Musigny Grand Cru 2009 - Domaine Mugnier
AOC, Musigny Great Growth, Vintage 2009, Mugnier Estate
- Presentation of the winery
The winery was founded in 1863 by Frédéric Mugnier, who was a liqueur sceller in Dijon. At the time the area includes twenty hectares from Chambolle-Musigny and Nuits-Saint-Georges. The winery and factory liqueurs will operate until 1949, by his son and grandson. In 1950, Jacques-Frédéric Mugnier, his grandson, decided to sell the mill liquors and entrusts leased the vineyard. Over the field of inheritance fell into a great house wine Nuits-Saint-Georges. In 1978, the family took over the operation of vineyards. In 2004, the area increased from 4 to 14 hectares by the end of the tenancy of the Clos de la Maréchale.
- Wine
Le Musigny like its neighbor Les Amoureuses, is very elegant, very rich, but not heavy. The aromatic palette is close to Les Amoureuses but this wine has exceptional depth and intensity, with a very nice finish on the palate.
- Musigny Mugnier 2008
The estate usually produces between 2000 and 5000 bottles of this Grand Cru, from a plot of 1.14 ha, exclusively from old vines. It is a great aging wine, which needs to be kept several years in the cellar its aromas. Despite the capricious weather, the year 2008 gave great wines, vibrant and vivid.
Data sheet
- Vintage
- 2009
- Format
- 75 cl
- Color
- Red Wine
- Grape Variety
- Pinot Noir
- % vol.
- 13 %
- Appellation
- Musigny
- Region
- Burgundy, Côte de Nuits
- Producer
- Domaine Jacques-Frédéric Mugnier
- Classification
- Grand Cru
- Marketplace
- Vivino

One of the best in Chambolle-Musigny
The Mugnier saga began with Frédéric Mugnier, born in 1826. This successful distiller, who owned a liquor store in Dijon, bought the Château de Chambolle-Musigny and its vineyard in 1863. During the 1880s, the phylloxera crisis drastically lowered the value of many Burgundy vineyards, so Frédéric took the opportunity to buy his second one: the Clos de la Maréchale. In total, he now possessed 24 hectares of vineyard.
After his death in 1911, his son Ernest temporarily took the helm of the estate, but he died a few years afterwards, in 1924. His seven children inherited the entire property, although one of them (called Marcel) managed to buy all of his siblings' shares. He then proceeded to give them to his only son Jacques-Frédéric, who de facto became the sole proprietor of the Mugnier estate and its vineyards.
Unfortunately, the financial crisis forced Frédéric's grandson to sell the family-owned liquor business and all the grape vines, which were leased to the Faiveley family during the 1950s. Ultimately, the trained lawyer left France to pursue a banking career in Saudi Arabia. When he came back to France in 1977, Jacques-Frédéric succeeded in getting some of his assets back, but he died shortly after.
His son Frédéric, born in 1955, finished his engineer studies and also left for Saudi Arabia, where he had found a job in the oil industry. Nostalgia got a hold of him, though, and he returned to France in 1985. The same year, he started training as a oenologist in Beaune and he recovered ownership of the Clos de la Maréchale. He now had 14 hectares of grape vines, which he decided to take care of.
Frédéric has a scientific approach to the vineyard. He doesn't produce organic wines, but he doesn't use any chemical pesticides or herbicides either. His wines are simply the purest they can be, which is rather impressive. Frédéric wants to erase the winemaker from the winemaking process, to let the terroir express itself instead.
Discover the wines made by Frédéric Mugnier.