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Nicolas Rossignol
France – 
Borgogna Côte d’Or – 
Volnay – 

THE COMPANY

Born in 1974 Nicolas started making wine in his early twenties in the Domaine Rossignol-Jeanniard, but his education was achieved through the multiple experiences in other domaines in Burgundy and then in Châteauneuf-du-Pape, Bordeaux and South Africa. In 1997, he created his Domaine with only 3 hectares that after the merger in 2011 between the D.ne Nicolas Rossignol and Rossignol-Jeanniard family become 17 and on which Nicolas vinifies around 30 different appellations. Since 2017, the new winery in Beaune allows the talented “vigneron” to express even better his great capacity of interpretation of Pinot Noir from the “little” Bourgogne to the Pommard, interpreting even the smallest facets of Volnay, a village to which Nicolas is particularly devoted. All the vineyards are cultivated trough “lutte raisonnée” method, which takes into account lunar calendar both in the vineyards and in the cellar. No chemical herbicides are employed: soil is maintained through plowing only. This all makes Nicolas and his fine and deep wines great interpreters of Pinot Noir in Burgundy.

France - 

Bourgogne

Côte de Beaune

The Cote de Beaune covers about 30 km running from the northern limit of the AOC Ladoix to the southern limit of the AOC Maranges, although the latter designation is all outside the administrative department of the Cote d'Or, belonging instead to that of Saone-et-Loire. In the Cote de Beaune, the strip of rock outcrop, or Argovien, is situated higher up the hill; instead of a narrow strip of vineyard below the ledge, therefore, a broad, gentle slope has been formed on which the vineyards climb, some almost to the peaks.

France - 

Bourgogne

Côte de Beaune

The Cote de Beaune covers about 30 km running from the northern limit of the AOC Ladoix to the southern limit of the AOC Maranges, although the latter designation is all outside the administrative department of the Cote d'Or, belonging instead to that of Saone-et-Loire. In the Cote de Beaune, the strip of rock outcrop, or Argovien, is situated higher up the hill; instead of a narrow strip of vineyard below the ledge, therefore, a broad, gentle slope has been formed on which the vineyards climb, some almost to the peaks.