Eric Rousseau describes 2005 as "a great vin de garde; it's rare to get a vintage as perfect as 2005." He went on: "It was an exceptional year for Burgundy in terms of the lack of problems. It wasn't too hot, and although there was not much water, the vines did not suffer. And of course the harvest was very clean, and there were virtually no rotten or green grapes to eliminate." The estate carried out a severe green harvest during the second half of July, but production was still in the 40 to 48 hl/ha range, which Rousseau described as "high for us." Rousseau has stopped heating the cellar to bring about a rapid malolactic fermentation, but the malos nonetheless started in November and finished in March.
2005 Domaine Armand Rousseau Gevrey Chambertin Lavaux Saint Jacques 86-88
Good full red. Cherry and minerals on the nose, with hints of licorice and pepper. Offers a restrained sweetness and modest flesh. Has a chewiness but also a slight medicinal quality and some dusty tannins. This "colder" terroir retained good acidity in 2005, noted Eric Rousseau, who added that his 2005s showed harder tannins before the racking but are silkier today.
2005 Domaine Armand Rousseau Gevrey Chambertin Les Cazetiers 88-91
Good medium red. Aromas of sweet cherry, game and flowers. Fatter and silkier than the Lavaux, with a liqueur-like cherry flavor; very good material here. This is quite open today but also has solid underlying structure.
2005 Domaine Armand Rousseau Charmes Chambertin 87-90
Medium red. Musky, rather exotic aromas of red fruits and faded rose. Sweet but a bit medicinal and withdrawn, showing more grip but less sex appeal than the Cazetiers. This is cooler on the back end, even a tad dry. This cuvee comprises two-thirds Mazoyeres and one-third Charmes. Interestingly, Rousseau considers Mazoyeres to be more feminine in style, but points out that three-quarters of the estate's vines in Mazoyeres are relatively young.
2005 Domaine Armand Rousseau Mazy Chambertin 89-92
Bright medium red. Darker aromas of black cherry and menthol. A step up in concentration from the foregoing samples, with riper but sappy dark fruit and licorice flavors. Offers lovely intensity and class, and finishes with very good lift and energy. Good stuff. As the vines get older (they now average about 40 years of age), we're getting better ripeness here, notes Eric Rousseau.
2005 Domaine Armand Rousseau Clos de la Roche 90-93
Good full, bright red. Reticent but pure aromas of kirsch, licorice and minerals. Bright, firm black cherry flavor shows less early sweetness than the Mazy. A bit dominated today by its rather powerful structure; very much a wine for extended cellaring.
2005 Domaine Armand Rousseau Ruchottes Chambertin Clos des Ruchottes 90-93
(like the Charmes, Mazy and Clos de la Roche, this wine is aged in once-used barrels) Good deep red. Enticing, ripe aromas of black cherry, game and oak spice. Supple and sweet, offering a nice combination of density and energy. Fuller than the Clos de la Roche. The wine's oak component complements and lifts the fruit. Finishes with lovely purity and lingering mineral perfume. Like the Clos de la Roche, this will need a good seven or eight years of cellaring.
2005 Domaine Armand Rousseau Gevrey Chambertin Clos St. Jacques 92-95
Deep, bright red. Very sexy aromas of red cherry, violet, rose petal and licorice. Suave, juicy and sweet, with lovely precision of flavor and inner-mouth perfume. Really saturates the palate yet comes across as virtually weightless. Finishes wonderfully long and scented, with ineffable complexity. This superb premier cru is divided into five strips running from the bottom to the top of the slope:
2005 Domaine Armand Rousseau Chambertin Clos de Beze 92-95
Good deep red. More deeply pitched and wilder on the nose than the Clos-Saint-Jacques, with a medicinal dark cherry character dominating; currently less floral and more oaky. Then wonderfully sweet and fat in the mouth but less racy and subtle today than the Clos Saint-Jacques. This is at once expressive and unevolved in the middle palate; one senses that this topnotch grand cru has complexity and perfume to burn. In a tricky stage today but offers superb breadth and finishes with very fine tannins and explosive length. And I would never bet against this sexy wine.
2005 Domaine Armand Rousseau Chambertin 94-97
Good deep red. Multidimensional nose offers black cherry, dark raspberry, smoke, game, minerals, licorice and flowers; conveys an almost medicinal austerity. The biggest, richest and longest of these 2005s, with explosive sappy sweetness and superb depth. This has a texture of liquid velvet and obviously strong extract but is very young, tight and tannic today and will require many years to express its inherent complexity. Eric Rousseau told me he prefers this to the Clos de Beze due to the effect of the added ripeness of the vintage in this colder site. He notes that over the past five or six years he has harvested in Chambertin before Clos de Beze because he feels that this fruit needs more ripening on the vine. "Two additional days really made a difference," he said.
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