Caves Jean et Sébastien Dauvissat, Chablis 1er Cru, “Vaillons Vieilles Vignes”
Here we have a wine that would leap off the page if I encountered it on a wine list—a wine, and a producer, which is at once instantly recognizable, consistently superb, and criminally undervalued. And if you are like me, and prefer your white Burgundy to be loaded with tension and chalky minerality, Chablis is where you want to be if you also crave value.
This really is one of the last bastions of true “cool climate” Chardonnay, and for me, few if any white wines combine palate-coating concentration with a torrential rush of freshness like top-tier Chablis. Caves Jean & Sébastien Dauvissat, now run by Sébastien, has tended to be viewed by label-chasers as the “other” Dauvissat, but there’s no way to justify the yawning price gap between the two—we just need to be quiet and take advantage of it! Today’s deeply moving old-vine (vieilles vignes) bottling from the fabled “Vaillons” Premier Cru is the perfect example: It represents a notable step up in power and intensity from Dauvissat’s regular Vaillons bottling with a negligible difference in price. That’s what these Dauvissats do: Keep upping the value-for-dollar ratio to seemingly impossible levels. Today’s ’16 comes from a choice parcel of 70+-year-old vines in Vaillons, creating a profoundly luscious wine that doesn’t lose any of the chalk-etched minerality we crave. With four years of positive bottle evolution under its belt, the Vaillons Vieilles Vignes is ready to play, but will keep your mouth watering and your mind engaged for many years to come. You will not, I repeat will not, find a better Chablis value anywhere!
I strongly recommend keeping a close eye on the temperature of this bottle. Don’t serve it too cold—55 degrees should be just right. This wine has all the tension of a loaded crossbow; let it soften in decanter for an entire hour (or two, or three, or even overnight!) to blow off some of its extra energy. But once it cracks open, the 2016 Vaillons Vieilles Vignes unleashes a wave of citrus sensations—Meyer lemon, kumquat, and perfumed yuzu. It’s pale lemon-yellow is a bit deceiving for being profoundly rich and fat in the mouth, balanced by higher acidity and structure than the basic Vaillons cuvée. The palate has chiseled mineral firmness padded by a subliminal sweetness. Fresh pineapple, raw pie crust, and heady notes of white truffle build slowly towards a salty, yellow-fruited crescendo. The 2016 is tense and alive and ready to play after a few years of age. Let it melt with bites of raw sea urchin on your tongue with this recipe for uni pasta, and thank your lucky stars you bought more than a single bottle.