Vincent Bouzereau
France – 
Borgogna CĂ´te de Beaune – 
Meursault – 

THE COMPANY

This small family run domaine represents the twelfth generation of winemakers in Meursault, the heart of the CĂ´te de Beaune. Vincent Bouzereau was born in 1964 and after completing his studies at the school of viticulture in Beaune, he moved first to Switzerland for a year and then to California for six months to gain some experience, outside Burgundy. Returning to Meursault to his father’s estate, which he shared with his brother at the time, a few years later he decided to go his own way and in 1992 he bought the old and disused Asile of Bourgogne (an Hospice de CharitĂ©) to make it the headquarters of his domaine. He started with a small vineyard of two hectares inherited from his father, then the purchase of a small plot of half an hectare, to which over the years others have been added up to the 10 hectares that make up the property today. Great work in the vineyard, perfect harmony in the cellar always supported by his wife Aline, Vincent is today one of the best new interpreters of the variegated terroir of Meursault, a village that in white most represents the great finesse of Burgundy wines.

France - 

Bourgogne

CĂ´te 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

CĂ´te 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.