The Scotsman

The Brit working with the Burgundy ‘mono-maniacs’

- Rose Murraybrow­n @rosemurray­brown

Iwent to Burgundy against my will,” says winemaker Mark Fincham, “but now I cannot see myself working anywhere else.” It is not often you find an Englishman working as chief winemaker in a Burgundian domaine. Fincham, who visited Edinburgh recently to show Domaine Tawse and Maison Marchand Tawse’s range from the Cote d’or with importer Raeburn Fine Wines, gave me an insight into why he had ended up working in such a traditiona­l region in the heart of France.

“I trained in oenology at Montpellie­r with my first vintage in the Rhone in 1994, ultimately working at the Domaine du Pegau estate in Chateauneu­f du Pape,” says Fincham. “In 2011, I was approached by Pascal Marchand (of Clos des Epeneaux and Domaine de la Vougeraie fame) to help him revive one of Burgundy’s most historic estates.”

French-canadian Marchand, with financial backing from another Canadian, Moray Tawse, had set up a negociant business named Marchand Tawse, and to compliment it they purchased the famous old Domaine Maume in Nuits-st-georges. The Canadians invited Fincham to join them as winemaker for this new negociant and domaine business – with an ambitious goal to take the newly-named Domaine Tawse to the top level in Burgundy within a decade.

Fincham says he had not looking forward to living in Burgundy. “To be honest, Burgundy is not the greatest place to live; they are mono-maniacs in the middle of France, with nothing else there but wine,” he says.

“Also I am an outsider – as are the Canadian owners – so it took longer to gain acceptance. In the beginning we only had a small team, each person doing four people’s work out in the vineyards getting to know the terroir – but gradually the locals saw how hard we all worked.”

The Canadians planned to buy more vineyards, but it proved difficult as there was still a lot of good growers happy to sell grapes, but not vineyards – but they have supplement­ed a few extra plots in Côte de Beaune and Côte de Nuits’ Chambolle Musigny. Fifteen of their wines are made from estate fruit, the remaining 45 wines from boughtin grapes – but all domaine and negociant wines are treated the same in the winery.

People think of Marchand Tawse as a red wine producer, based in Nuits-st-georges, but Fincham has found interestin­g parcels of whites which make up 15 per cent of the range. We sampled four whites from the excellent 2017 vintage in Cote de Beaune, from unsulphure­d Savigny les Beaune 1er Cru to fabulous Chassagne Montrachet from their 0.24 hectare holding in Abbaye de Morgeot 1er Cru.

Tawse’s wines are approachab­le elegant modern Burgundies. These are wines with real energy, precisenes­s and transparen­cy of terroir and this signature of the terroir can only be achieved from sheer hard work, getting to know your vineyard, which Fincham has clearly done. The Canadian/english trio have made impressive upgrades to the old Maume domaine.

Like all winemakers today, Fincham is challenged by changing weather patterns in Burgundy. “Increased temperatur­es have benefitted ripeness in Pommard and Nuits St Georges, but last year’s April frost was devastatin­g. We only made 50,000 bottles in 2021, rather than 150,000 bottles – so prices will rise next year and it is a good time to buy right now”, he says.

White: Savigny Les Beaune Les Vergelesse­s 1er Cru Blanc 2017 Domaine Tawse

Fincham makes this wine in two batches – one with sulphur, the other without. The unsulphure­d version has deep yellow colour, honeyed notes, quite funky palate, smooth rounded finish.

£40.99

White Chassagne Montrachet Abbaye de Morgeot 1er Cru Blanc 2017 Domaine Tawse

Fincham picks this vineyard early to keep tension and higher acidity; this is broad, rich and intense with minerally depth; really attractive from fabulous 2017.

£71

Red: Beaune Teurons 1er Cru 2017 Domaine Tawse

Grapes ripen later on Teurons’ colder clay soils; plenty of ripe soft red fruit intensity, succulent rounded palate, added dimension of noble vegetal notes; a complex Teurons.

£40.99

Red: Gevrey Chambertin 2016 Domaine Tawse

Zero sulphur wine; rich plummy aromas, silky dense, fresh raspberry fruit, good acidity; very attractive for current drinking.

£50.99

All from Domaine Tawse, stockist: www.raeburnfin­ewines.com

Join Rose’s French Classics Dinner in Prestonfie­ld on Thursday 1 December www.rosemurray­brown.com

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