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Domaine Didier Dagueneau

Avant-Garde ‘Pouilly-Fumé’ from a Titan of the Loire Valley

Didier Dagueneau will forever be remembered as “The Wild Man of Saint-Andelain”. A true enfant terrible, he singlehandedly revolutionised viticulture and wine making in Pouilly-Fumé. Initially vilified by his peers, he was eventually revered for his success. Dagueneau tragically passed away in a light plane crash in September 2008.  His son is now in charge of the Domaine and continues to uphold his father’s remarkable legacy.

If there were any doubts surrounding the succession of this remarkable Estate, they have been emphatically quashed by the recent releases under the stewardship of Louis-Benjamin. On a recent visit Benjamin spoke of the ‘well oiled’ Estate he had inherited. “We have been experimenting here for 25 years in every area—vineyard management, winemaking, types of oak, time on lees—every single detail has been closely looked at, to establish precisely how we could produce the greatest possible wines from our soils. Today we know what we are doing. We are still progressing, and every year is different, but now any changes are at the margins.” 

“His wines smelled not of Sauvignon Blanc ... but of......Spring. Sipping the Buisson Renard was like standing beneath a waterfall: the flavours were clean, limpid eerily palpable, a soft shock. The silex was not the parody flintlock of popular myth; it was pure, sappy, soaring, rich, finishing with just a hint of stone after rain. I had not been expecting this calm and majestic retreat from the varietal. I learnt something new.” Andrew Jefford, The New France

Benjamin grew up in the vineyards and tasting great wines with his legendary father. He completed a degree in oenology and came back to work at the Domaine in 2004 after a year with François Chidaine in Montlouis and another year with Olivier Jullien at Mas Jullien in the Languedoc. He was about to launch his own Domaine when his father tragically passed away. He was ready.

We are often asked how the wines of Louis Benjamin differ from those of his father. The wines today have the same tension and vineyard expression that they did under Didier yet there is an added generosity and texture which certainly adds something to the equation. Our impression is that Louis Benjamin is little more relaxed at harvest time than his father was and perhaps picks a tad later, searching for his idea of perfectly ripened fruit. Regardless, no matter which wine you choose, each bottle from this avant-garde grower lives in a dimension beyond being merely outstanding Sauvignon Blanc and ranks amongst the great white wines of the world.

Postscripts In 2018 Benjamin Dagueneau pulled his family Domaine out of the Pouilly-Fumé appellation. Clearly, there is no love lost (if there was ever any to lose) between Dagueneau and the authorities. Last year Louis-Benjamin burnt the last vestige of the bridge by removing every reference to Pouilly-Fumé that remained on his labels—including Blanc Fumé de Pouilly, which is now labelled as Blanc Etc... It goes without saying that at no time in history has Domaine Didier Dagueneau relied on the appellation’s name to sell its wines. If anything, this latest change only serves to underline the non-conformity of one of France’s great Domaines.

Currently Available

Louis-Benjamin Dagueneau Jurançon Sec Les Jardins de Babylone 2015 (Ex-Négociant)

Louis-Benjamin Dagueneau Jurançon Sec Les Jardins de Babylone 2015 (Ex-Négociant)

Dagueneau’s dry Jurançon is a stunning, and hyper-rare wine from France’s southwest. Without being disrespectful to the region and its finest growers, this example is on another planet when it comes to quality. It is totally unique. Unlike the moelleux wine, this is made from all five of Jurançon’s permitted white grape varieties: Petit Manseng and Gros Manseng, as well as the strictly local (and seldom grown) Courbu, Lauzet, and Camarelet. The rarest of these Jurançon varieties, Camarelet, dominates the blend. The winemaking mirrors that of the Loire wine: Dagueneau and Pautrat use both stainless steel and ‘cigar’ barrels for the maturation, before putting the final blend together.Vagaries of vintage aside, the wine is always stunning: complex, enigmatic and totally unconventional (for the region) with Dagueneauesque transparency, precision and coolness, yet also that tender core of pulpy fruit and a driven, mineral finish. As these wines have some age you can expect some subtle secondary notes as well (think beeswax).

“The nobly-concentrated Dagueneau Jurancons are magnificent, with superb detail, magical levity, as well as irresistibility rather than over-the-top sweetness. ‘The idea is to have a balance with high acidity, not a confiture,’ remarks Benjamin Dagueneau. ‘Chateau d’Yquem is very good, but heavy. These wines aim at something a little more Germanic in style.’ I was already grinning before he said this!”
David Schildknecht, RobertParker.com
“Madame Hégoburu [Domaine de Souch] told me that she thought her wine could hold its own against all comers in Jurançon, but that she had to make an exception in favour of Didier’s. The Les Jardins de Babylone has a beautiful balance between acid and sweet fruits, grapefruits and oranges balanced by mangoes and quince. The wine should keep forever. Delicate but long, subtle but rich, Dagueneau’s Jurançon will be fascinating to taste down the years. It will also be interesting to see what his impact will be on the style of other producers’ wines.”
Paul Strang, South-West France: The Wines and Winemakers
Louis-Benjamin Dagueneau Jurançon Sec Les Jardins de Babylone 2015 (Ex-Négociant)
Louis-Benjamin Dagueneau Vin De France XXI 2021

Louis-Benjamin Dagueneau Vin De France XXI 2021

The only wine produced by Dagueneau from the 2021 harvest, XXI is blended from each of the domaine’s terroirs, including those parcels that would usually go into Pur Sang, Buisson-Renard, Les Monts-Damnés, and of course, Silex. There’s even a drop of fruit from the legendary Clos du Calvaire in Saint-Andelain, replanted in 2011. Aged on lees for 10 months in a variety of oak vessels, it’s a super racy, vibrant wine immediately redolent of all kinds of citrus, fresh herbs and those salty, chalky, mineral Dagueneau clues. The texture is compact and svelte—almost reminiscent of the domaine’s wines of old before the onset of warmer and earlier harvests—with bracing tangy freshness on the long, juicy, pithy close. A great success from an otherwise dispiriting vintage. 

“After a solar vintage with exotic notes in 2020, which is in top form today, 2021 returns to a fresher balance, with noble herbal notes that have become rare in recent years. Nevertheless, this XXI draws on an extremely tasty richness, well nourished by meticulous wood aging (barrels, demi-muids). A delicate texture, supported by beautiful bitters. Patience [required]. As usual, this Sauvignon will be very restrained in its youth. It will need five to six years to relax and loosen up. No doubt, it will evolve serenely for more than fifteen years.”
94 points, La Revue du vin de France
Louis-Benjamin Dagueneau Vin De France XXI 2021

“When his father died in September of 2008, Louis Benjamin was only 26 years old. While some things have changed since then, much remains the same. The dogs are gone, and the house has a different flair, but the meticulous attention to detail in the vineyards and the precision in the cellar have, if anything, become even more perfectionist under his direction.” Joel B Payne, Vinous

Country

France

Primary Region

Central Vineyards, Loire Valley

People

Winemaker: Louis-Benjamin Dagueneau

Availability

National

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