1993 Corton Charlemagne
Buying options
Tasting notes
Due to all the problems with premox (premature oxidation) in white Burgundy, it’s not often that we encounter a great mature wine of this category. But at almost 30 years of age, this Corton-Charlemagne is still full of life with a slew of mature toasted nuts character alongside the caramelized lemon freshness. Beautiful balance through the long cool stony finish. Drink now.
Critic scores
Average Score
Antonio Galloni, Vinous
William Kelley, Wine Advocate
More reviews and scores
It smells of marmalade. A stunning nose. A kaleidoscope of crystalline flavour and acidity. Pickled lemon, hints of honey. Iridescent. Honeysuckle, burnt candle ends sputtering at the end of a long night, the sweet scent of rain on a warm summer’s night in the hour before dawn. And then the finish is umami, almost Jura-like. This is indescribable… It's aged so beautifully! But drink sooner rather than later.
It smells of marmalade. A stunning nose. A kaleidoscope of crystalline flavour and acidity. Pickled lemon, hints of honey. Iridescent. Honeysuckle, burnt candle ends sputtering at the end of a long night, the sweet scent of rain on a warm summer’s night in the hour before dawn. And then the finish is umami, almost Jura-like. This is indescribable… It's aged so beautifully! But drink sooner rather than later. (TC)
From a year that was austere for several decades but which has emerged as one of the most underrated choices for top-flight mature white Burgundy today, the 1993 Corton-Charlemagne Grand Cru is showing very well indeed, wafting from the glass with notes of tangerine oil, crisp yellow orchard fruit, freshly baked bread, iodine and wet stones. Medium to full-bodied, textural and incisive, with a racy spine of acidity that's balanced by concentrated fruit, it concludes with a long, intensely sapid finish.
About the producer

This historic Domaine Bonneau du Martray is an iconic Burgundy address, dedicated to making two Grands Crus: its iconic white Corton-Charlemagne and red Corton, expressing the special terroir of the hill of Corton. Today it is owned by Stanley Kroenke, of Screaming Eagle fame.