, but his dream never
died. At the ripe age of fifty, André was finally given his chance to be part
of the domaine. His grandson, Cédric Vincent, was just a tot, but the two were
quite close. Cédric’s parents were going through a divorce, but early memories
of longing to join his grandfather in the vineyards brought the young Cédric
solace. Today, after completing his advanced studies in enology, Cédric works
side-by-side in the vineyards and...












Jean-Paul
Thévenet is the third generation to produce wine at his family estate in
Morgon, but as a young man he took the domaine in an unexpected direction. In
the early 1980s Beaujolais was flooded with mass-produced, over-commercialized
wine, pushing winemaker and viticultural prophet Jules Chauvet to invoke a
return to more traditional practices. Jean-Paul and three other local vignerons, Marcel Lapierre, Guy Breton,
and Jean Foillard, soon took up the torch of this “natural wine” movement.
Kermit dubbed this clan the Gang of Four, and the name has stuck ever since.
These rebels called for a return to the old practices of viticulture and
vinification: starting with old vines, never using synthetic herbicides or
pesticides, harvesting late, rigorously sorting to remove all but the
healthiest grapes, adding minimal doses...




Near the remote village of Tarabucetta, outside of Figari on the southern tip of Corsica, Yves Canarelli has made quite an impact not only in Corsica, but on mainland France as well. Now it is our turn. As a former student of economics who turned to enology, Yves strikes a fascinating balance between thoughtful intellectual and ardent traditionalist. Since taking over the family domaine in 1993, he has championed the restoration of native Corsican varietals. The appellation Corse Figari lies along a plateau just inland from the coast, where grapes have been farmed since the 5th century B.C. Though Figari is regarded as the most ancient growing region of Corsica, it has still taken pioneers like Yves having the courage to rip out entire vineyards of foreign varietals before Corsican...






Château
Aney was built in 1850 by the family that gave it its name, just five years
before the wine classification system was initiated in Bordeaux. The domaine
thrived and earned Cru Bourgeois status,
but by the mid-twentieth century the land was no longer being farmed and the
château had fallen into disrepair. In 1972 Jean Raimond and his son, Pierre,
bought the property, rehabilitated the vineyards, and refurbished the winery
and cellars. This marked a new era for Château Aney; which fittingly achieved Cru Bourgeois status for a second time in
1978. Today Pierre runs the estate along with his son, David, producing wines
of class and elegance.



To call André Ostertag a revolutionary winemaker
is to tell just half the story. He is a pioneer, certainly, but also an ardent
environmentalist (as demonstrated in both his wine and his sculpture, another
passion). After training in Burgundy, André returned to the family domaine in
Alsace with renewed zeal: he lowered yields considerably and introduced
viticultural and vinification techniques from other regions to his own home
ground. The 1996 vintage marked his first collaboration with KLWM, and the
following year he brought biodynamic viticulture to his fourteen hectares of
vineyards, including his flagship parcel in the Muenchberg Grand Cru.








In Maligny, a village well-poised between Paris and
Dijon, just north of Chablis, Olivier Savary and his wife, Francine, have been vignerons since 1984. Though many of
Olivier’s family members were vignerons, an
unfortunate series of challenging harvests discouraged his parents from joining
the family business. Chardonnay runs strongly through his veins, however, and
Olivier pursued wine school in Dijon regardless of the fact that he would have
no vines of his own. Olivier and Francine arranged to farm some vineyard land en métayage (share cropping) in the
Chablis and Petit Chablis appellations. With his father at his side to farm the
complex network of vineyards, Olivier initially sold off the majority of his
production in bulk to a négociant.
With some encouragement from his longtime neighbor and childhood friend,...








Little
would we know that when Marcel Lapierre took over the family domaine from his
father in 1973, he was on the road to becoming a legend. In 1981, his path
would be forever changed by Jules Chauvet, a man whom many now call his
spiritual godfather. Chauvet was a winemaker, a researcher, a chemist, and a
viticultural prophet. It was he who, upon the advent of chemical fertilizers
and pesticides in the 1950s, first spoke out for “natural wine,” harkening back
to the traditional methods of the Beaujolais. Joined by local vignerons Guy Breton, Jean-Paul
Thévenet, and Jean Foillard, Marcel spearheaded a group that soon took up the
torch of this movement. Kermit dubbed this clan the Gang of Four, and the name
has stuck ever since. These rebels...




















Maison
Kuentz-Bas was first established by the Kuentz family in 1795, and the domaine
as we know it today was forged through a marriage that joined the Kuentz and
Bas families in 1895. Nestled in the town of Husseren-les-Châteaux, it sits at
one of the highest points in Alsace, and the vineyards stretch out from the
village over an area of ten hectares. More than two hundred years of tradition
and vineyard pedigree have made these wines perennial favorites, with the grand crus of Eichberg and Pfersigberg
earning the highest esteem. However, when the family sold the property to famed
vigneron Jean-Baptiste Adam in 2004,
many wondered what direction the new team would take. Adam, like the estate’s
former owners, has a reputation for being an advocate of Alsatian terroir,...
When
Nicole Chanrion began her career in the 1970s, convention relegated women to
the enology labs and kept them out of the cellars—even her mother thought
winemaking was man’s work—but she would not be deterred from her dream of
becoming a vigneronne. With six
generations of family tradition preceding her, she grew up helping her father
in both the vineyards and the cellar in the Côte-de-Brouilly, one of the
southernmost crus of the northern
Beaujolais. Though she is mild-mannered and slight of build, her determination
and conviction have consistently defied all doubts. Ever since taking over the
family domaine in 1988, she works all 6.5 hectares entirely by herself, from
pruning the vineyards and driving the tractors to winemaking and bottling, all
without bravado or fanfare. In 2000 she became...


















Even
after many successful years practicing his craft, fourth-generation vigneron Michel Chignard claims to be a
novice. He is a modest man, kind and courteous, but in every aspect of his
winemaking one clearly sees a passionate perfectionist. In 2007 Michel turned
the management of the family domaine over to his son Cédric, who is carrying on
this philosophy with great pride and has already managed to prove himself in
his first few vintages. The Chignard family is also blessed with vineyards in
one of the best sites of the Fleurie appellation, Les Moriers, an arrowhead-shaped parcel that juts right down into
Moulin-à-Vent vines. Their eight hectares of vineyards are over sixty years
old, keeping yields naturally low. These old-vine root systems also run very
deep, accessing minerals from the...


















